The world's first 🌐 decentralized and 🤝 federated video conferencing solution powered by the Matrix protocol.
Element Call is a native Matrix video conferencing application developed by Element, designed for secure, scalable, privacy-respecting, and decentralized video and voice calls over the Matrix protocol. Built on MatrixRTC (MSC4143), it utilizes MSC4195 with LiveKit as its backend.
You can find the latest development version continuously deployed to call.element.dev.
Note
For prior version of the Element Call that relied solely on full-mesh logic,
check full-mesh
branch.
✅ Decentralized & Federated – No central authority; works across Matrix
homeservers.
✅ End-to-End Encrypted – Secure and private calls.
✅ Standalone & Widget Mode – Use as an independent app or embed in Matrix
clients.
✅ WebRTC-based – No additional software required.
✅ Scalable with LiveKit – Supports large meetings via SFU
(MSC4195: MatrixRTC using LiveKit backend).
✅ Raise Hand – Participants can signal when they want to speak, helping to
organize the flow of the meeting.
✅ Emoji Reactions – Users can react with emojis 👍️ 🎉 👏 🤘, adding
engagement and interactivity to the conversation.
Element Call can be packaged in two ways:
Full Package – Supports both Standalone and Widget mode. Hosted as a static web page and accessed via a URL when used as a widget.
Embedded Package – 🚧 Coming Soon: Designed for Widget mode only. Bundled with a messenger app for seamless integration. This is the recommended method for embedding Element Call into a messenger app.
In Standalone mode Element Call operates as an independent, full-featured video conferencing web application, allowing users to join or host calls without requiring a separate Matrix client.
Element Call can be embedded as a widget inside apps like Element Web or Element X (iOS, Android), bringing MatrixRTC capabilities to messenger apps for seamless decentralized video and voice calls within Matrix rooms.
Important
Embedded packaging is recommended for Element Call in widget mode!
For operating and deploying Element Call on your own server, refer to the Self-Hosting Guide.
For proper Element Call operation each site deployment needs a MatrixRTC backend setup as outlined in the Self-Hosting. A typical federated site deployment for three different sites A, B and C is depicted below.
MatrixRTC backend (according to
MSC4143)
is announced by the homeserver's .well-known/matrix/client
file and discovered
via the org.matrix.msc4143.rtc_foci
key, e.g.:
"org.matrix.msc4143.rtc_foci": [
{
"type": "livekit",
"livekit_service_url": "https://someurl.com"
},
]
where the format for MatrixRTC using LiveKit backend is defined in
MSC4195.
In the example above Matrix clients do discover a focus of type livekit
which
points them to a Matrix LiveKit JWT Auth Service via livekit_service_url
.
- Each call participant proposes their discovered MatrixRTC backend from
org.matrix.msc4143.rtc_foci
in theirorg.matrix.msc3401.call.member
state event. - For LiveKit MatrixRTC backend
(MSC4195),
the first participant who joined the call defines via the
foci_preferred
key in theirorg.matrix.msc3401.call.member
which actual MatrixRTC backend will be used for this call. - During the actual call join flow, the LiveKit JWT Auth Service provides the client with the LiveKit SFU WebSocket URL and an access JWT token in order to exchange media via WebRTC.
The example below illustrates how backend selection works across Matrix
federation, using the setup from sites A, B, and C. It demonstrates backend
selection for Matrix rooms 123 and 456, which include users from different
homeservers.
If you'd like to help translate Element Call, head over to Localazy. You're also encouraged to join the Element Translators space to discuss and coordinate translation efforts.
To get started clone and set up this project:
git clone https://github.com/element-hq/element-call.git
cd element-call
yarn
To use it, create a local config by, e.g.,
cp ./config/config.devenv.json ./public/config.json
and adapt it if necessary.
The config.devenv.json
config should work with the backend development
environment as outlined in the next section out of box.
Note
Be aware, that this config.devenv.json
is exposing a deprecated fallback
LiveKit config key. If the homeserver advertises SFU backend via
.well-known/matrix/client
this has precedence.
You're now ready to launch the development server:
yarn dev
A docker compose file dev-backend-docker-compose.yml
is provided to start the
whole stack of components which is required for a local development environment:
- Minimum Synapse Setup (servername:
synapse.localhost
) - LiveKit JWT Service (Note requires Federation API and hence a TLS reverse proxy)
- Minimum TLS reverse proxy (servername:
synapse.localhost
) Note certificates are valid for at least 10 years from now - Minimum LiveKit SFU Setup using dev defaults for config
- Redis db for completeness
These use a test 'secret' published in this repository, so this must be used only for local development and never be exposed to the public Internet.
Run backend components:
yarn backend
# or for podman-compose
# podman-compose -f dev-backend-docker-compose.yml up
To add a new translation key you can do these steps:
-
Add the new key entry to the code where the new key is used:
t("some_new_key")
-
Run
yarn i18n
to extract the new key and update the translation files. This will add a skeleton entry to thelocales/en/app.json
file:{ ... "some_new_key": "", ... }
-
Update the skeleton entry in the
locales/en/app.json
file with the English translation:{ ... "some_new_key": "Some new key", ... }
Usage and other technical details about the project can be found here:
Copyright 2021-2025 New Vector Ltd
This software is dual-licensed by New Vector Ltd (Element). It can be used either:
(1) for free under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License (as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version); OR
(2) under the terms of a paid-for Element Commercial License agreement between you and Element (the terms of which may vary depending on what you and Element have agreed to). Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the Licenses is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the Licenses for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the Licenses.