Guides · Screen mirroring

Mirror Android to an Apple TV

Updated July 2026 · by the ThankAI team

iPhones mirror to an Apple TV with two taps. Android phones get nothing — Apple never opened AirPlay mirroring to them. AirVids Streamer closes that gap: it captures your Android screen and its audio and streams them to an Apple TV, a Mac, or a TV with AirPlay built in, over your own Wi-Fi. This guide covers the setup, the settings worth knowing about, and the honest limits — including one about latency that we would rather you read before installing.

What you need

  • An Android phone on Android 14 or later.
  • An AirPlay display: an Apple TV, a Mac with AirPlay Receiver enabled, or a TV with AirPlay built in — many recent LG and Samsung models have it.
  • Phone and display on the same Wi-Fi network.

AirVids is currently in open beta testing. Anyone can sign up on the beta page — it is a short form, and you download the app from Google Play like any other.

Setup, step by step

  1. Join the beta and install AirVids Streamer from the Play link you receive.
  2. Open the app. AirPlay displays on your network appear automatically.
  3. Tap your Apple TV (or Mac, or TV). If the receiver asks for a password or PIN — Macs often do — enter it once and AirVids remembers the connection.
  4. Start mirroring. Your whole screen appears on the TV, and it follows when you rotate between portrait and landscape.

Settings worth knowing about

  • Resolution. Full 1080p by default, with a 720p option that saves battery and helps on busy Wi-Fi. Both run at 30 frames per second.
  • A/V sync slider. If your TV's sound runs through a soundbar or HomePod, the audio can trail the picture slightly. Each device gets its own sync slider so you can line up the lip-sync once and forget it.
  • Volume. Per-device volume control, and your phone's physical volume buttons work while mirroring.
  • Battery savers. A 720p saver mode and a lower-power frame-rate mode. Screen capture requires the display to stay on, which is the biggest battery cost — these options claw a good part of it back.

When this won't work

Mirroring from Android into Apple's world has real constraints, and we think you should know them before you point a movie night at this.

  • Latency. The stream runs roughly 200 ms behind your phone. Watching videos, showing photos and giving presentations all feel fine. Fast games do not — your taps land noticeably late. We are working on bringing this down, but that is where it stands today.
  • DRM apps show black. Netflix and similar apps block screen capture at the platform level. Mirroring them gives a black rectangle with audio, or nothing. No mirroring app can honestly promise otherwise.
  • iPads cannot receive. Apple TVs, Macs and AirPlay TVs accept mirroring; iPads do not.
  • Receiver quirks. Some third-party AirPlay TVs behave slightly differently from an actual Apple TV. Most work well; if yours misbehaves, the app has a built-in support log you can email us, and that genuinely helps us fix things.

Common questions

Does sound come with the picture?

Yes — your device audio streams alongside the video and stays in sync, with a per-device slider to fine-tune lip-sync when the sound runs through separate speakers.

Can I mirror to a Mac?

Yes. Turn on AirPlay Receiver in the Mac's System Settings and it shows up as a display, password protection included. Handy when the nearest big screen is a MacBook.

Why is it a beta?

Getting Android to mirror into Apple's ecosystem is genuinely hard, and some receivers play nicer than others. The core experience works well; we are still smoothing out audio sync edge cases, battery use and behavior on crowded Wi-Fi, and we would rather call that a beta than pretend otherwise.

Is it free?

Yes — mirroring sessions are time-limited and an optional rewarded ad unlocks more time. A paid version with no ads is planned for the future.

Related guides

Put your screen on the big screen.

The AirVids beta is open to everyone — sign up and you'll be mirroring in a few minutes.