--- title: 'Pavleur vs Fathom — Meeting Copilot Compared' excerpt: 'How Pavleur compares to Fathom for meeting notes: privacy-first local capture, video and screenshots, and automatic post-meeting reports.' date: '2026-07-09T00:00:00.000Z' lastModified: '2026-07-09' author: 'Pavleur Team' tags: ['comparisons', 'meeting-ai'] keywords: [ 'pavleur vs fathom', 'fathom alternative', 'ai meeting notes comparison', 'privacy-first meeting copilot', 'meeting recap tool', ] competitor: 'Fathom' competitorUrl: 'https://fathom.video' verdict: 'Fathom is a well-known cloud meeting recorder for automatic call notes. Choose Pavleur when you want privacy-first local capture, video and on-screen screenshots in the record, and automatic post-meeting reports that improve over time.' tldr: 'Fathom is a cloud-based meeting recorder that transcribes calls and generates notes. Pavleur is a privacy-first desktop meeting copilot: it captures locally, records video and on-screen screenshots alongside the audio, and writes automatic post-meeting reports. This page frames how Pavleur compares and when each fits.' keyTakeaways: - 'Fathom is a cloud meeting recorder/transcriber; Pavleur is a privacy-first desktop copilot that captures locally on your machine' - 'Pavleur records video and on-screen screenshots, so what someone shares on screen survives the call — not just the audio' - 'Pavleur produces automatic post-meeting reports and improves at your recurring meetings over time' - 'Fathom may fit better if you specifically want a cloud-native recorder wired into a broad set of cloud integrations' --- ## How Pavleur compares to Fathom If you are evaluating meeting-notes tools, Fathom is one of the names that comes up early. It is a cloud meeting recorder: it joins or records your calls, transcribes them, and produces summarized notes you can review afterward. Its reputation is built on getting call recordings and highlights out of the meeting with very little setup, and plenty of teams use it and like it for exactly that. Pavleur is built around a different center of gravity. It is a **privacy-first desktop meeting copilot** that captures the meeting locally, keeps the full record so nothing is lost, and writes an automatic report after every call. This page is an honest framing of how the two compare and when to choose each — not an authoritative teardown of Fathom, whose exact current pricing and feature set you should confirm on their site. ## What Pavleur does differently ### Privacy-first local capture Pavleur runs as a desktop app and captures the meeting on your own machine. For teams that are cautious about where meeting audio and transcripts live, keeping capture local instead of routing every call through a third-party cloud recorder is the headline difference. If data residency and "who can see our calls" is a live question for you, this is the axis that matters most. ### Video and on-screen screenshots, not just audio Most meeting-notes tools are built around the transcript. But a lot of the value in a working meeting is **on the screen** — the workflow a customer demos, the dashboard someone walks through, the slide with the number that matters. Pavleur captures video and on-screen screenshots alongside the conversation, so that context is in the record. Audio-only notes lose it. ### No meeting-information loss Because Pavleur keeps the full record of the call, the specific ask, the exact objection, and the screen someone shared are all preserved — not compressed away before you get to review them. You work from the record, not from a summary that already dropped the detail you needed. ### Automatic post-meeting reports that improve over time After each call, Pavleur writes an automatic report: decisions, action items, and next steps. And because it is built to **auto-improve** on your recurring meetings, it gets sharper at the calls you actually repeat — the weekly sync, the standing customer check-in — rather than treating every meeting as brand new. ## Who each is for **Fathom is a fit if** you want a cloud-native meeting recorder that joins calls and produces automatic notes, and you are comfortable with cloud capture and want the specific integration surface a cloud tool offers. **Pavleur is a fit if** you want privacy-first local capture, you meet in calls where people share their screens and that visual context matters, and you want automatic reports that get better at your recurring meetings over time. ## When Fathom might fit better Being honest builds trust, so here is the fair version: if your requirement is specifically a **cloud-native recorder** — you want calls captured in the cloud and wired into a particular set of cloud tools, and local desktop capture is not a priority — a purpose-built cloud recorder like Fathom may map to that better. Confirm Fathom's current capabilities and pricing directly on their site; we deliberately do not quote competitor prices here because they change. Pavleur's edge is not "more cloud integrations." It is privacy-first local capture, visual capture of what is shared on screen, and reports that compound over time. ## FAQ ## Is Pavleur a Fathom alternative? Yes. Both help you capture meetings and get notes afterward. Pavleur differs by capturing locally on your desktop (privacy-first), recording video and on-screen screenshots alongside the audio, and producing automatic post-meeting reports that improve at your recurring calls. ## What is the main difference between Pavleur and Fathom? The center of gravity. Fathom is a cloud meeting recorder focused on transcription and notes. Pavleur is a privacy-first desktop copilot focused on losing nothing — including the screens people share — and writing reports that get sharper over time. ## Does Pavleur capture screen shares? Yes. Pavleur captures video and on-screen screenshots, so a workflow or slide someone shares survives the call. Audio-only notes tools do not keep that context. ## Explore more See how Pavleur fits different roles on the [for-teams pages](/for), browse ready-made agendas in [meeting templates](/meeting-templates), or compare Pavleur against [other meeting tools](/compare).