How to Livestream Pre-Recorded Video on Facebook with Gyre.pro
Facebook Live is one of the most powerful yet underused distribution tools available to content creators. I’ve been running 24/7 live streams across multiple platforms for years, and I can tell you from personal experience: Facebook’s live video algorithm treats broadcast content very differently from standard video uploads — and that difference translates directly into reach, engagement, and revenue. The problem is that streaming pre-recorded content to Facebook continuously used to require a PC running OBS around the clock. That changed when I started using Gyre.pro.
In this guide, I’m going to walk you through exactly how to stream pre-recorded video on Facebook Live using Gyre.pro — a fully cloud-based tool that runs your stream 24/7 without any software, without your computer staying on, and without Facebook ever knowing the difference. Whether you want to broadcast to a Facebook Page, a Group, or both simultaneously, the process is straightforward — and once it’s running, it’s truly hands-off automation.
As a YouTube Certified Expert with 20+ years of content creation experience and 6 Silver Play Buttons, I’ve tested practically every streaming tool on the market. Gyre.pro is the one I recommend for 24/7 automated streaming because of its dedicated server infrastructure, its security model (no channel login required), and the sheer simplicity of getting started. I’ve personally earned over $10,000 through their affiliate program — not because I’m paid to say it works, but because it genuinely does.
Stream Pre-Recorded Video to Facebook 24/7
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Why Stream Pre-Recorded Video to Facebook?
Before we get into the technical setup, let’s talk about why you’d want to do this in the first place. Facebook’s algorithm gives Live video significant preferential treatment over standard uploaded content. When you go Live, Facebook notifies your followers, prioritises your content in the News Feed, and in many cases surfaces it to people who don’t already follow your Page. That kind of organic reach is increasingly rare on social media in 2026.
The key difference with Facebook Live vs YouTube Live is the nature of the audience. Facebook users tend to be more casual and scroll-oriented. They encounter your live stream while browsing, rather than actively searching for it. This means shorter average watch sessions than YouTube — but it also means you can reach people who would never have found a standard post. For certain niches — news commentary, radio-style content, background music, spiritual content, cooking shows — a persistent 24/7 Facebook Live stream creates a kind of always-on presence that drives both engagement and page growth.
I’ve seen creators in the gospel music space use this strategy with remarkable effectiveness. A 24/7 stream of worship content on a Facebook Page gives followers something to check in to any time of day — and Facebook’s algorithm rewards the consistent live signal by organically pushing the stream to new audiences.
Facebook Pages vs Facebook Groups: Which Should You Stream To?
This is one of the first questions creators ask, and the answer depends on your goals. Here’s how I break it down from my own experience:
Facebook Pages for 24/7 Streaming
Facebook Pages are the better choice for most 24/7 pre-recorded streaming setups. Here’s why:
- Pages can go Live to a public audience, meaning your stream is discoverable by non-followers
- Creator Studio provides a dedicated Live dashboard with persistent stream keys
- Pages qualify for Facebook Monetisation (Stars, In-Stream Ads) once you meet requirements
- Page analytics give you detailed audience data for your live streams
- Facebook’s algorithm actively promotes Live content from Pages to new audiences
For a creator wanting to build an audience and potentially monetise, a Page is almost always the right choice for 24/7 automated streaming.
Facebook Groups for Streaming
Groups can go Live, but there are some important limitations to understand. Live streams in Groups are only visible to Group members. There’s no organic discovery to non-members. However, if you already have an established community in a Facebook Group, streaming directly to it can be a powerful engagement tool — members get notified, the stream becomes a shared experience, and you keep the audience warm.
My recommendation: use a Page for your primary 24/7 stream, and if you have an active Group, use a second Gyre stream slot (requires Start+ plan with 4 simultaneous streams) to simulcast to the Group as well.
Personal Profiles
Facebook does not allow third-party RTMP streaming tools to broadcast Live to personal profiles. You must use a Page or Group. This is a Facebook policy, not a Gyre limitation.
What Is Gyre.pro and How Does It Work?
Gyre.pro is a cloud-based 24/7 live streaming platform. Instead of running OBS on your PC 24 hours a day, you upload your pre-recorded videos to Gyre’s cloud servers. Gyre then streams those videos directly to Facebook (or any other supported platform) using your RTMP stream key. The stream loops automatically when the playlist finishes, creating a continuous 24/7 broadcast.
