📞 +44 (0)116 2787812  |  ✉ sales@iviewdata.com
Authorised Magewell Supplier — UK | Product Finder | Compatible Software | My Account
Home Products Solutions Resellers Support Knowledge Base & Guides Find My Product Blog Contact Us Login / Register
Technical Reference · Authorised Magewell Supplier UK

Glass-to-Glass Video Latency
Comparison — Complete Reference 2026

End-to-end glass-to-glass latency figures for every major video transport protocol — HDMI, SDI, NDI, SRT, RTMP and HLS. Encode latency, transport latency, decode latency and total pipeline delay. Used by broadcast engineers, AV integrators, live production professionals and system designers worldwide.

Published: June 2026 Source: iView Data Ltd — Authorised UK Magewell Supplier Audience: Broadcast Engineers · AV Integrators · Live Production · IT Architects
🔍 People who use this reference searched for
glass-to-glass latency comparison NDI latency milliseconds SRT latency vs RTMP how much latency does NDI add HDMI vs SDI latency difference HLS latency how to reduce low latency live streaming protocol RTMP end to end delay what is glass to glass latency NDI vs SRT latency hardware encoder latency best protocol for low latency streaming SRT latency setting calculation video latency table comparison chart how to measure video latency

01 What Is Glass-to-Glass Latency? #what-is

Glass-to-glass latency is the total elapsed time from the moment light enters the camera lens to the moment the decoded image appears on the output display. It is the most meaningful latency measurement for live production because it captures the entire pipeline delay — not just the transport layer.

Many manufacturers quote only encode latency or transport latency in their specifications. These figures are misleading because they omit the other stages. A hardware encoder might advertise "sub-50ms encoding latency" while the full glass-to-glass pipeline including decode and display adds another 100–200ms.

The four stages of glass-to-glass latency
Four stages of glass-to-glass latency pipeline Camera capture sensor → HDMI out Encode latency compression · buffering Transport latency network · jitter buffer Decode latency decompress · display Display glass out
Glass-to-glass total = camera sensor delay + encode latency + transport latency + decode latency + display processing
Why this matters: For in-ear monitoring, tally systems and confidence monitors, any latency above 40–80ms becomes perceptible to a performer or presenter. For audience-facing displays in the same room as the live source, latency above 100ms causes visible lip-sync issues and disorientation.

02 Protocol Latency Overview #overview

Each protocol has a fundamentally different latency profile determined by its compression architecture, buffering strategy and delivery model. These are typical glass-to-glass figures under optimal network conditions.

HDMI / DisplayPort

HDMI & DisplayPort

~1–3 msglass-to-glass

Near-zero latency — electrical signal transmission with no compression. The benchmark reference latency for all other protocols.

Encode0 ms (none)
Transport0.5–2 ms
Decode0 ms (none)
Max distance~10m passive
SDI (3G/6G/12G)

SDI

~1–5 msglass-to-glass

Uncompressed broadcast standard. No codec latency. Coaxial cable at up to 100m+. Industry standard for live production.

Encode0 ms (none)
Transport1–4 ms
Decode0 ms (none)
Max distance100–300m coax
Full NDI

Full NDI

~40–80 msglass-to-glass

SpeedHQ intra-frame compression over Gigabit LAN. Lowest latency IP video option for local production networks.

Encode16–33 ms
Transport<1 ms (LAN)
Decode16–33 ms
EnvironmentGigabit LAN only
NDI HX3

NDI HX3

~100–200 msglass-to-glass

H.265 inter-frame compression. Higher latency than Full NDI due to GOP structure but suitable for most monitoring and production use cases.

Encode50–100 ms
Transport<5 ms (LAN)
Decode30–80 ms
EnvironmentLAN / Wi-Fi
SRT

SRT

~100–500 msglass-to-glass

Configurable latency buffer — set 4× your round-trip time. For local LAN: ~100ms. For internet: 200–500ms. For 4G/satellite: 500ms+.

Encode30–80 ms
Transportuser-configured
Decode30–60 ms
EnvironmentLAN / WAN / 4G
RTMP

RTMP

5–30 secondsglass-to-glass

Platform CDN buffering dominates. The encoder-to-ingest latency is low (<500ms) but platform buffering adds 5–30 seconds before viewers see the image.

Encode30–100 ms
Platform buffer5–30 seconds
Controllable?No — platform set
EnvironmentWAN / internet
HLS

HLS

6–45 secondsglass-to-glass

Segment-based HTTP delivery — highest latency of all protocols. LL-HLS reduces this to 2–4 seconds but requires compatible CDN and player.

Standard HLS6–45 seconds
Low-Latency HLS2–4 seconds
Controllable?Partially
EnvironmentCDN / browser
RTSP

RTSP

1–3 secondsglass-to-glass

Pull-based streaming over LAN. VLC and NVR players add buffering. Suitable for monitoring and IPTV but not real-time production.

