Twitch can save your live streams as VODs, but only after you turn on “Store Past Broadcasts” in your Creator Dashboard.
End a stream, refresh your channel, and see nothing under Videos? Twitch feels like it should keep a replay by default, yet saved video is an opt-in feature. Once you flip the right switch, you can control what gets stored, what goes public, and how you’ll keep a copy before Twitch deletes it.
What Twitch Means By “Recording”
On Twitch, “recording” usually means creating a VOD (video on demand) after your live stream ends. That VOD can show up as a Past Broadcast on your channel, or it can stay private in Video Producer until you publish it.
That’s different from Clips and Highlights:
- Past Broadcasts (VODs): A full replay of your stream, saved only if VOD storage is enabled.
- Clips: Short moments made during or after a stream. Viewers can create these if you allow it.
- Highlights: Edited segments saved from a VOD. These are meant to stick around longer than a standard Past Broadcast.
Does Twitch Automatically Record Streams? What Actually Happens
Twitch won’t create a Past Broadcast for every stream unless you enable VOD storage. When VOD storage is off, your stream ends and the platform doesn’t keep a replay you can publish later.
When VOD storage is on, Twitch generates a VOD after the stream finishes processing. Processing can take a few minutes, and longer streams can take longer to appear. During that window, it may look like nothing was saved even when it was.
Does Twitch Automatically Record Streams When VOD Storage Is Enabled?
Yes, in the sense that Twitch will automatically generate a VOD after each stream once “Store Past Broadcasts” is enabled. You don’t need to hit a separate record button for standard VOD capture.
Two switches decide what viewers see:
- Store Past Broadcasts: Creates the VOD.
- Publish: Controls whether it appears publicly under Videos as a Past Broadcast.
Where To Turn On VOD Saving In Twitch
Open your Creator Dashboard on desktop, go to Settings, then Stream, and find the VOD settings section. Turn on “Store Past Broadcasts.” Twitch outlines the feature on its Video on Demand (VOD) help page.
After you toggle it on, scan for these related options if they appear in your dashboard:
- Always publish VODs: Makes Past Broadcasts visible by default after each stream.
- Unpublish specific VODs: Keeps a replay private when you don’t want it on your channel.
- Stream markers: Drops timestamps so you can jump to moments later during editing.
How Long Twitch Keeps Past Broadcasts Before Deleting Them
Twitch’s VOD storage is temporary. The retention window depends on your account type. Twitch’s Partner documentation notes extended storage for Partners compared with standard accounts. Twitch Partner Program Overview describes the longer VOD availability for Partners and the shorter default window for others.
Even with the longest window, treat Twitch as a short-term shelf. If a replay matters, plan to download it, export it, or turn it into Highlights.
VOD Storage And Visibility Checklist
Before you assume Twitch “didn’t record,” run through the common gotchas.
- You never enabled Store Past Broadcasts: No VOD is created.
- The VOD exists but isn’t published: It’s in Video Producer, not your public Videos tab.
- Processing isn’t finished: Give it time after ending the stream.
- You’re checking on mobile: Some settings are easier to find on desktop.
- The VOD expired: It was deleted after the retention window.
- Muted sections: Copyright detection can mute parts of a replay.
VOD Options That Change What Viewers See
Once VOD storage is enabled, decide whether your channel should show full replays by default or only a curated set of videos.
Always Publish VODs Vs Manual Publishing
Always publishing is hands-off. The stream ends, Twitch processes the VOD, and it appears publicly when ready. Manual publishing takes a minute more work, yet it gives you a buffer to keep a rough stream off your profile.
Subscriber-Only Archives
Twitch offers subscriber-only archives for channels that have subscriptions enabled. That option can keep full replays behind a paywall while still letting you create public Highlights.
Disable VODs For A One-Off Stream
If you’re running a test stream or troubleshooting audio, turning VOD storage off before going live prevents a replay from being created at all.
Table: What Gets Saved On Twitch And Where It Shows Up
| Content Type | How It’s Created | Where You Find It |
|---|---|---|
| Past Broadcast (VOD) | Auto-generated after a stream when VOD storage is on | Video Producer; optionally public under Videos |
| Highlight | Created by selecting a segment of a VOD | Videos tab as Highlights; Video Producer |
| Clip | Created from a short moment during/after a stream | Clips section; can appear in feeds |
| Exported Video | Sent from Twitch to another platform when export is enabled | On the destination platform |
| Downloaded Copy | Saved locally from Video Producer | Your drive or editing folder |
| Stream Marker | Dropped during the live stream to mark moments | Inside Video Producer timeline |
| Chat Replay | Optional replay that syncs chat with the VOD | On the VOD page when enabled |
| Muted Segment | Audio muted during processing if copyrighted music is detected | Within the VOD playback |
Why Twitch VODs Go Missing
When VODs disappear, it’s usually one of three causes: VOD storage was off at the time of the stream, the VOD expired, or the VOD exists but isn’t visible to the person checking.