The key technical detail is that Gyre gives every user a dedicated server and dedicated IP address — not a shared server like most cloud streaming tools. This matters for stream stability. Your stream isn’t competing for bandwidth with other users, which means fewer dropped frames and more reliable uptime.
Gyre is also a YouTube-certified streaming provider, which I mention because it signals the level of infrastructure quality you’re working with. It supports all major platforms: YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, Twitch, Kick, X (Twitter), and MixCloud.
Key advantage for Facebook streaming: Gyre only requires your RTMP stream key. It never asks for your Facebook login credentials. This is a significant security benefit — you’re not handing over account access to a third-party tool.
Facebook Content Policies for Live Streaming
Before I walk you through the technical setup, you need to understand Facebook’s content rules for Live streams. Violating these can result in your stream being cut off, your Page receiving a strike, or in severe cases, account suspension.
Copyright and Music
This is the big one. Facebook’s Rights Manager actively scans Live streams for copyrighted music and other content. If your pre-recorded videos contain commercially licensed music you don’t have the rights to stream, your stream can be interrupted or muted mid-broadcast. Always use royalty-free music, music from Facebook’s Sound Collection, or content you own the rights to. This is especially important for 24/7 streams where you won’t be monitoring every moment.
Content Guidelines
Facebook prohibits graphic violence, nudity, hate speech, and content that violates their Community Standards. These rules apply equally to Live streams and uploaded videos. Since your 24/7 stream will be running unattended, ensure your entire video library is fully compliant before setting up the loop.
Authenticity Policies
Facebook technically requires that Live video be “live” — meaning real-time. However, streaming pre-recorded video via RTMP is an industry-standard practice that Facebook itself accommodates by providing RTMP stream keys through Creator Studio. Millions of creators and broadcasters use this method legitimately. The key is that your content should be your own original content or content you have the rights to broadcast. Don’t attempt to stream other creators’ content or live events you don’t own.
Step-by-Step: How to Set Up a Facebook 24/7 Stream with Gyre.pro
Step 1: Prepare Your Facebook Page
Log in to Facebook and go to your Page. Make sure the Page is in good standing — no active violations or restrictions. You’ll need to be an Admin of the Page to access Live streaming settings. If you don’t have a Page yet, create one from your Facebook profile. Choose a Page category that matches your content niche.
In Page Settings, look for “Live Videos” and ensure there are no restrictions on your ability to go Live. Some Pages that have received prior strikes may have temporary Live restrictions.
Step 2: Get Your RTMP Stream Key from Facebook Creator Studio
This is where most first-timers get confused, so I’ll be very specific. Here’s exactly where to find your Facebook RTMP credentials:
- Go to business.facebook.com/creatorstudio and log in
- Select your Page from the top dropdown if you manage multiple Pages
- Click the Live icon in the left-hand navigation (it looks like a play button with a dot)
- Click “Go Live” — this opens the Live producer
- Select “Streaming Software” (not “Go Live Now”)
- You will see your Server URL (typically rtmps://live-api-s.facebook.com:443/rtmp/) and your Stream Key
- Copy both values — keep them secure, like a password
Facebook also offers a Persistent Stream Key option. I strongly recommend enabling this. A persistent key doesn’t expire when you end a stream, which is essential for a 24/7 setup where Gyre will keep streaming indefinitely. Without a persistent key, your stream key becomes invalid after the first session ends.
Important: Keep your Facebook stream key private. Anyone who has your stream key can broadcast to your Page. Treat it like a password and don’t share it publicly.
Step 3: Sign Up for Gyre.pro
Head to Gyre.pro and start your 7-day free trial. Note that the free trial only supports YouTube streaming. To stream to Facebook, you’ll need the Start plan ($49/month) or higher. The Start plan unlocks all platforms including Facebook, Instagram, Twitch, Kick, and X.
If you want playlist management (the ability to queue multiple videos in order), you’ll need the Start+ plan ($99/month). For a 24/7 looping stream, I’d recommend starting with Start+ — it’s the plan I use for most of my automated streams. For full pricing details, check my Gyre.pro pricing breakdown.
Step 4: Upload Your Videos to Gyre
Once logged into the Gyre dashboard, navigate to your media library and upload your pre-recorded videos. Gyre supports MP4 format (recommended), MOV, and AVI. The built-in Video Converter automatically transcodes and optimises your files for streaming — this is particularly helpful for Facebook, which has specific encoding requirements.
