Screen recording in 2026 needs no extra app, because iPhone, Android, Mac, and Windows all include a built-in recorder. On iPhone you add Screen Recording to Control Center; on Android you use the Quick Settings tile; on Mac you press a keyboard shortcut for the capture toolbar; and on Windows you open the built-in capture tool. The one thing people forget is audio: capturing system sound and your microphone are separate toggles you set before you hit record. Choose your device below, decide whether you need sound, and you can be recording in seconds.
Built-in recorders by device
The fastest path is almost always the tool already on your device. Third-party recorders add features like webcam overlays and scheduled captures, but for a quick demo, tutorial, or bug report, the built-in option is cleaner, free, and watermark-free. For still images rather than video, see our guide to taking a screenshot.
| Device |
How to start |
Audio options |
| iPhone |
Add Screen Recording to Control Center, then tap it |
Long-press to enable the microphone |
| Android |
Open Quick Settings, tap Screen Record |
Choose media sound and or microphone |
| Mac |
Press the screenshot toolbar shortcut, pick record |
Select a microphone in Options |
| Windows |
Open the built-in capture or game bar tool |
Toggle microphone and system audio |
Step by step
- Set up audio first. Decide whether you need system sound, your voice, or both. On iPhone, long-press the record button to turn the microphone on. On Mac and Windows, choose the audio source in the recorder options before starting.
- Clear your screen. Close private tabs and silence notifications so nothing sensitive or distracting appears in the recording. A focus or do-not-disturb mode helps.
- Start recording. Trigger the built-in recorder, perform your task at a calm pace, and avoid rushing. Steady movement is easier to follow than fast clicking.
- Stop and find the file. End the recording from the same control. Recordings land in Photos on iPhone, the gallery on Android, and the Movies or Videos folder on Mac and Windows.
- Trim before sharing. Cut the dead air at the start and end using the built-in photos or video tools. A tighter clip is smaller and easier to watch.
Tips for a clean recording
- Match resolution to purpose. Full screen at native resolution looks crisp but creates large files. For a quick share, a lower resolution is fine.
- Keep it short. Long recordings balloon in size. Record only the part you need, or split a long demo into segments.
- Watch the file format. Most built-in recorders save common formats that play anywhere, so you rarely need to convert.
- Test audio once. A quick five-second test confirms your microphone and system sound are captured before you record the real thing.
What to skip
- Watermarked recorder apps. Many free third-party recorders stamp a logo or inject ads when the built-in tool is cleaner and free.
- Recording at max resolution by default. It bloats files for no benefit on small screens or quick shares.
- Leaving notifications on. Pop-ups during a recording look unprofessional and can leak private information.
- Over-editing. For a simple demo, a quick trim is plenty; full editing software is overkill.
FAQ
Why is there no sound in my screen recording?
The microphone or system audio toggle was likely off. On iPhone, long-press the record button to enable the mic; on Mac and Windows, set the audio source in the recorder options before you start.
Where do screen recordings get saved?
On iPhone they go to Photos, on Android to the gallery, and on Mac and Windows to the Movies or Videos folder by default. You can usually change the location in settings.
Can I screen record on a phone for free?
Yes. Both iPhone and Android include a free built-in screen recorder, so you rarely need a third-party app for basic captures.
How do I keep screen recording files small?
Record at a sensible resolution rather than the maximum, keep clips short, and trim out the dead time. These three habits cut file size the most.
Where to go next
How to take a screenshot in 2026, how to edit videos for YouTube in 2026, and how to make your laptop faster in 2026.