Open source screen recording software software to evaluate in 2026
Open source screen recording software tools give teams full code access, no per-user licensing, and the flexibility to self-host — but operational cost replaces license cost. These are the open source options in this category, followed by the full tool list for comparison.
10 tools in this category.
All screen recording software tools
These tools are part of the screen recording software category but may not match the open source filter above. Worth reviewing if the primary options don't fit.
Arcade is positioned here as a screen recording software option for creators comparing workflow fit, output quality, pricing structure, and how much creative effort the product is likely to save after adoption.
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Berrycast is positioned here as a screen recording software option for creators comparing workflow fit, output quality, pricing structure, and how much creative effort the product is likely to save after adoption.
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Guidde is positioned here as a screen recording software option for creators comparing workflow fit, output quality, pricing structure, and how much creative effort the product is likely to save after adoption.
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Loom is positioned here as a screen recording software option for creators comparing workflow fit, output quality, pricing structure, and how much creative effort the product is likely to save after adoption.
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mmhmm is positioned here as a screen recording software option for creators comparing workflow fit, output quality, pricing structure, and how much creative effort the product is likely to save after adoption.
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ScreenPal is positioned here as a screen recording software option for creators comparing workflow fit, output quality, pricing structure, and how much creative effort the product is likely to save after adoption.
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Scribe is positioned here as a screen recording software option for creators comparing workflow fit, output quality, pricing structure, and how much creative effort the product is likely to save after adoption.
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Tango is positioned here as a screen recording software option for creators comparing workflow fit, output quality, pricing structure, and how much creative effort the product is likely to save after adoption.
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Tella is positioned here as a screen recording software option for creators comparing workflow fit, output quality, pricing structure, and how much creative effort the product is likely to save after adoption.
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Zight is positioned here as a screen recording software option for creators comparing workflow fit, output quality, pricing structure, and how much creative effort the product is likely to save after adoption.
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Open Source FAQ for screen recording software
Is open source screen recording software software really free?
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The license is free, but operational costs (hosting, maintenance, patching, upgrades) replace the vendor's license fee. Teams without dedicated ops resources often spend more on self-managed open source than they would on a managed commercial alternative.
When should I choose open source over commercial screen recording software tools?
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Open source is strongest when you need full code control, on-premises deployment for compliance, or want to avoid vendor lock-in. It's weaker when your team lacks the ops capacity to maintain, patch, and scale the deployment.
What should I check before deploying open source screen recording software software?
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Evaluate community activity (commits, issues, releases in the last 6 months), commercial support options, documentation quality, and the total operational burden vs a managed alternative. A dormant project with no commercial backing is a risk.