Screen recording settings involve trade-offs. Higher quality means larger files and more CPU load. Lower settings mean smaller, faster files but potentially blurry text or choppy motion. The goal is finding the minimum quality level that looks perfect for your specific use case — not just maxing everything out.
This guide gives you concrete recommended settings for every common screen recording scenario, plus explanations of what each setting actually does.
Browser Screen Recordings with Smart Settings
Screen Recorder Pro automatically uses Chrome's optimized encoding for smooth, efficient recordings from any browser tab.
Add to Chrome — FreeResolution: The Most Important Setting
Resolution determines how many pixels your recording captures. More pixels = better quality AND larger files.
| Resolution | Pixels | Best For | File Size (1 hour) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 720p (1280x720) | 921K | Meetings, casual recordings, low-end PCs | 1–2 GB |
| 1080p (1920x1080) | 2.07M | Tutorials, professional recordings, YouTube | 3–5 GB |
| 1440p (2560x1440) | 3.68M | High-detail UI demos, 2K monitors | 6–9 GB |
| 4K (3840x2160) | 8.29M | Professional video production, large displays | 15–25 GB |
Rule of thumb: Record at your display's native resolution or 1080p, whichever is lower. Recording at higher than native resolution doesn't add quality — it just wastes space and CPU.
Frame Rate: 30fps vs 60fps
Frame rate determines how smoothly motion appears in your recording. The human eye perceives motion differently depending on content type:
- Static content with occasional movement (slide presentations, code editing): Even 24fps looks smooth. 30fps is more than enough.
- Normal UI navigation (clicking through apps, scrolling web pages): 30fps is perfect. Slightly jerky at 24fps.
- Fast scrolling, animations, drag-and-drop: 30fps may show slight stutter. 60fps looks smoother.
- Gameplay, fast cursor movements: 60fps is noticeably better. 30fps looks choppy.
The practical recommendation: use 30fps for everything except gameplay. The file size and CPU savings are substantial, and viewers won't notice the difference in most tutorial or meeting content.
Codec: Which Video Format to Choose
The codec determines how your video is compressed. Each offers different trade-offs:
| Codec | Container | Quality/Size | Compatibility | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| H.264 (AVC) | MP4 | Good | Universal | Distribution, upload, sharing |
| VP9 | WebM | Better than H.264 | Modern browsers/Chrome | Browser extension output |
| H.265 (HEVC) | MP4 | Best quality/size | Newer devices only | Archival, professional production |
| AV1 | WebM/MP4 | Excellent | Cutting edge only | YouTube upload (future-proof) |
For most purposes, record in whatever format your tool outputs (usually H.264 or WebM) and convert if needed. H.264 MP4 is universally supported and the safest choice for sharing recordings with anyone.
Bitrate: Quality vs File Size
Bitrate controls how much data is used to encode each second of video. Higher bitrate = better quality, larger files. Lower bitrate = smaller files, potential artifacts (blurriness, blockiness) in fast-moving scenes.
Screen content compresses more efficiently than natural video because large areas of the screen don't change between frames (think: white background, stable UI elements). You can use lower bitrates than you'd need for a camera recording at the same resolution.
| Use Case | Resolution | Frame Rate | Recommended Bitrate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Meeting recording | 720p | 30fps | 2–4 Mbps |
| Tutorial / screencast | 1080p | 30fps | 4–8 Mbps |
| Professional YouTube | 1080p | 30fps | 8–12 Mbps |
| Gameplay recording | 1080p | 60fps | 10–20 Mbps |
| Archival quality | 1080p+ | 30fps | 20+ Mbps |
Audio Settings for Screen Recordings
Video quality gets all the attention, but audio quality is often the bigger factor in viewer experience. A slightly lower-resolution video with crystal-clear audio is more watchable than pristine 4K with muffled narration.
Sample Rate
Use 44,100 Hz (44.1 kHz) or 48,000 Hz (48 kHz). Both are standard. 44.1 kHz is the CD standard; 48 kHz is the video production standard. Either is fine for voice narration.
Channels
Mono is sufficient for voice narration and reduces file size. Stereo is needed if you're capturing music, sound effects, or want natural stereo audio from a meeting. Browser extension recordings typically capture stereo audio by default.
Codec
AAC (Advanced Audio Codec) at 128–192 kbps is the standard. MP3 at 192 kbps is also fine but slightly less efficient than AAC. Opus (used in WebM) is excellent and highly efficient — 96 kbps Opus sounds as good as 128 kbps MP3.
Microphone vs Speaker Capture
- For meeting recordings: Capture "tab audio" to get all participants' voices cleanly
- For tutorials with narration: Capture your microphone plus tab audio if needed
- For quiet recordings: Disable microphone capture entirely if you're not narrating
Settings Quick Reference by Use Case
| Use Case | Resolution | FPS | Bitrate | Audio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tutorial for YouTube | 1080p | 30 | 8 Mbps | 128 kbps AAC + mic |
| Meeting recording | 720p | 30 | 3 Mbps | Tab audio only |
| Bug report | 720p | 30 | 4 Mbps | Mic + tab audio |
| Presentation with slides | 1080p | 30 | 5 Mbps | 192 kbps AAC + mic |
| Browser gameplay | 1080p | 60 | 15 Mbps | Tab audio + mic |
| Quick demo for Slack | 720p | 30 | 2 Mbps | Mic only |
Record Your Browser Tab at the Right Settings
Screen Recorder Pro handles settings automatically, optimized for Chrome's encoding pipeline. No configuration required for great quality.
Install Screen Recorder ProFrequently Asked Questions
What resolution should I use for screen recording?
1920x1080 (1080p) is the standard for most screen recordings. It's high enough for clear text and sharp UI elements, universally supported by video platforms, and doesn't require a powerful computer to encode. If your display is 4K, scale down to 1080p output unless you specifically need 4K detail.
What is the best frame rate for screen recording?
30fps is the sweet spot for most screen recordings. Text, UI elements, and slide content look perfectly smooth at 30fps. Use 60fps only for gameplay, rapid UI animations, or fast scrolling content. 60fps roughly doubles file size and encoding CPU load.
What bitrate should I use for screen recording?
For 1080p30 screen recordings: 4–8 Mbps produces good quality with manageable file sizes. For 1080p60: 8–15 Mbps. Screen content encodes more efficiently than natural video, so lower bitrates work well for screencasts compared to camera recordings.
What is the best codec for screen recording?
H.264 (AVC) remains the most compatible choice — plays everywhere without additional codecs. VP9 (WebM) is what most Chrome extensions output — slightly smaller files than H.264 at equivalent quality. For distribution and compatibility, H.264 MP4 is the safest choice.
What audio settings should I use for screen recording?
For narration: record at 44.1kHz or 48kHz sample rate, stereo or mono, AAC codec at 128 kbps. For microphone recording, use a headset or external USB mic rather than your laptop's built-in mic — the quality difference is dramatic.