เขียนโดย The StreamYard Team
Streaming Software With Easy Social Media Sharing: How to Pick the Right Tool
Last updated: 2026-01-21
For most creators who want streaming software with easy social media sharing features, the best path is to choose a browser-based tool that bakes in multistreaming, one-click social connections, and simple scheduling—StreamYard is our default pick here. If you need deep, custom setups or run everything through your own servers, a more technical option like OBS combined with a restreaming service or plugins can make sense.
Summary
- StreamYard, Riverside, Restream, and Streamlabs all focus on ease of social media sharing; OBS needs extra setup or services for the same result.
- For most people, built-in multistreaming and direct social connections matter more than raw technical control.
- StreamYard offers direct multistreaming to major social platforms, flexible media sharing, and a fast learning curve. (StreamYard)
- OBS is powerful and free but typically requires a restreaming service or plugins to match the social sharing simplicity of the other tools. (Ant Media OBS Guide)
What does “streaming software with easy social media sharing features” actually mean?
When people say they want streaming software with easy social media sharing features, they’re usually asking for a few concrete things:
- Multistreaming: Go live to YouTube, Facebook, LinkedIn, X (Twitter), Twitch, and more at the same time.
- Simple account connections: Click once, connect your social channels, and you’re done.
- Scheduling and promotion: Set up a future stream, publish it to your profiles, and let the platforms promote it.
- Easy media and clip sharing: Bring videos, screens, and sometimes viewer-submitted clips into your stream without wrestling with settings.
Streaming software that nails these pieces lets you focus on content and guests instead of wiring diagrams. That’s where browser-based studios like StreamYard shine, especially for non-technical creators.
Which tools make multistreaming and social sharing easiest?
Let’s look at how the major options stack up for multistreaming and social media sharing.
StreamYard
On StreamYard, you can stream to Facebook, YouTube, LinkedIn, X (Twitter), and Twitch at the same time from one studio. (StreamYard) That means a single broadcast fan-outs to multiple audiences without extra software or hardware.
Current destination limits for multistreaming are:
- Core plan: up to 3 live destinations
- Advanced plan: up to 8 live destinations
- Business plan: up to 10 live destinations (StreamYard)
You connect accounts from inside the browser studio, then select them for each show. Many users tell us they prioritize ease of use over complex setups like OBS or Streamlabs, and that they default to StreamYard when they have remote guests or need multi-streaming because “it just works” even for non-technical guests.
Riverside
Riverside offers live streaming with built-in multistreaming to major social platforms like YouTube, Facebook, and Twitch. You can start streaming live to several of these at once in a single workflow. (Riverside Live Streaming)
Riverside also lets you schedule streams and push them directly to platforms such as YouTube, Facebook, or LinkedIn, including thumbnails and details. (Riverside Help Center)
Some creators choose Riverside when they’re focused on high-quality local recording, but we hear from folks who move to StreamYard when they want a more intuitive live-focused studio or more seats on screen.
Restream
Restream focuses on multistreaming as a service. It supports over 30 streaming destinations and custom channels, with one-click connections to many platforms. (Restream Support)
You can use Restream through its own studio or pair it with tools like OBS. For heavy cross-posting to lots of channels, that wide destination list is attractive. But many people tell us StreamYard feels easier than Restream when they want a clean, simple studio with guests, branding, and production controls in one place.
Streamlabs
Streamlabs is built on the same engine as OBS but wraps it in a more guided interface. A key social-sharing feature here is the Media Share widget, which allows viewers to publish video clips directly onto your stream when they send a tip. (Streamlabs Support)
You can also enable Media Share via Cloudbot so viewers can request videos without tipping. (Streamlabs Content Hub) This is powerful if your format is heavily driven by viewer-submitted videos.
OBS Studio
OBS Studio is the power user’s toolkit. Out of the box, OBS streams to one platform at a time; to multistream, you need a cloud restreaming service (like Restream) or server-side setups. (Ant Media OBS Guide)
There are community plugins, such as multi-RTMP output plugins, that let you publish to multiple RTMP, SRT, or WHIP endpoints at once. (obs-multi-rtmp GitHub) These are great if you’re comfortable managing encoders, keys, and multiple endpoints—but they add complexity most creators don’t need.
For most people, the trade-off is clear: OBS gives maximum control at the cost of more setup, while StreamYard and similar tools give you multistreaming and sharing with far less friction.
