Escrito por Will Tucker
How to Record Your Screen and Upload to Facebook (Fastest Paths + Pro Tips)
Last updated: 2026-01-10
For most people in the U.S., the fastest, most flexible way to record your screen and publish to Facebook is to use StreamYard to capture your screen (and camera if you want) and then publish directly to a Facebook Page or download and upload the file. If you only need a quick oneâoff capture on a single device, you can use your builtâin Windows/macOS recorder and then upload that video to Facebook manually.
Summary
- StreamYard lets you record your screen, camera, and guests in the browser, then download or publish directly to Facebook Pages.
- Facebook also accepts uploads from your phone or computer if you record locally first using builtâin tools.
- Other options like OBS and Loom can work, but they add either setup time (OBS) or plan limits (Loom) that many creators donât need.
- For repeat content, teams, and branded screen recordings, a StreamYard workspace usually gives you the most leverage.
How does Facebook handle screen recordings?
From Facebookâs point of view, a screen recording is just a regular video file. You record it somewhere, save it as a video, then upload it.
On mobile, Facebook explains that you can tap the âWhatâs on your mind?â box on your Feed or Page, choose Photo/Video, and select any video file stored on your device to upload it to Facebook. (Facebook Help Center)
On desktop, the idea is the same: once youâve recorded your screen and saved an MP4 or similar file to your computer, you can upload it to your Feed, to a Group, or to a Page you manage using Facebookâs normal video post flow.
The real decision is less about Facebook and more about where you record and how flexible you want that recording to be.
Why use StreamYard instead of just recording locally?
If all you ever need is a quick oneâminute clip, your builtâin recorder might be enough. But most people searching for âhow to record your screen and upload to Facebookâ want a bit more:
- Presenterâled videos, not just raw screen
- Clear audio control (mic vs system sound)
- Reusable files that can be repurposed, clipped, and reâbranded
- Content that will still look good a year from now
At StreamYard, our studio is built exactly for that:
- You see your screen share in a live preview and can choose layouts that emphasize either your screen, your face, or both.
- You control your screen audio and microphone audio independently, so you can mute, adjust, or swap sources without breaking the recording.
- You get local multiâtrack recordings, so your screen, mic, and guests can each be edited later in proper editing tools.
- You can record both landscape and portrait outputs from the same session, making it much easier to repurpose for Reels, Stories, or TikTok later.
- You can apply branded overlays, logos, and lowerâthirds while you record instead of doing all that work in post.
- You can keep private presenter notes visible only to you inside the studio.
- Multiple people can share screens in the same session, which is perfect for collaborative demos or walkthroughs.
That combinationâbrowserâbased studio, branded layouts, multiâparticipant recordingâends up being more useful than a simple system screen recorder for most Facebookâbound content.
How do you record your screen with StreamYard for Facebook?
Hereâs a straightforward workflow you can follow today:
-
Create a StreamYard account
Sign up in your browser. Thereâs a Free plan plus a 7âday free trial of paid plans, and we often have special offers for new users. (StreamYard pricing) -
Enter the studio and set up your sources
- Choose Record only (you donât have to go live).
- Turn on your camera and mic if you want to appear on screen.
- Click Share â Screen to pick your entire display, a specific window, or a browser tab.
-
Pick a layout and add your branding
- Use the layout controls to decide how your face and screen appear together.
- Add your logo, overlay, and any lowerâthirds youâve created so the recording looks like a finished show, not a raw capture.
-
Record your walkthrough
- Hit Record.
- Talk through your demo, switching layouts as needed.
- If youâre working with a coâhost, let them share their screen too while you stay in the same recording.
-
Stop and grab your files
When you stop, your recording is saved to your StreamYard dashboard. Youâll see the main mixed video plus local multiâtracks for editing on all plans that include local recording. (StreamYard support)
From here, you can either download the file to upload to Facebook manually or use our direct publishing options for Pages.
How do you publish a StreamYard recording to a Facebook Page?