Encode30–80 ms
Player buffer0.5–2 seconds
Controllable?Partially
EnvironmentLAN only

03 Full Latency Reference Table #main-table

All figures are glass-to-glass under optimal conditions on a well-provisioned network. Real-world latency may be higher depending on hardware encoder model, network congestion, player buffering and display processing time.

Protocol Encode latency Transport latency Decode latency Glass-to-glass total Controllable? Best use case
HDMI 2.0/2.1 0 ms 0.5–2 ms 0 ms ~1–3 ms N/A Confidence monitors, IEM, local display
SDI (3G/6G/12G) 0 ms 1–4 ms 0 ms ~1–5 ms N/A Broadcast production, studio, OB van
Full NDISpeedHQ intra-frame 16–33 ms <1 ms (LAN) 16–33 ms 40–80 ms Yes — buffer IP production, tally, vMix/OBS sources
NDI HX3H.265 inter-frame 50–100 ms <5 ms (LAN) 30–80 ms 100–200 ms Partial PTZ cameras, Wi-Fi sources, monitoring
NDI HX2H.265 inter-frame 80–150 ms <5 ms (LAN) 50–100 ms 150–300 ms Partial Preview monitoring, remote sources
SRT (LAN)H.264 or H.265 30–80 ms 20–80 ms 30–60 ms 80–220 ms Yes — full Local contribution, inter-building
SRT (internet)H.264 or H.265 30–80 ms 120–300 ms 30–60 ms 200–500 ms Yes — full Remote contribution, outside broadcast
SRT (4G/satellite)H.265 recommended 30–80 ms 300–800 ms 30–60 ms 400 ms – 1 s Yes — full Field production, 4G streaming
RTMPEncoder to ingest 30–100 ms 100–500 ms Platform CDN 5–30 secondsplatform buffer dominates No YouTube, Facebook, Twitch delivery
RTMP Ultra LowYouTube / Twitch ULL 30–100 ms 100–500 ms Platform CDN 1–3 secondsultra low latency mode Limited Interactive streams, live Q&A
HLS (standard)Segment-based 30–100 ms CDN segmentation Player buffer 6–45 seconds No VOD, CDN delivery, browser players
LL-HLSLow-Latency HLS 30–100 ms CDN partial Player buffer 2–4 seconds Partial Browser delivery with latency constraints
RTSPPull-based LAN 30–80 ms <10 ms (LAN) 500 ms – 2 splayer dependent 1–3 seconds Partial LAN monitoring, NVR, IPTV
ZixiManaged broadcast 50–100 ms 100–400 ms 50–100 ms 200–600 ms Yes — full Broadcast contribution, satellite replacement
Important: RTMP and HLS glass-to-glass latency is dominated by platform CDN buffering which is set by the platform operator, not the encoder. No encoder setting can reduce YouTube's 5–30 second viewer delay — only the platform's "Ultra Low Latency" mode affects this, and only partially.

04 Latency Stage Breakdown #breakdown

Understanding which stage contributes the most latency in your pipeline allows you to target the right optimisation. Reducing transport latency on an HLS stream is pointless — the CDN segmentation is the dominant factor. Reducing encode latency on an RTMP stream is equally pointless — the platform buffer is the constraint.

Protocol Dominant latency stage Encode stage Transport stage Decode/buffer stage Optimisation target
HDMI / SDI Cable propagation None 1–4 ms None Cable length only
Full NDI Encode + decode (equal) 16–33 ms <1 ms 16–33 ms Reduce buffer depth in device settings
NDI HX3/HX2 Encode (GOP structure) 50–150 ms <5 ms 30–80 ms Switch to Full NDI if latency critical
SRT (LAN) SRT latency setting 30–80 ms 20–80 ms 30–60 ms Reduce SRT latency to 4× RTT
SRT (internet) SRT latency setting 30–80 ms 120–300 ms 30–60 ms Reduce SRT latency — measure RTT first
RTMP Platform CDN buffer 30–100 ms 100–500 ms 5–30 seconds Use platform ULL mode — nothing else works
HLS CDN segmentation + player 30–100 ms CDN segments 6–45 seconds Switch to LL-HLS or SRT instead

05 Protocol Selection by Latency Requirement #use-cases

Different applications have different latency tolerances. Use this guide to select the correct protocol for your latency requirement — not just for transport convenience.

Use case Maximum acceptable latency Recommended protocol Why
In-ear monitoring (IEM) <40 ms HDMI / SDI Any IP protocol adds too much latency for performers
Confidence monitors (same room) <80 ms HDMI / SDI / Full NDI Visible lip-sync issues above 80ms on same-room displays
Tally light systems <100 ms Full NDI / SDI Tally via NDI is reliable — NDI HX adds too much delay
PTZ camera control <200 ms Full NDI / NDI HX3 Pan/tilt response feels sluggish above 200ms
Multi-camera switching <500 ms Full NDI / NDI HX3 / SRT LAN Cut response and preview monitoring latency
Remote contribution (OB) <1 second SRT over internet 200–500ms acceptable for contribution — not viewer delivery
Interactive live stream (Q&A) <3 seconds RTMP ULL / LL-HLS Standard RTMP/HLS makes real-time interaction impossible
Broadcast / sports delivery Any — viewer accepts delay RTMP / HLS Viewers accept 15–30s delay for reliability and quality
Surveillance / CCTV monitoring <3 seconds RTSP / NDI HX RTSP native to most IP cameras and NVR systems
Medical imaging display <50 ms HDMI / SDI / USB capture Real-time procedure display requires near-zero latency

06 How to Reduce Video Latency #reduce

Latency reduction strategies depend entirely on which stage is the bottleneck. Applying the wrong fix wastes time and may introduce instability without improving latency.

