Discover Some of the Best YouTube Channels
🐴 Horses

Best Horse Channels

From young show jumpers and trust-based training to elite competition, daily stable life and honest farm ownership — a guide to the best horse channels, who each suits, and where each falls short.

By the BestTubeChannels editorial team · Updated February 2026 · 8 channels reviewed

Horse YouTube ranges from world-class competition footage to the unglamorous 7am reality of mucking out, and “best” depends entirely on whether you ride, want to learn, or simply love watching horses. The eight channels below are the most rewarding in the space, spanning show jumping, thoughtful training, top-level sport, daily stable life and honest farm ownership. We’ve grouped them by what each is actually about, with an honest note on the limitations of each.

One thing worth keeping in mind: horses are large, powerful animals and good horsemanship takes hands-on instruction. These channels are excellent for inspiration, understanding and seeing how experienced riders work, but riding and training skills are best learned in person with a qualified coach — a video can show you the idea, not correct your seat or read your specific horse. With that in mind, here’s how the landscape breaks down.

On this page

How the landscape breaks down

Horse YouTube sorts into a few clear lanes. The competition and riders camp — Jumping With Ivy, the FEI channel — covers the sport itself, from a young show jumper’s journey to the world’s top events. The training and horsemanship lane is Warwick Schiller’s territory, focused on trust and the horse’s mental state. Daily life and lifestyle — This Esme, Friesian Horses, Harlow Luna White — documents the real rhythm of owning and caring for horses. And the access and ownership end — Matt Harnacke, Free Spirit Equestrian — ranges from the luxury sport-horse market to an honest look at the costs and challenges of running a farm.

A good way to use them together: watch the FEI channel and Jumping With Ivy for the sport, Warwick Schiller to think more deeply about training, and the lifestyle channels for a realistic picture of what day-to-day horse ownership involves — then take any actual riding or training instruction to a coach in person. The channels build understanding; a good instructor builds skill.

Quick comparison

ChannelBest forFocusRegionFormat
Jumping With IvyShow jumping journeyCompetitionUKVlogs
This EsmeReal horse-owner lifeLifestyleUKVlogs
Warwick SchillerTrust-based trainingHorsemanshipAustralia/USTraining
FEIElite competitionTop-level sportGlobalHighlights
Friesian HorsesDaily stable lifeLifestyle / breedNetherlandsDaily vlogs
Matt HarnackeSport-horse marketAccess / luxuryAustralia/EUTours & vlogs
Harlow Luna WhiteYoung riders & poniesFamilyFamilyFamily vlogs
Free Spirit EquestrianHonest farm ownershipOwnership / welfareUSDay-in-the-life

The 8 channels

01
Jumping With Ivy
1M+ SubsShow JumpingPony VlogUKIvy Thomas-Cook

Ivy Thomas-Cook is a British show jumper who first went viral at the age of six, clearing a 1.20m oxer on her father's 17hh stallion — a fence taller than she was. The video spread globally and launched one of the fastest-growing equestrian channels on YouTube, with Jumping With Ivy going from zero to 1.3 million subscribers in just a few years. The channel follows Ivy's progress through competitions, training sessions and life with her ponies, and it has a warmth and energy that pulls in viewers well beyond the horse world. Proof that size and age are no barrier to doing remarkable things.

Common criticism

The channel is built heavily around one young rider’s personality and journey, so it’s more inspirational following than instructional content — you won’t learn to ride from it. The elite show-jumping context (talented horses, serious resources) is also a long way from most viewers’ reality.

Jumping With IvyWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
02
This Esme
1M+ SubsEquestrian VlogCountry LifeUKGrace Esme

Grace — known as This Esme — is one of the UK's most popular equestrian vloggers, with a channel that blends horses, country living, fashion and the realities of owning and competing with multiple horses. Her content is honest and personal — she shares the unglamorous side of equestrian life alongside the highlights, which is exactly why her audience is so loyal. Whether she is schooling at home, competing at shows or sorting out barn problems at 7am, the channel gives a genuine picture of what serious recreational horse ownership actually looks like day to day.

