Home Glossary Pre-Recorded Live Stream: What It Is, How It Works, and Why Creators Use ItUpdated: Mar 30, 2026

Pre-Recorded Live Stream: What It Is, How It Works, and Why Creators Use It

Pre-Recorded Live Stream: What It Is, How It Works, and Why Creators Use It

A complete explainer on pre-recorded live streaming — the technique that lets you broadcast edited video as a live event on YouTube, getting all the benefits of live streaming without being present.

Pre-Recorded Live Stream
A pre-recorded live stream is a broadcast in which pre-edited video content is transmitted through a live streaming protocol (RTMP/RTMPS), appearing to viewers as a real-time live event. The broadcaster is not present during the stream — the video plays automatically, but YouTube and viewers see it as “LIVE.”
Live
Badge appears on your stream — same as a real-time broadcast
RTMP
Protocol used to send the video file to YouTube as a live stream
24/7
Possible with looped pre-recorded content — no manual operation needed
Full
YouTube algorithm treats it identically to a live stream for reach/notifications
⚡ Key Point

YouTube cannot distinguish between a pre-recorded video being streamed via RTMP and a genuinely live broadcast. Both trigger the same subscriber notifications, appear in the Live tab, get the red “LIVE” badge, and receive identical algorithmic treatment.

How Pre-Recorded Live Streaming Works

  1. Video file prepared: A creator edits and exports a video file (MP4, MKV, etc.) — the same as any normal video production process.
  2. Streaming software encodes it: Software like OBS, FFmpeg, or a dedicated streaming tool reads the video file and re-encodes it in real time as a stream.
  3. RTMP transmits to YouTube: The encoded stream is sent to YouTube’s ingest servers via RTMPS protocol, using the creator’s stream key.
  4. YouTube broadcasts it live: YouTube receives the stream and distributes it to viewers in real time — complete with live chat, the red LIVE badge, and subscriber notifications.
  5. VOD saves automatically: After the stream ends, YouTube saves the broadcast as a replay VOD on the creator’s channel.

Pre-Recorded vs. Live Stream: Key Differences

Feature True Live Stream Pre-Recorded Live Stream
Creator must be present Yes No
Content quality Variable (live mistakes happen) Consistent (edited in advance)
YouTube algorithm treatment Full live stream treatment Full live stream treatment
Subscriber notifications Yes Yes
Live chat availability Yes (can be monitored) Yes (can be auto-moderated)
Ability to schedule in advance Possible but requires attendance Fully automated scheduling
Real-time audience reaction Full interaction possible Chat only (no on-camera response)

Why Creators Use Pre-Recorded Live Streams

  • Maximum channel reach with minimal time: Get the algorithm and notification benefits of live streaming while publishing pre-edited, high-quality content
  • Reach global time zones: Schedule streams to go live at peak times in your audience’s timezone — even 3am in yours
  • 24/7 passive channel growth: Loop content to keep a “LIVE” badge active around the clock, continuously attracting new viewers
  • Repurpose existing video content: Turn your back catalog of uploaded videos into live stream events without re-editing
  • Consistent publishing schedule: Never miss a streaming day due to illness, travel, or technical live issues
  • Quality control: Unlike true live streams, you can edit out mistakes, add graphics, and polish the content before it goes out
📖 Real-World Use Case

A gaming channel creator records and edits a 2-hour gameplay video on Monday. Using a streaming tool, they schedule it to go live Thursday at 8pm — their audience’s peak viewing time. Subscribers receive push notifications at 8pm, the video shows a “LIVE” badge, and chat fills up with reactions. The creator is asleep but the stream runs automatically. The replay becomes a permanent VOD that continues to get views for months.

Tools for Pre-Recorded Live Streaming

  • YTStreamer — purpose-built for pre-recorded live streaming; schedule and automate streams with no technical setup required
  • OBS Studio + Media Source — free; add your video as a Media Source and stream to YouTube manually; requires manual operation
  • FFmpeg — command-line tool; powerful but requires technical knowledge; best for developers
  • Restream — multi-platform streaming tool; supports pre-recorded content via RTMP
  • Castr — cloud-based; supports scheduling pre-recorded streams without a local PC

Start Pre-Recorded Live Streaming Today

YTStreamer is built specifically for pre-recorded live streaming — upload your video, set a schedule, and go live automatically while you’re doing something else.

Start Streaming Free →

Frequently Asked Questions

Is pre-recorded live streaming allowed by YouTube?
Yes — YouTube permits streaming pre-recorded content via RTMP. Many creators and professional broadcasters use this method. The only restriction is that YouTube requires disclosure for paid promotional content and prohibits streaming content that violates its terms of service — the same rules that apply to all live streams.
Will viewers know it’s pre-recorded?
Not automatically — the stream looks identical to a live broadcast from YouTube’s interface. Some creators choose to disclose it in the title or description (“Pre-recorded stream”), while others simply stream without disclosure. The live chat remains open and functional regardless.
YT
Written by YTStreamer Editorial Team

The YTStreamer team specializes in YouTube live streaming strategy, automation tools, and creator growth. Our guides are based on hands-on testing, YouTube's official documentation, and real-world creator feedback — so you get advice that actually works.

Stream pre-recorded videos live on YouTube — no OBS, no laptop required.

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