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    7 Best Free Screen Recorders for Mac in 2026

    An honest comparison of every free screen recording app for Mac in 2026. What each one does well, where it falls short, and which one fits your workflow.

    9 februari 2026·7 min read
    Read in:English简体中文繁體中文EspañolFrançais

    Table of Contents

    • 7 Best Free Screen Recorders for Mac in 2026
    • 1. ScreenKite
    • 2. macOS Built-In Recorder (Command + Shift + 5)
    • 3. QuickTime Player
    • 4. OBS Studio
    • 5. Kap
    • 6. Loom (Free Plan)
    • 7. ScreenPal (Free Plan)
    • Comparison table
    • How to pick

    7 Best Free Screen Recorders for Mac in 2026

    There are a lot of screen recording apps for Mac. Most of them have a free tier, a free trial, or are fully free.

    But "free" means different things. Some are free with a watermark. Some are free with a time limit. Some are genuinely free but only do one thing well. Some are free forever with no catches.

    This guide covers seven options that are actually usable without paying. For each one, we explain what it does well, what it does not do, and who it is best for.

    1. ScreenKite

    ScreenKite is a native macOS screen recorder built on ScreenCaptureKit and Metal. It is free with no watermark, no time limit, and no account required.

    If you are comparing free Mac recorders against Screen Studio, Loom, Screen Charm, or ScreenSage Pro, start here: ScreenKite gives you recording, editing, export, and Google Drive sharing in one mature Mac app.

    What it does well:

    • 3× faster exports than Screen Studio. A 1-minute 4K recording exports in about 1 minute with ScreenKite. Screen Studio takes 3 to 4 minutes for the same clip. Hardware-accelerated Metal export makes this possible.
    • AI-powered video editing. ScreenKite supports Agentic video editing with Claude Code, Codex, and Gemini. Edit videos using natural language commands.
    • System audio capture without BlackHole or any driver setup. It uses ScreenCaptureKit natively.
    • Built-in editor with trimming, splitting, zoom, backgrounds, and captions.
    • Auto-zoom follows your cursor, so viewers can see what you are clicking.
    • Webcam overlay.
    • Cloud sharing through Google Drive when you need to send a finished video.
    • Lightweight. Native Swift and Metal, not Electron.
    • Mature production-ready workflow: record, edit, export, and share without stitching together separate tools.

    What it does not do:

    • macOS only. No Windows or Linux version.
    • No livestreaming.

    Best for: Mac users who want the world’s fastest screen recorder with complete editing and export — without paying and without workarounds for basic features like system audio.

    2. macOS Built-In Recorder (Command + Shift + 5)

    Every Mac since Mojave has a screen recorder built in. Press Command + Shift + 5 and a toolbar appears. You can record the full screen or a selected area, choose a microphone, and start.

    What it does well:

    • No download, no setup, no account.
    • Lightweight. Almost zero impact on system performance.
    • Records microphone audio without any configuration.

    What it does not do:

    • No system audio. You cannot capture the sound from apps, calls, or browser tabs without installing a separate virtual audio driver.
    • No editing. The output is a raw .mov file.
    • No webcam overlay, no auto-zoom, no cursor emphasis.
    • No export options. You get .mov and that is it.

    Best for: Quick clips for Slack or internal messages where polish does not matter.

    3. QuickTime Player

    QuickTime is already on your Mac. File → New Screen Recording opens the same Screenshot toolbar as Command + Shift + 5. Since macOS Catalina, they share the same backend.

    QuickTime can also record audio-only clips, which is occasionally useful for voiceovers.

    The limitations are identical to the built-in recorder: no system audio, no editor, no export choices.

    Best for: Exactly the same as the built-in recorder — because it is the same recorder.

    4. OBS Studio

    OBS is free, open source, and powerful. It was built for live streaming, so it handles complex setups: multiple scenes, audio mixing, custom overlays, and simultaneous sources.

    On macOS Ventura and later, OBS can capture system audio natively through ScreenCaptureKit without needing a virtual audio driver.

    What it does well:

    • Full control over encoding, resolution, and audio routing.
    • System audio capture on macOS 13+.
    • Multi-track audio for separate mic and system audio editing.
    • Completely free with no limits.