For Facebook streaming, I recommend:
- Resolution: 1920×1080 (Full HD) — Facebook supports up to 1080p
- Bitrate: 4,000-6,000 kbps video, 128 kbps audio
- Frame rate: 30fps or 60fps
- Format: H.264 video, AAC audio
- Aspect ratio: 16:9 for landscape streams
Gyre’s Video Converter handles most of this automatically, so don’t stress too much if your source files aren’t perfect. The converter will do the heavy lifting.
Step 5: Configure Your Facebook Stream in Gyre
In the Gyre dashboard, click “New Stream” or “Create Stream”. You’ll see options for:
- Platform: Select “Custom RTMP” (Facebook isn’t always listed by name — you’ll enter your credentials manually)
- Server URL: Paste your Facebook Server URL (rtmps://live-api-s.facebook.com:443/rtmp/)
- Stream Key: Paste your Facebook Persistent Stream Key
- Stream Name: Give it a descriptive name like “Facebook Page 24/7”
- Video Source: Select your uploaded video file(s)
- Loop: Enable looping so the stream restarts automatically
If you’re on Start+ or Pro+ and have multiple videos, use the Playlist feature to build a queue. You can set videos to play in order, shuffle randomly, or create custom sequences. For a 24/7 music stream, I typically load 10-20 tracks and let them loop in shuffle mode to keep the stream fresh.
Step 6: Start Your Stream and Verify on Facebook
Click “Start Stream” in Gyre. Give it 30-90 seconds to initialise — Gyre is spinning up your dedicated server and establishing the RTMP connection with Facebook. Once connected, head back to Creator Studio’s Live Producer. You should see the preview update to show your video playing, and the status will change to “Connected”.
You’ll also need to set your stream title, description, and privacy setting in Creator Studio before going fully live. Click “Go Live” in Creator Studio to make the stream public on your Page. Once live, Facebook will notify your followers and the stream will appear in your Page’s Live Video section.
Step 7: Optimise Your Stream Title and Description for Discovery
Facebook Live streams are discoverable through search and the Watch tab. Take time to write a compelling stream title that includes relevant keywords. Add a detailed description explaining what your stream is about. Use relevant hashtags — Facebook Live content can surface through hashtag searches.
I also recommend pinning a comment to your Live stream with a call to action — ask viewers to follow your Page, share the stream, or engage with a question. Facebook’s algorithm rewards engagement, and even a few early comments can dramatically boost your stream’s organic reach.
How Facebook’s Algorithm Treats 24/7 Live Streams
Understanding Facebook’s algorithm is crucial if you want to maximise the benefit of 24/7 streaming. Facebook Live works differently from YouTube Live in several important ways.
The Live Boost
When you go Live on Facebook, your followers who are active on the platform get a notification. Facebook also prioritises your Live stream in followers’ News Feeds above standard posts and uploaded videos. This “live boost” is one of the primary reasons to stream live rather than just upload video — the organic notification reach alone can drive significant viewership spikes.
Watch Time and Engagement Signals
Facebook’s algorithm rewards reactions, comments, and shares during Live streams. Unlike YouTube, where watch time is the dominant ranking factor, Facebook weights social engagement heavily. This means your 24/7 stream benefits more from occasional viewer interaction than pure watch duration. Consider posting regular updates to your Page linking to the live stream (“We’re LIVE now!”) to drive periodic engagement spikes.
Discovery Through the Watch Tab
Facebook’s Watch tab surfaces Live videos to users who have expressed interest in similar content. A well-titled 24/7 stream in a popular niche (music, spiritual content, news commentary, nature relaxation) can attract viewers entirely organically through the Watch tab — people who don’t follow your Page at all. This is the Facebook equivalent of YouTube’s “Live” search tab, and it’s a genuine growth driver.
Shorter Attention Spans vs YouTube
I want to be honest here: Facebook Live viewers typically have shorter session lengths than YouTube Live viewers. On YouTube, a viewer might stick with a 24/7 stream for hours while working. On Facebook, many viewers are scrolling and will engage for 5-20 minutes before moving on. This is normal and expected — it doesn’t mean your stream isn’t working. The value on Facebook is more about volume of exposure and the notification/discovery mechanism than long-duration passive listening sessions.
Content that works best for Facebook 24/7 streams tends to be inherently digestible in short bursts — music radio, news highlights, motivational content, ambient visuals with voiceover. If your content requires extended attention, YouTube may be the better primary platform, with Facebook as a secondary distribution channel.
