Streamlabs and other live streaming apps for Android

Capture cards and dedicated stream boxes have a place, but a lot of mobile creators ship a real broadcast straight from their phone. Game streams from PUBG and Mobile Legends, IRL walks, makeup and cooking demos, slow live chats, and music streams from a bedroom rig all run on Android in 2026. The apps below cover three jobs: streaming directly to one platform, multistreaming from a phone to several at once, and pushing a high-bitrate signal to a custom RTMP endpoint when the platform’s own app is the bottleneck.

What to look for in a mobile streaming app

A phone is a streaming rig that fits in your hand, but the constraints matter:

Quick comparison

AppBest forMultistreamCustom RTMPFree planAptoide
StreamlabsMobile creators with overlays and donationsYes (Prime)YesYes (Prime upgrade)Yes
TwitchNative gaming streams to TwitchNoNoYesYes
YouTubeWalks, music, and gaming to YouTube LiveNoThrough StudioYesYes
Bigo LiveSoutheast Asia social streamingNoNoYesYes
Larix BroadcasterPro RTMP, SRT, RTSP encoderN/A (point to a server)YesYesYes
Nimo TVGaming streams in LATAM and SEANoNoYesYes
TikTokShort, high-engagement LIVE roomsNoTikTok Live Studio on PCYesYes

The 7 best live streaming apps for Android

1. Streamlabs — best for mobile creators with overlays and tips

Streamlabs is the closest thing to a mobile studio. The app handles streaming to Twitch, YouTube, Facebook, and Trovo, layered on top with overlay widgets, alerts, and chat readout. Streamlabs Prime adds multistream, premium themes, and merch tools. For most mobile creators it is the only app you need open while broadcasting.

Where it falls short: Prime is a paid subscription and removes the largest features from the free tier. The phone-only stream still depends on the phone’s encoder, so heat and battery matter.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, Windows, macOS

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp Store

Bottom line: The default mobile streaming pick. Add Prime once you have an audience.

2. Twitch — best for gaming streams direct to Twitch

Twitch ships a built-in mobile broadcaster. Tap Go Live, pick a category, and you are streaming. The integration with the Twitch app means chat and viewers stay in the same UI, and the affiliate path is the most established in gaming.

Where it falls short: No multistream from the official app. Mobile streams cap below desktop bitrates. No overlays.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Use the Twitch app when your audience is on Twitch. Add Streamlabs when you need overlays.

3. YouTube — best for live IRL and walks

YouTube lets phones go live once an account has cleared verification and the live access checks. The Android app is the simplest way to start: aim the camera, set a title, and stream. Chat is built in, replays are saved, and the algorithm picks live videos up for the Shorts and home feeds afterwards.

Where it falls short: Mobile live currently requires an account that meets YouTube’s eligibility checks. No overlays.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, web

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp Store

Bottom line: The IRL walk and music stream pick. Pair with a stabiliser and a portable mic.

4. Bigo Live — best for Southeast Asia social streams

Bigo Live is one of the largest social streaming platforms in Southeast Asia and the Middle East. The Android app is built around the live room: hosts go live, viewers send virtual gifts, and the host’s revenue tracks beans-to-cash inside the app. PK matches between hosts drive a lot of the engagement.

Where it falls short: Discoverability is heavily algorithmic and not transparent. Regional rules vary.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, web

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Worth a slot if you are streaming to a Southeast Asia, Middle East, or Latin America audience.

5. Larix Broadcaster — best for custom RTMP and SRT

Larix Broadcaster from Softvelum is the professional RTMP and SRT encoder for Android. It exposes bitrate, framerate, codec, and audio sampling controls, and it streams to any RTMP, RTMPS, SRT, or RTSP endpoint. Pair it with a Restream account on the back end and you can multistream from a phone with custom destinations Streamlabs cannot reach.

Where it falls short: No built-in overlays, alerts, or chat. The UI is a recording app, not a creator app.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Larix Broadcaster is the pro pick. Use it when you need the bitrate dial in your own hand.

6. Nimo TV — best for LATAM and SEA gaming streams

Nimo TV, owned by Huya, is one of the larger gaming-stream platforms in Latin America and Southeast Asia. The Android app handles streaming mobile gameplay with a built-in screen capture layer, live chat, and a viewer rewards economy. The host onboarding is a faster path to monetisation than Twitch’s affiliate window in those regions.

Where it falls short: Lower mindshare in North America and Europe. Some features depend on regional partner programs.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Add Nimo TV if your audience speaks Spanish, Portuguese, or Indonesian.

7. TikTok — best for short LIVE rooms

TikTok LIVE is the platform built around short, high-engagement live sessions. Once an account passes the LIVE eligibility threshold, the broadcast button appears next to the camera. Gifts are sent in real time, conversion to followers from LIVE is the fastest on any platform, and the algorithm pushes live rooms aggressively to the home feed.

Where it falls short: Eligibility rules vary by region. LIVE rules around content and conduct are strict and enforced quickly. No native overlays for mobile.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Pick TikTok LIVE for the short engagement bursts that pull in new followers fastest.

How to pick the right one

Pick Streamlabs if you want the closest thing to a mobile studio with overlays, alerts, and multistream once you upgrade.

Pick Twitch, YouTube, Bigo Live, Nimo TV, or TikTok when your audience already lives on that platform.

Pick Larix Broadcaster when you need a pro RTMP or SRT encoder on the phone, especially if you push to a custom server, an OBS bridge, or a Restream relay.

A useful pattern for new creators: Streamlabs for the daily stream, Larix Broadcaster as the backup encoder, and one or two platform apps to handle chat and analytics on the side.

FAQ

What is the best app for streaming on Twitch from a phone?

Streamlabs Mobile is the most flexible because it adds overlays, alerts, and multistream. The official Twitch app is fine for a straight gaming broadcast with chat.

Can you multistream from an Android phone?

Yes. Streamlabs Mobile supports multistream on the Ultra subscription, and Larix Broadcaster can push to a Restream RTMP endpoint that fans out to multiple platforms.

What bitrate should I use to live stream from a phone?

For 720p at 30 frames per second, plan around 3,000 to 4,500 kbps. For 1080p at 60 fps, plan 6,000 kbps or more. Phones throttle quickly above 6,000 kbps under heat.

Is YouTube mobile live free?

Yes, once the account meets YouTube’s eligibility checks. Streaming is free and YouTube Premium is only for viewers.

What is the best mobile streaming app for IRL streams?

YouTube’s mobile live works for the long walks and Streamlabs Mobile is the most ergonomic for IRL with overlays. Pair with a portable mic and a stabiliser for the cleanest result.