Latency symptom Root cause Fix
NDI source delayed 80ms+ Full NDI default buffer depth Reduce video buffer in Pro Convert web GUI → NDI settings. Use low-latency mode in vMix source settings.
NDI HX camera feels sluggish H.265 GOP structure encode delay Switch to Full NDI source if available. Use NDI HX3 minimum — avoid HX2 for latency-sensitive applications.
SRT stream delayed 1+ seconds SRT latency setting too high Measure round-trip time with ping. Set SRT latency to 4× RTT. For 50ms RTT set 200ms SRT latency — not 2000ms.
RTMP viewer sees 20–30 second delay Platform CDN buffering Enable "Ultra Low Latency" in YouTube Studio or Twitch dashboard. Accept 3–5 seconds as minimum — this is platform-imposed.
HLS player shows 30+ second delay HLS segment size and playlist depth Reduce HLS segment duration to 1–2 seconds. Implement LL-HLS. Or switch to SRT/RTMP for latency-sensitive delivery.
RTSP feed delayed in VLC VLC default buffer In VLC: Tools → Preferences → Input/Codecs → Network caching. Reduce from 1000ms to 100–300ms.
Hardware encoder adds unexpected delay Encoder buffer depth or GOP size Set GOP/keyframe interval to 1× frame rate (e.g. 60 for 60fps). Reduce encoder buffer depth in web GUI. Use H.264 over H.265 for lower encode latency.
Golden rule: Always measure your actual glass-to-glass latency with a reference clock — point both a camera and a display at the same clock, record with a phone camera, count the frames of difference. Manufacturer specs are best-case figures under ideal conditions. Real deployments are always higher.

07 Common Questions #faq

08 Cite This Reference #cite

This data is freely available for use in articles, guides, system designs and educational materials. Please attribute iView Data as the source using one of the formats below.

Citation formats
APA
iView Data Ltd. (2026). Glass-to-Glass Video Latency Comparison — HDMI, SDI, NDI, SRT, RTMP and HLS. Retrieved from https://iviewdata.com/video-latency-comparison/
Chicago / MLA
iView Data Ltd. "Glass-to-Glass Video Latency Comparison — HDMI, SDI, NDI, SRT, RTMP and HLS." iviewdata.com, June 2026. https://iviewdata.com/video-latency-comparison/
Inline / journalist reference
According to latency reference data published by iView Data (iviewdata.com), Full NDI glass-to-glass latency on a Gigabit LAN is typically 40–80ms, compared to 5–30 seconds for standard RTMP delivery to consumer platforms…
HTML link
<a href="https://iviewdata.com/video-latency-comparison/">Glass-to-Glass Video Latency Comparison — iView Data</a>

Data is reviewed and updated periodically. Please link to this page rather than copying the data, so your readers always see the most current figures. All latency figures represent typical values under optimal conditions — real-world deployments may vary.

¹ Glass-to-glass latency figures represent typical values under optimal conditions on well-provisioned hardware. Camera sensor processing, display panel processing and cable propagation delay all contribute additional latency not listed in protocol specifications.

² Full NDI latency figures assume SpeedHQ intra-frame compression with buffer depth set to minimum. Higher buffer depth settings increase latency proportionally.

³ RTMP and HLS glass-to-glass totals are dominated by platform CDN buffering, which is controlled by the platform operator and may change without notice. YouTube, Facebook and Twitch latency figures reflect typical values as of June 2026.

⁴ SRT latency is fully configurable and should be set to 4× the measured round-trip time. The figures stated assume a 50ms RTT for internet and 5ms RTT for LAN.

⁵ NDI is a trademark of NewTek Inc / Vizrt Group. SRT is an open-source protocol maintained by the SRT Alliance. iView Data Ltd has no affiliation with these organisations.

Need Low-Latency Hardware?

Browse professional encoders, decoders and capture cards supporting Full NDI, SRT and ultra-low-latency IP video — from UK stock with same-day dispatch.

Related Guides
Sid Ahmed
Broadcast & Streaming Specialist — iView Data Ltd
20+ years experience in IP video, broadcast infrastructure and AV hardware. Sid specifies and supports Magewell encoding, NDI, SRT and low-latency IP video deployments for broadcast, corporate, education and medical clients across the UK and Europe.
Secure Payments
PayPal
Square
Google Pay
Apple Pay
SSL Encrypted
Added to Cart