Best Niches for 24/7 Facebook Live Streams
From my experience and the case studies I’ve seen from Gyre’s creator community, these niches tend to perform particularly well for 24/7 Facebook Live automation:
- Gospel and worship music — huge Facebook audience, strong engagement, notification reach to religious communities
- News and commentary — high engagement from followers who share content with friends
- Relaxation and meditation — ambient content that people leave playing in the background
- Kids educational content — parents find and bookmark streams, return regularly
- Cooking and recipe loops — Facebook’s food community is enormous and highly engaged
- Local radio/podcast content — Facebook Live serves as a distribution channel for audio-first creators
For a deeper dive into which content niches work best across all platforms, see my guide to best niches for Gyre.pro automation.
Troubleshooting Common Facebook + Gyre Issues
Stream Not Appearing on Facebook
If Gyre shows the stream as active but you can’t see it on Facebook, check that you’ve clicked “Go Live” in Creator Studio’s Live Producer. The RTMP connection alone doesn’t make you public — you need to manually publish the stream the first time. After that, if your stream drops and reconnects, it may automatically resume (depending on your settings).
Stream Key Rejected
If Gyre can’t connect using your Facebook stream key, double-check that you’re using the persistent stream key and not a one-time key. Also verify that you’ve copied the entire key without any trailing spaces. If the problem persists, regenerate your stream key in Creator Studio and update it in Gyre.
Stream Disconnects After a Few Hours
Facebook occasionally disconnects streams that have been running for extended periods (usually 8-12 hours) as a stability measure. This is a Facebook platform limitation, not a Gyre issue. Gyre’s Stream Scheduler (available on Start+ and Pro+) can be configured to automatically restart the stream, and some creators set up a short scheduled break overnight to prevent forced disconnects.
Audio Muted by Rights Manager
If your stream audio is being muted, it means Facebook’s Rights Manager has detected copyrighted music. Replace affected content with royalty-free alternatives immediately. I keep a library of approved royalty-free music specifically for my Facebook streams to avoid this issue entirely.
Running Facebook and YouTube Simultaneously with Gyre
One of the most powerful things you can do with Gyre’s multi-stream capability is run Facebook and YouTube simultaneously. On the Start+ plan (4 simultaneous streams) or Pro+ plan (8 simultaneous streams), you can broadcast the same pre-recorded content to multiple platforms at once — no extra work, double the distribution.
I run YouTube as my primary 24/7 platform (better monetisation, better algorithm for long-session content) and Facebook as a secondary platform for reach and notifications. The setup is identical — just create a second stream in Gyre with your Facebook RTMP credentials while your YouTube stream continues running. For a complete guide to multistreaming, see my post on streaming to multiple platforms with Gyre.
Ready to Go Live on Facebook 24/7?
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My Honest Assessment of Facebook 24/7 Streaming
I want to give you a realistic picture, not just a sales pitch. Facebook 24/7 Live streaming with Gyre works exceptionally well for the right type of creator and the right type of content. If you’re in a niche with a strong Facebook community — gospel, local news, cooking, family entertainment — the notification system and live boost can drive genuine growth and engagement that you simply can’t replicate with standard video uploads.
However, Facebook’s monetisation for Live streams (Stars, In-Stream Ads) has higher requirements and is generally less mature than YouTube’s. If your primary goal is ad revenue, YouTube remains the stronger platform. Facebook works best as either a primary platform for community-focused creators or as a secondary distribution channel alongside YouTube.
The copyright enforcement on Facebook is also stricter and less predictable than YouTube’s Content ID system. Be meticulous about your content rights before setting up a 24/7 Facebook stream — a rights violation mid-stream can cause disruptions to your entire setup.
With those caveats noted, Gyre makes the technical side effortless. The setup takes about 20-30 minutes, and once it’s running you genuinely don’t need to touch it. For a comprehensive look at everything Gyre can do, read my complete Gyre.pro review. And if you’re just getting started with 24/7 channel automation, my guide to building a 24/7 YouTube channel with Gyre is the best place to start.
About Alan Spicer
Alan Spicer is a YouTube Certified Expert and 20+ year content creator with 6 Silver Play Buttons. He uses Gyre.pro daily to run 24/7 livestreams across multiple channels and has earned over $10,000 through the Gyre affiliate program. Follow his work at alanspicer.com.
Discover more from Alan Spicer - YouTube Certified Expert
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