    What it does not do:

    • No built-in editor. You record a file and edit it elsewhere.
    • No auto-zoom, no cursor smoothing, no backgrounds.
    • The interface is complex. Scenes, sources, encoders, and bitrate settings are designed for streamers.
    • Higher learning curve than any other app on this list.

    Best for: Livestreamers and users who want maximum control over recording settings and scenes.

    5. Kap

    Kap is a free, open-source screen recorder built by a small team. It has over 19,000 stars on GitHub and a clean, minimal interface.

    Kap's strength is GIF export. You record a portion of your screen and export it as a GIF, MP4, WebM, or APNG. For developers and designers who need quick animated clips for documentation or pull requests, Kap is simple and fast.

    What it does well:

    • Clean interface. Record and export in a few clicks.
    • GIF export with quality controls.
    • Open source, no watermark, no account.
    • Lightweight for short recordings.

    What it does not do:

    • No system audio.
    • No editor beyond basic trimming.
    • No webcam overlay, no auto-zoom.
    • Built with Electron, so it uses more memory than a native app.
    • Not designed for long recordings. Performance can degrade on clips over a few minutes.

    Best for: Developers who need quick GIFs or short MP4s for documentation.

    6. Loom (Free Plan)

    Loom is a cloud-first recorder. You record your screen and webcam, and the video uploads instantly to Loom's servers. You get a shareable link within seconds.

    The free tier allows up to 25 videos of up to 5 minutes each.

    What it does well:

    • Fast sharing. Record → get link → send. No file management.
    • Webcam overlay built in.
    • Works well for async team communication.

    What it does not do:

    • Recordings are stored on Loom's cloud. You cannot easily download the high-quality original on the free tier.
    • 5-minute limit per video on free.
    • Limited editing. Basic trimming only.
    • No auto-zoom. What you record is what you get.
    • Compression reduces quality compared to local recording.
    • Paid plans are priced per user per month once you outgrow free.

    Best for: People who prioritize instant sharing over recording quality or ownership.

    7. ScreenPal (Free Plan)

    ScreenPal (formerly Screencast-O-Matic) offers a free tier that includes screen and webcam recording with no watermark. The free version records up to 15 minutes and includes basic editing.

    What it does well:

    • Webcam overlay on the free tier.
    • Basic trimming and annotations.
    • Cross-platform (also works on Windows and Chromebook).

    What it does not do:

    • 15-minute recording limit on free.
    • No 4K export on free.
    • The app is not native to macOS. It feels like a cross-platform tool ported to Mac.
    • System audio may be available on some plans — check current ScreenPal features for your platform.

    Best for: Educators and trainers who need webcam overlay and basic editing without paying.

    Comparison table

    AppSystem audioEditorAuto-zoomWebcamExport speedLimitCost
    ScreenKiteYesYesYesYesFast (Metal, 3× faster)NoneFree
    Built-in (Cmd+Shift+5)NoNoNoNoSlow (.mov)NoneFree
    QuickTimeNoNoNoNoSlow (.mov)NoneFree
    OBSYes (macOS 13+)NoNoYesMediumNoneFree
    KapNoBasicNoNoFast (GIF)Short clipsFree
    Loom (free)YesBasicNoYesN/A (cloud)5 min / 25 videosFree
    ScreenPal (free)Check planBasicNoYesMedium15 minFree

    How to pick

    If you want a complete screen recorder that handles audio, editing, and export without workarounds: ScreenKite covers the most ground at zero cost, with 3× faster exports than Screen Studio and AI-powered editing.

    If you just need a quick clip with no setup: The built-in recorder is already on your Mac.

    If you need GIFs for dev work: Kap is clean and simple for short clips.

    If you need a shareable link instantly: Loom is built for that, within its limits.

    If you want full control and already know streaming tools: OBS gives you everything, but you bring your own editor.

    Every tool on this list is genuinely usable. The right one depends on what "free" means to you — free with compromises, or free with everything you actually need.

    Table of Contents

    • 7 Best Free Screen Recorders for Mac in 2026
    • 1. ScreenKite
    • 2. macOS Built-In Recorder (Command + Shift + 5)
    • 3. QuickTime Player
    • 4. OBS Studio
    • 5. Kap
    • 6. Loom (Free Plan)
    • 7. ScreenPal (Free Plan)
    • Comparison table
    • How to pick
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    ScreenKite Team

    The team behind ScreenKite — building the fastest screen recorder for macOS.

    www.screenkite.com

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