VOD Storage Was Off At The Time Of The Stream
Toggling VOD storage on today won’t bring back streams from last week. If the setting was off during the broadcast, Twitch didn’t create the replay. Your only fallback is a local recording from OBS, Streamlabs Desktop, or a capture card setup.
The VOD Expired
Twitch deletes Past Broadcasts after the retention window. Highlights are meant for longer storage, so saving standout segments as Highlights can protect them from expiry.
The VOD Is Unpublished
If you can see a replay in Video Producer but your viewers can’t, check publish status and privacy for that broadcast.
Local Recording As A Backup
If Twitch is your only copy, one missed toggle or an expired VOD can wipe a stream for good. Local recording is the safety net. When you record locally, your computer writes the video file while you stream, so you keep a copy even if Twitch fails to store a replay.
Most streamers handle this inside OBS: keep your streaming settings as-is, then enable recording to a separate folder with enough free space. If your stream runs for hours, test file sizes once so you know what a typical session costs in storage.
- Use a dedicated drive if you can: It reduces dropped frames on busy systems.
- Match your canvas to your output: Weird scaling can make replays look soft.
- Save audio cleanly: If your mic is clipped live, it will be clipped in the recording too.
You don’t need to record every stream locally. Reserve it for launches, tournaments, collabs, or any session you plan to edit into long-form content later.
Make VOD Editing Faster
VODs get easier to reuse when you set yourself up during the live stream. Stream markers help you jump straight to moments you want for Highlights or off-platform edits. A quick marker after a big win or a funny moment saves time later.
After the stream, skim the VOD once, trim obvious dead time, then convert only the strongest segments into Highlights. That keeps your Videos tab watchable and reduces the chance that a casual visitor bounces after clicking a four-hour replay.
How To Keep Copies Before Twitch Deletes Them
If a stream is worth keeping, treat Twitch as the first stop, not the vault. Three paths cover most creators: download, export, and Highlights.
Download From Video Producer
Downloading gives you a file you control. Save the raw file, then make smaller edits from it so you can always return to the source.
Export To Another Platform
Many creators export VODs to YouTube for longer storage and search reach. Set a routine: export after each stream or at least before the VOD window ends, then keep titles consistent so viewers can follow series content.
Turn Key Segments Into Highlights
Highlights let you cut dead air and keep the best moments. A tight Highlight library can be easier to watch than a page of full-length broadcasts.
Table: Simple Workflow To Make Twitch Recording Reliable
| Step | When To Do It | Why It Helps |
|---|---|---|
| Enable Store Past Broadcasts | Once, before your next stream | Creates VODs automatically after each broadcast |
| Pick Publish Mode | Before you go live | Controls whether replays appear publicly by default |
| Record Locally In OBS | During streams you can’t lose | Gives a permanent copy if Twitch VODs fail or expire |
| Drop Stream Markers | Live, when moments happen | Makes editing faster after the stream |
| Check The VOD After Processing | 10–30 minutes after ending | Catches issues early while you can still act |
| Download Or Export On A Schedule | Within a day or two | Beats the retention clock and prevents loss |
| Create Highlights From Standout Segments | Weekly | Keeps your strongest content visible and easy to watch |
Audio, Music, And Muted VODs
A Twitch replay can exist and still feel broken if big chunks are muted. Twitch can mute segments in stored replays when copyrighted music is detected.
The fix is prevention: avoid background music you don’t have rights to, route music to a separate audio track in OBS when you can, and keep stream audio clean enough that the VOD stays watchable.
Common Scenarios And Fast Fixes
You Enabled VODs But Nothing Shows Up
Give processing time, then check Video Producer first. If the VOD is present there, it’s a visibility issue. If it’s missing there too, confirm the toggle was on before the stream started.
You Want A Cleaner Videos Tab
Leave Always publish off, then publish only the broadcasts you want on display. Pair that with Highlights that summarize your best sessions.
Key Takeaways For Recording Twitch Streams
- Twitch won’t save a full replay unless VOD storage is enabled before you go live.
- Once enabled, Twitch will generate a VOD automatically after each stream ends.
- Publishing is separate from saving. A VOD can exist privately in Video Producer.
- Past Broadcasts expire, so download, export, or create Highlights on a routine.
References & Sources
- Twitch.“On-Demand Content on Twitch (Video on Demand).”Explains how to enable VOD storage and manage past broadcasts in the Creator Dashboard.
- Twitch.“Twitch Partner Program Overview.”Describes Partner benefits and notes extended VOD storage for Partners compared with standard accounts.