If you manage Facebook Pages, StreamYard can shorten the path from recording to publish:
-
Connect your Facebook Page as a destination
Inside StreamYard, connect the Facebook Page you manage. (This uses Facebookâs normal permissions dialog.) -
Edit and prepare the recording
In your StreamYard dashboard, you can trim and prepare your recording into a video of up to two hours and send it directly to your YouTube channels and Facebook Pages. (StreamYard Help Center) -
Publish or schedule to your Page
Choose your connected Page, add your title, description, and thumbnail, and publish. For many workflows, this means you never have to download/export/upload manually.
You can also use preârecorded streaming to upload a finished screen recording and have it broadcast to your Facebook Page at a scheduled time, up to 1080p on paid plans. (StreamYard preârecorded streaming)
If youâre posting to a personal profile or a Group instead of a Page, the simplest path is usually to download the StreamYard recording and upload it via Facebookâs normal post interface.
How do you record your screen on Windows or Mac without extra tools?
If you want a oneâtime, noâaccount option, you can use your operating systemâs builtâin recorder, then upload that file to Facebook.
On macOS
Facebookâs documentation describes using Appleâs builtâin shortcut: press Command (â) + Shift + 5 to open the screen capture toolbar, then choose whether you want to record the entire screen or just a portion of it. (Facebook Help Center)
When youâre done, macOS saves a video file (typically to your Desktop), which you can upload to Facebook like any other video.
On Windows 10/11
You can use the builtâin Xbox Game Bar (Win + G) or thirdâparty tools, save the recording as an MP4, then upload that video through Facebookâs post composer on desktop or mobile.
This approach is fine for quick captures, but you wonât get branded layouts, separate audio tracks, or easy ways to involve guests.
When would you consider OBS or Loom for Facebook screen videos?
Sometimes you may want a more specialized setup. Hereâs how two popular alternatives fit in:
OBS for local recording and advanced control
OBS is free and openâsource software for video recording and live streaming that runs on Windows, macOS, and Linux. (OBS official site) You install it on your computer, then build âscenesâ from sources like Display Capture, Window Capture, and webcams.
OBS makes sense when:
- You want deep control over encoding formats, bitrates, and file containers.
- Youâre comfortable configuring scenes, audio routing, and GPU/CPU settings.
- You mainly care about local files and donât need browserâbased studios or cloud workflows.
The tradeâoff is setup time and ongoing maintenance. Youâll manage storage, bitrate, and performance yourself, and you still have to upload your exported MP4 to Facebook manually.
Loom for quick async clips that you share by link
Loom focuses on fast, async recording with a screenâplusâcamera bubble and linkâbased sharing. Its Starter plan is free but limited to 25 videos and 5âminute recordings per person, while paid Business plans advertise unlimited recording time and storage. (Loom pricing)
Loom lets you record, then use its Share â Social options to post via Facebook, among others. (Loom sharing)
Loom can be helpful for quick internal walkthroughs and feedback, but if you care about branded production, multiâparticipant demos, and consistent Facebook content, a StreamYard studio usually gives you more control without paying per person.
What export settings matter when uploading a screen recording to Facebook?
Facebook accepts standard video formats. If youâre exporting from StreamYard or another tool and planning to upload manually, a few practical guidelines help:
- Format: MP4 with H.264 video encoding is a safe default. StreamYard accepts uploads in H.264âencoded MP4 when you use preârecorded streaming or longâform publishing, which lines up well with what Facebook expects. (StreamYard preârecorded streaming)
- Resolution: 1080p works well for most Facebook feeds and Pages; lower resolutions are acceptable for quick clips.
- Bitrate: If you upload through StreamYard for preârecorded streaming, videos up to 10 Mbps (10,000 Kbps) are supported. (StreamYard preârecorded streaming) For direct upload to Facebook, similar bitrates are typically fine for screen content.
In practice, if you record inside StreamYard and either publish direct to Facebook Pages or download and upload, you donât need to microâtune these settingsâyour files will already be in a Facebookâfriendly format.
What we recommend
- Use StreamYard as your default: record your screen, camera, and guests in the browser, then publish or download for Facebook.
- If you need a oneâoff, lightweight capture, use your deviceâs builtâin recorder and upload the resulting file to Facebook.
- Consider OBS only if you specifically need advanced local control and are comfortable managing encoding and hardware.
- Use Loom when your primary need is quick internal walkthroughs shared by link, and treat StreamYard as your goâto for public, branded Facebook content.