Common criticism

The vlog format mixes genuine horse content with lifestyle, fashion and personal material, which not everyone is there for. It reflects one well-resourced owner’s experience rather than offering structured instruction, so the value is in the honest picture it paints more than in teachable technique.

This EsmeWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
03
Warwick Schiller
300K+ SubsHorsemanshipNatural TrainingAustraliaNRHA Champion

Warwick Schiller grew up on a sheep and wheat farm in New South Wales, Australia, competed as a National Reining Horse Association Reserve World Champion, and represented Australia at the World Equestrian Games. His YouTube channel — with over 20 million total views — focuses on building genuine trust and connection between horse and human, drawing on elements of natural horsemanship, psychology and mindfulness. His training philosophy is grounded in understanding the horse's mental state rather than simply correcting behaviour, which has attracted a global following that spans disciplines from reining and cutting to dressage and jumping. One of the more thoughtful and well-regarded voices in horse training on YouTube.

Common criticism

The thoughtful, psychology-led approach is a strength but can feel slow or abstract for viewers wanting concrete, step-by-step drills. It’s also a particular training philosophy rather than the only valid one, and — as with any video — it can’t substitute for hands-on coaching with your specific horse.

Warwick SchillerWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
04
FEI — Fédération Equestre Internationale
300K+ SubsCompetitionShow JumpingDressageEventingOfficial

The FEI is the world governing body for equestrian sport, and their YouTube channel is the official home of competition highlights from the biggest events on the calendar — World Championships, World Cup Finals, Olympic qualifiers and Grand Prix events across all seven FEI disciplines: jumping, dressage, eventing, driving, endurance, vaulting and reining. If you want to watch the world's best horses and riders competing at the highest level, this is the place to start. The production quality is high and the archive is extensive, covering years of major competition footage.

Common criticism

It’s a competition-highlights archive, so there’s no instruction, training or behind-the-scenes depth — purely the sport at the top level. For casual viewers unfamiliar with the disciplines and scoring, a lot of the footage can be hard to fully appreciate without some background.

FEI — Fédération Equestre InternationaleWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
05
Friesian Horses
1M+ SubsFriesian BreedDaily LifeNetherlandsYvonne Horjus

Yvonne Horjus runs two stables of Friesian horses in Friesland — the Dutch province the breed takes its name from — and has been documenting their daily life on YouTube almost every day for years. The channel is low-key and thoroughly addictive: foal births, training sessions, herd dynamics, stable chores and the personalities of individual horses that regular viewers come to know well over time. With over 1.1 million subscribers and a comment section full of people from every continent, Friesian Horses has become one of the most watched equestrian lifestyle channels on YouTube — built entirely on consistency and a genuine love of the horses.

Common criticism

The appeal is gentle, repetitive daily stable life, which is soothing for fans but uneventful for anyone wanting training, competition or variety. It focuses on one breed and one operation, and the near-daily, low-key format is more companionable background viewing than a learning resource.

Friesian HorsesWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
06
Matt Harnacke
400K+ SubsShow JumpingLuxury StablesHorse BuyingAustralia

Matt Harnacke is an Australian equestrian who built his YouTube channel around a format that stands out in the horse space: access to high-end sport horse operations, luxury stables and the world of professional horse buying that most viewers will never experience first-hand. His "first 24 hours with a new horse" videos and tour of elite European competition stables have attracted nearly 500,000 subscribers and audiences well beyond the equestrian community. The production quality is high and the insight into the upper end of the sport horse market is genuinely fascinating, even for viewers who have never sat on a horse.

Common criticism

The focus on luxury stables and the high-end sport-horse market is fascinating but aspirational and far removed from ordinary horse ownership, so there’s little practical takeaway for most viewers. It leans on access and production value more than teaching, making it more of a window into a rarefied world than a how-to.