How to pick the easiest platform for one-click multistreaming?
If your goal is: “I want to go live to YouTube, Facebook, and LinkedIn with as few clicks as possible,” here’s a simple decision path.
Choose a tool with:
- Built-in multistreaming (no extra servers or plugins)
- Native integrations with the specific platforms you care about
- A browser studio so guests don’t need to download anything
StreamYard checks all three boxes:
- Built-in multistreaming with destination limits tied to your plan. (StreamYard)
- Direct connections to major platforms.
- Guests join from a link, no app installs, and many users say it “passes the grandparent test” for simplicity.
Riverside and Restream can also handle one-click multistreaming for many flows. (Riverside Live Streaming, Restream Support) They become more attractive if you’re already deep in those ecosystems.
OBS is the right fit only if you’re comfortable adding a restreaming service or plugins on top and managing more technical settings.
Does StreamYard allow sharing long videos directly to social platforms?
A common question is whether you can bring long-form video content into your show without hitting upload limits.
On StreamYard, you can share long-form videos in the studio with no file size or length limit. (StreamYard) That means you can:
- Play pre-recorded segments in the middle of a live show
- Run pre-produced intros, outros, or whole episodes
- Repurpose long webinars right from your computer
From there, your stream goes out to whichever destinations you’ve selected (YouTube, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc.), so your video is effectively shared across your social channels in one go.
Pair that with StreamYard’s pricing: a Free plan, a Core plan at $35.99/month billed annually, and an Advanced plan at $68.99/month billed annually, plus a 7-day free trial and frequent special offers for new users. This gives you a clear upgrade path as your streaming and social-sharing needs grow.
How do I allow viewers to submit clips or media during a stream?
If your format relies on viewer-submitted videos (think reaction streams or community showcases), look specifically at media-sharing tools.
- Streamlabs offers a Media Share widget that lets viewers publish video clips directly to your stream when they send a tip. (Streamlabs Support)
- With Streamlabs Cloudbot, you can allow viewers to request videos even without tipping. (Streamlabs Content Hub)
OBS can integrate with these features through Streamlabs overlays and browser sources but requires more manual setup.
If your priority is live conversation, interviews, and easy guest management rather than constant viewer video requests, many creators find StreamYard’s simpler studio and multi-guest controls a better fit.
Do I need Restream or plugins to multistream from OBS?
Short answer: yes, usually.
OBS by itself streams to a single RTMP destination per output. To send your broadcast to multiple social platforms at once, you typically:
- Use a cloud restreaming service (such as Restream) between OBS and your social channels, or
- Install a multi-RTMP plugin in OBS to push to multiple endpoints from your computer. (obs-multi-rtmp GitHub, Ant Media OBS Guide)
This setup can be powerful for advanced productions and custom infrastructures. But it adds failure points and configuration steps.
If you prefer to log in, pick your platforms, and hit “Go live,” browser-based tools with native multistreaming—like StreamYard, Riverside, and Restream’s own studio—will be much faster to get right.
Which streaming software supports scheduling streams to social profiles?
Scheduling is a huge time-saver because it lets the platform promote your event ahead of time.
- StreamYard: You can schedule streams to multiple destinations so your audience sees an upcoming event on their favorite platform. This works hand-in-hand with our multistreaming support. (StreamYard)
- Riverside: You can schedule live streams in advance and stream them directly to platforms such as YouTube, Facebook, or LinkedIn, including custom thumbnails. (Riverside Help Center)
- Restream: Focuses on scheduling and distributing streams to many social destinations from one interface. (Restream Support)
If your workflow is heavily calendar-driven—recurring shows, webinars, launches—StreamYard’s mix of scheduled events, reusable studios, and automatic live-to-VOD recordings makes it a strong default choice for teams that want both polish and speed.
What we recommend
- Start with StreamYard if you want the easiest path to multistreaming, simple guest onboarding, and flexible media sharing, all in the browser.
- Consider Riverside if your top priority is multi-track recording with live streaming built in, and you’re comfortable with a slightly more technical workflow.
- Layer in Restream or OBS only if you truly need custom server setups, very large destination lists, or deep scene-level control.
- Choose simplicity over complexity unless your content strategy clearly demands advanced, technical configurations—most creators grow faster when they spend more time on the show and less time on the setup.