Screen Recorder
Capture any screen, application window, or browser tab straight from your browser, with system audio and microphone support. Nothing to install, no account required to start.
Click to start recording your screen
Choose a screen, window or browser tab to recordSaving recording...
How It Works
- Click record
- Capture your screen
- Download recording
Tips for Best Results
- Close unnecessary tabs for performance
- Use headset mic for clear audio
- Chrome works best
Previous Recordings
Why Choose Our Screen Recorder
No Software Required
Recording starts directly in Chrome or Edge through the browser's native Screen Capture API. No app, plugin, or extension to install beforehand.
Dual Audio Tracks
Toggle system audio from the recorded tab, your microphone, or both at once. Turn each on or off before you hit Start so the recording has exactly the sound mix you need.
Up to 1080p Resolution
The recorder captures at whatever resolution your screen and browser support, up to 1080p. Sharp enough for tutorial videos, product walkthroughs, and anything you plan to share publicly.
Capture Starts in Seconds
Click Start Recording, pick whether you want your full screen, a single app window, or one tab, confirm the browser prompt, and the capture begins. No setup screens or configuration wizards.
Perfect For
How It Works
Browser-Based Screen Capture
The recorder calls getDisplayMedia(), the browser's native Screen Capture API, to get a live video stream of whatever you select, whether that is your full desktop, one application window, or a single browser tab. MediaRecorder then encodes that stream on the spot inside your browser tab. No data leaves your machine during recording.
Audio mixing runs through the Web Audio API. System audio from a recorded tab and microphone input are kept as separate streams and merged before encoding, so you can speak over a demo and still hear the original tab audio. The finished file saves as WebM, which plays in any modern browser. If you need MP4 or another container, run the file through the Video Format Converter tool afterward.
Frequently Asked Questions
Click Start Recording and your browser will show a picker where you choose a screen, an app window, or a specific tab. Once you confirm, the recorder starts immediately. Click Stop when you are finished, and the file is ready to preview and download, all without leaving the page.
Yes. Before clicking Start Recording, toggle on System Audio to capture sound from the recorded tab, Microphone to capture your voice, or both together. System audio is only available when you record a browser tab, not a full screen or app window, which is a browser-level restriction outside our control.
Chrome and Edge give you the full experience, including system audio from browser tabs. Firefox supports screen capture but typically cannot mix in tab audio. Safari does not support the Screen Capture API at all, so recording will not work there. For anything beyond basic capture, Chrome is the reliable choice.
There is no hard limit imposed by the tool. Practical limits come from your browser's available RAM, since the encoded video is held in memory until you stop. Recordings beyond 30 minutes can produce very large files and may strain memory on lower-spec machines. For long sessions, consider breaking the recording into shorter segments.
The download is a WebM file. Chrome, Edge, and Firefox play WebM natively, and most desktop video players handle it too. If a specific platform requires MP4, run the downloaded WebM through the Video Format Converter tool to remux it without re-encoding.
No. The entire capture and encoding process runs inside your browser tab using local APIs. The video stream never passes through our servers. Nothing is uploaded unless you explicitly download the file to your own device.
Resolution depends on what you are capturing. Recording your full monitor gives you that monitor's native resolution, up to 1080p. Recording a single browser tab captures just that tab's pixel dimensions. Closing other tabs and background apps during recording helps the encoder keep up without dropping frames.
Yes. Recordings contain no watermarks and belong to you. You can use them in tutorials, product demos, training courses, marketing materials, or anything else. The only content rules that apply are the ones you set for whatever platform you publish on.
Nothing to install. The tool runs on browser APIs that Chrome and Edge ship with by default. Open the page, click Start Recording, and your browser will ask permission to share your screen. That permission prompt is the only step between you and a recording.
System audio only works when you pick a browser tab in the sharing dialog, not a window or full screen. In Chrome's sharing picker, select "Chrome Tab," then look for the "Share audio" checkbox at the bottom of the dialog and make sure it is checked. If that checkbox is not visible, switch to a different tab option or refresh the page and try again.
Free Screen Recorder: Record Screen Online, No Download vs Other Methods
| Feature | Luxoret AI | Manual / Traditional | Other Tools |
|---|---|---|---|
| Speed | Minutes, not hours | Hours of manual editing | Varies by complexity |
| Skill Required | None — AI handles it | Video editing expertise | Moderate learning curve |
| Software | Browser-based, nothing to install | Expensive editing suite | Desktop app required |
| Quality | AI-enhanced, professional | Depends on editor skill | Template-dependent |
| Revisions | Instant re-processing | Re-edit from scratch | Limited by plan |