How to Record Videos on Your Phone: The Easiest Setup for Short Videos

How to Record Videos on Your Phone

Have you been waiting to get the ‘right gear’ to record videos on your phone?

You think you need better lighting. Maybe a tripod. Definitely a proper background.

So it sits on your to-do list, and you keep putting off recording.

But if you’re trying to figure out how to record videos on your phone, you already have everything you need. The real problem is putting too many steps between you and ‘record’, and it makes you less likely to start.

If you’re new to this, this is all you need.


How to Record Videos on Your Phone in Under 2 Minutes

That’s the rule. If it takes longer than two minutes to set up, it’s too much.

Every extra step adds hesitation:

Individually, they seem like small tasks. Put together, that’s enough to stop you.

When it comes to recording videos on your phone, the goal isn’t to optimize your setup, but to remove it as a barrier.


The Bare Minimum Setup (No Extra Gear)

You don’t need to buy anything to record videos on your phone.

1. Your Phone

Any modern smartphone works.

Don’t get stuck comparing specs. The difference won’t matter if you’re not currently recording consistently.


2. Use Natural Light (It’s Better Than Most Setups)

Stand facing a window on a bright and clear day. That’s your lighting setup.

Avoid standing in front of a window behind you and harsh overhead lights.

What works is having a light source in front of you and even lighting on your face.

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A post shared by Ryan Mulhern (@ryanamulhern)

This alone will outperform most complicated setups.


3. Keep Your Phone Stable

You don’t need a tripod.

Use what’s around you: books, shelves, or any flat surface.

Shaky video is distracting. Stability is what matters.

Here’s a great hack:

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4. Get Clear Audio Without a Mic

If people can’t hear you, they won’t stay.

Move closer to your phone, record in a quiet space, and avoid empty, echoey rooms.

To reduce echo, record in places with soft materials that absorb sound, like curtains, sofas, cushions, or carpets. These surfaces stop your voice from bouncing around the room.

Clear audio is perfect audio.

Here’s more on how to use everyday items to create soundproofing so you can record videos on your phone wherever you are.


The “Good Enough” Frame

Keep it simple for recording videos on your phone:

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A post shared by Daniela Schrittenlocher (@elasmarketingservices)

That’s enough. If you keep overthinking your framing, you’re delaying the part that actually matters.

Beyond the basics, check out this article on how to create amazing talking head videos.


A Simple Checklist Before You Hit Record

Use this every time you record videos on your phone:

Then start.


What Actually Matters, And What Doesn’t

What matters

What doesn’t: fancy camera upgrades, studio-quality lighting, and the ‘perfect setup’.

Prioritize things that move the needle.

If hooks feel difficult, there’s a reason. This explains why writing hooks is so hard.


Why Simple Setups Win

When you remove friction, you record more.

And when you record more, you improve faster, you get more comfortable, and you stop overthinking.

Consistency is what builds skill, not better gear.


Common Mistakes That Kill Momentum

If your setup is complicated, you won’t stick with it.


If You Want to Upgrade Later

Only after you’re consistent, you can consider these basic add-ons:


Make Recording Feel Effortless

Even with a simple setup, it’s easy to overthink your framing, lighting, and positioning.

Humeo removes that mental load.

It gives you clear guidance before you record, so you’re not second-guessing yourself. If your background isn’t working, you can blur it, switch it, or upload your own. You can also adjust brightness, contrast, and color in seconds.

Focus on what you’re saying. Let everything else handle itself.


The Real Goal: Hit Record More Often

The best setup is the one you’ll actually use.

If recording video on your phone feels simple, you show up more, and that’s how you improve.

Feature image credit: Giorgio Trovato on Unsplash

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