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How to Record Your Screen with Annotations and Highlights

Updated March 2026 · 9 min read

Screen Recorder Pro Add to Chrome — Free

Updated March 2026  ·  8 min read

Quick Answer Annotations can be added two ways: in real-time while recording (using a screen annotation tool that draws on top of your screen) or in post-production after recording (using video editing software). For most tutorial creators, post-production annotation in CapCut or DaVinci Resolve gives better control. For live demos, real-time tools like ZoomIt (Windows) or Annotate (Mac) are faster.
📋 Table of Contents
📋 Table of Contents

An unannotated screen recording shows what happened. An annotated one guides the viewer through what matters. Arrows pointing to buttons, numbered steps, highlighted areas, callout boxes explaining context — these elements transform a raw recording into a clear tutorial. This guide covers the tools and techniques for adding annotations both during recording and after.

Record the Raw Content — Add Annotations in Post

Screen Recorder Pro captures your screen at full quality. Record first, then use the annotation tools covered in this guide to guide your viewers' attention exactly where you want it.

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Approach 1: Real-Time Annotation During Recording

Real-time annotation means drawing on your screen as you record — the annotations appear in the video as you make them. This approach is faster to produce but harder to control precisely, and mistakes are part of the recording.

Best Real-Time Annotation Tools

ZoomIt (Windows — Free from Microsoft Sysinternals)

ZoomIt is the gold standard for Windows screen recording annotation. It offers:

Epic Pen (Windows — Free and Paid)

Epic Pen creates a transparent drawing layer on top of your screen that captures into recordings. Features include colored pens, markers, erasers, straight line snapping, and shapes. The free tier is sufficient for most annotation use cases.

Annotate (Mac — Free and Paid)

Mac's equivalent of Epic Pen. Accessible from the menu bar, provides a drawing overlay with shapes, arrows, text, and highlighter tools. The drawing layer is captured by any screen recorder running simultaneously.

Presentation Pointer (Mac — Free)

Adds a spotlight effect and laser pointer to Mac's screen — useful for directing attention in real-time demos without leaving permanent marks on screen.

When Real-Time Annotation Works Best

Real-time annotation limitations: Annotations drawn during recording are permanent in the video — you can't move or remove them in post. Shaky hand-drawn annotations can look unprofessional for polished tutorial content. Consider real-time annotation for speed, and post-production annotation for quality.


Approach 2: Post-Production Annotation

Post-production annotation means recording cleanly, then adding annotations as video overlays during editing. This approach gives precise control — annotations can be perfectly positioned, timed, sized, and styled. It takes more time but produces more professional results.

Free Post-Production Annotation Tools

CapCut (Web, Windows, Mac, Mobile — Free)

CapCut has become popular for tutorial content creation. For annotations:

DaVinci Resolve (Windows, Mac, Linux — Free)

Professional video editor with extensive annotation capabilities in its Fusion module:

Canva Video (Web — Free tier)

For lighter annotation needs: upload your MP4 to Canva Video, add text, arrows, and shapes as design elements, then export. Simpler interface than dedicated video editors.

ToolPlatformBest ForLearning Curve
CapCutWeb/Desktop/MobileSocial media tutorials, quick annotationsLow
DaVinci ResolveDesktopProfessional tutorials, motion trackingMedium-High
Canva VideoWebSimple text and arrow overlaysLow
iMovieMac/iOSBasic text overlays, Mac usersLow
Adobe PremiereDesktop (paid)Professional productionHigh


Essential Annotation Types for Screen Recording

1. Numbered Step Indicators

Numbered circles (1, 2, 3) positioned near the relevant UI element guide the viewer through sequential steps. Keep numbers consistent in size and style throughout a video. Place them slightly outside the clickable element, not covering it.

1
Implementation in post-production Create a circle shape (40–60px diameter) with a number inside. Add it as a video overlay at the frame where you perform that step. Fade it in briefly before the action, then fade it out after. Consistent placement (same size/color throughout) makes sequences easy to follow.

2. Arrows Pointing to UI Elements

Arrows are the most common annotation type — they direct attention quickly without the viewer having to hunt for what you're clicking. Best practices:

3. Highlight Boxes

Semi-transparent colored rectangles drawn around specific UI sections focus attention on a region rather than a single element. Useful for:

4. Callout Boxes

Text callout boxes with a pointer arrow add explanatory text on screen. Use for:

5. Blur / Redaction

Blur or black-box overlays over sensitive information are technically annotations. Use them for:

Capture Clean Recordings — Annotate Later

Screen Recorder Pro delivers high-quality WebM and MP4 recordings that work with all the annotation tools mentioned in this guide. Clean raw recordings give you full flexibility in post-production.

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Cursor Highlighting: Making Clicks Visible

Standard cursor recordings show the cursor, but it can be hard for viewers to track a small white arrow on a busy screen. Cursor highlighting makes every click visible.

Real-Time Cursor Highlighting Tools

Cursor Effects in Post-Production

In DaVinci Resolve or Premiere, you can add a circle overlay that follows the cursor path (manually keyframed). This is time-consuming but allows precise control — you can make the cursor indicator disappear during transitions and appear only when you want to draw attention to a click.



Zoom-In Annotation: Magnifying Key Moments

One of the most effective annotation techniques is a smooth zoom into the part of the screen you're demonstrating, then zooming back out. This is easier to implement than overlays and makes small UI elements legible even on small screens.

1
Record at high resolution Record at 1920×1080 or higher. This gives you room to zoom in without losing quality.
2
Add a zoom keyframe in your editor In CapCut or DaVinci Resolve, set a zoom keyframe at the moment before the key action (e.g., zoom to 150–200% centered on the button being clicked), then zoom back to 100% after.
3
Smooth the animation Use ease-in and ease-out on the zoom animation. A sudden jump looks jarring; a 0.3–0.5 second smooth zoom feels natural and guides attention without disorienting viewers.
Zoom is the most versatile annotation: A well-timed zoom-in makes small UI elements readable on mobile screens, guides attention as effectively as an arrow, and requires no additional graphic elements. Many professional tutorial creators use zoom-in/out as their primary annotation technique.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can I add annotations to a screen recording while recording?

Yes. Use a real-time annotation tool like ZoomIt (Windows), Epic Pen (Windows), or Annotate (Mac) that draws on top of your screen while the recorder captures it. The annotations appear in the recording as you draw them. Alternatively, annotate in post-production for more control and polish.

What's the best free tool for annotating screen recordings?

For post-production annotation: CapCut (free, web/desktop) is excellent for adding arrows, text, and highlights. DaVinci Resolve (free) offers professional-level annotation. For real-time annotation during recording on Windows: ZoomIt (free from Microsoft) and Epic Pen (free tier) are the top choices.

How do I add a cursor highlight to a screen recording?

Use a cursor highlighter app (Cursor Highlighter on Windows, Mouseposé on Mac) that adds a visible ring around your cursor during recording. For post-production, manually keyframe a circle overlay in your video editor to follow the cursor path at key moments.

How do I highlight a specific area of my screen in a recording?

Two approaches: during recording, use a spotlight tool that darkens the rest of the screen. In post-production, add a semi-transparent highlight box over the important area or a blur effect over everything else using CapCut or DaVinci Resolve.

What annotations make screen recording tutorials clearer?

The most effective annotations: numbered circles to sequence steps, red arrows pointing to clickable elements, yellow highlight boxes around key UI areas, text callouts for non-obvious actions, and zoom-in effects before clicking small targets. Use annotations sparingly — highlight only the most important moments, not every action.

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