Matt HarnackeWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
07
Harlow Luna White
600K+ SubsFamily ChannelPoniesKids RidingUK

Harlow, Luna and White is a British family equestrian channel run by Chelsea White, following her daughters Harlow and Luna and their four ponies: Popcorn, Cloudy, Rolo and Panda. The channel captures the full reality of pony ownership for young riders — competitions, lessons, pony care, the highs and the inevitable setbacks — in a warm, family-friendly format that resonates strongly with horse-mad children and their parents. With over 600,000 subscribers it has become one of the most-watched family horse channels on YouTube in the UK.

Common criticism

The family-friendly, young-rider focus means content is light and aimed primarily at children, so older or more serious equestrians will find limited depth. As a family vlog it carries a fair amount of personal and lifestyle material around the actual horse content.

Harlow Luna WhiteWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
08
Free Spirit Equestrian
300K+ SubsHorse TrainingFarm LifeRescue HorsesUSAShae Lauren

Shae Lauren runs Free Spirit Farm in the United States and built her channel around an honest, transparent view of equestrian farm ownership — the training, the welfare challenges, the costs, the mistakes and the genuine rewards. She works with horses from varied backgrounds, including rescues and difficult cases, and her approach to both horsemanship and content creation is notably open about the parts of horse ownership that most channels edit out. A good channel for viewers who want to see what the equestrian life actually looks like rather than a curated highlight reel.

Common criticism

The honest focus on the difficult realities of farm ownership — costs, welfare challenges, hard cases — can be heavy going compared with more upbeat channels. It documents one owner’s personal experience and decisions rather than offering structured horsemanship instruction, so it’s insight more than how-to.

Free Spirit EquestrianWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →

How to choose for your situation

Match the channel to what you want — the sport, the training mindset, or the reality of ownership — and take any actual riding instruction to a qualified coach in person.

Following the sport

FEI for elite global competition across all disciplines, and Jumping With Ivy for the warmth of following one young show jumper’s journey.

Thinking deeply about training

Warwick Schiller for a thoughtful, trust- and psychology-based approach to horsemanship that spans disciplines.

Seeing real day-to-day horse life

This Esme for honest recreational ownership, Friesian Horses for addictive daily stable life, and Free Spirit Equestrian for a candid look at farm ownership.

Family and young riders

Harlow Luna White for warm, family-friendly pony content, with Matt Harnacke for a fascinating window into the high-end sport-horse world.

Frequently asked questions

Can I learn to ride or train horses from these channels?
They’re great for understanding, inspiration and seeing how experienced riders approach things — Warwick Schiller in particular is excellent for the mindset of training. But riding and handling are physical, hands-on skills involving a large animal, so actual instruction should come from a qualified coach in person who can see you and your horse. Use the channels to learn concepts, not as a substitute for lessons.
Which channel is best for watching top-level competition?
The FEI channel is the official home of the biggest events — World Championships, World Cup Finals and Grand Prix competition across all seven FEI disciplines, with a deep archive and high production quality. Jumping With Ivy is a lovely complement if you’d rather follow the personal journey of an up-and-coming rider.
What’s the best channel for understanding horse training?
Warwick Schiller is among the most respected voices on YouTube for thoughtful, trust-based horsemanship that prioritises the horse’s mental state over simply correcting behaviour. His approach draws followers across disciplines. As with all training content, pair it with hands-on coaching for your own horse.
Which channels show what owning a horse is really like?
This Esme is honest about the unglamorous side of recreational ownership, Friesian Horses captures the daily rhythm of stable life, and Free Spirit Equestrian is candid about the costs, welfare challenges and mistakes of running a farm. Together they give a far more realistic picture than a highlight reel.
Is there a good horse channel for children?
Harlow Luna White is a warm, family-friendly channel following two young riders and their ponies, which resonates strongly with horse-mad children and their parents. Jumping With Ivy, centred on a young show jumper, is also very accessible for younger viewers.