5 min. reading

Facebook Simplifies Video: All Content Becomes Reels Soon

Here's a platform update that's going to change how millions of people share videos. As Facebook simplifies video creation, they've just announced that in the coming months, every video uploaded to the platform will automatically become a reel. No more choosing between formats - it's all unified now. Let's break down what this move actually means for anyone creating content.

Katarína Šimčíková Katarína Šimčíková
Freelance I Digital Marketing Specialist, Ecommerce Bridge EU
This article was translated for you by artificial intelligence
Facebook Simplifies Video: All Content Becomes Reels Soon
Source: Depositphotos: Photo by dimarik (edited in Canva Pro)

Understanding the Change: Everything Becomes Reels

The Core Update Explained

Facebook’s reasoning is straightforward: people use their platform daily to connect with friends, capture memories, and share interests. Their solution? Make video sharing simpler by removing the choice entirely.

Here’s what they’re doing: Instead of having separate paths for regular videos and reels, there’s now just one. Upload any video, and it becomes a reel automatically. The twist? These reels won’t have length limits or format restrictions.

The practical difference:

Current process: Pick between video upload or reel creation, each with different interfaces

New process: One streamlined flow with enhanced creative options

End result: Less decision fatigue, more creative tools

Previously, creators dealt with two separate workflows – one for Feed videos and another for Reels. Each had different tools and options. Now Facebook is merging these into a single experience that gives access to more creative features while letting you control who sees your content.

Rollout timeline: This isn’t happening overnight. Facebook plans a gradual global rollout over the coming months, covering both personal profiles and business pages. Their goal is making reel creation and discovery smoother across the platform.

Your Privacy Settings Get Simplified Too

Control Stays in Your Hands

One concern people might have: “What happens to my privacy settings?” Facebook addresses this by unifying how privacy works across formats.

What’s changing with privacy: Your default audience setting will be consistent whether you’re posting to Feed or creating reels. When this update reaches your account, you’ll see a prompt asking you to confirm your settings or adjust them if your Feed and reel audiences were different before.

Your options remain:

• Share with friends only

• Target specific groups

• Go public for wider reach

• Mix and match based on content type

The key point: you’re still deciding who sees your content. The same audience controls exist – they’re just unified now. Whether you want to keep things private among friends or reach a broader audience for engagement, those choices haven’t changed.

Need to adjust settings later? Facebook’s Help Center has guidance on viewing and changing audience preferences whenever needed.

Interface Updates: The Video Tab Gets Rebranded

What You’ll See in Your Navigation

Last year, Facebook introduced a fullscreen video player and Video Tab designed to work with all video lengths. With this announcement, they’re renaming that Video tab to Reels tab.

Important clarification: This name change doesn’t affect the content you see. Facebook still supports diverse topics and video lengths. The recommendation system remains the same – personalised based on your interests and activity.

Reintroducing the Reels Tab

Source: about.fb.com

What stays consistent:

Algorithm recommendations tailored to you

Support for short, long, and Live videos

Same variety of creators and topics

• No changes to how content gets suggested

Essentially, it’s a rebrand that reflects the new unified approach, but your viewing experience continues as before.

Existing Content Remains Untouched

Your Library Stays Intact

Worried about videos you’ve already posted? Don’t be. Facebook confirms that existing video content stays exactly where it is, continuing to perform normally for your audience.

The breakdown:

Current videos: Remain on your profile or Page unchanged

Performance metrics: Continue tracking as usual

Creator benefits: Existing eligibility for distribution continues

Future uploads: Will follow the new reels format

This means there’s no scrambling to save or repost content. Your video library remains functional while new uploads get the unified treatment.

Practical Implications for Content Creators

How This Affects Your Strategy

For content creation:

• Simplified workflow eliminates format decisions

• Enhanced creative tools become available in one place

• No length restrictions means more flexibility

• Consistent publishing experience across all video types

For business accounts:

• Same targeting capabilities remain available

• Analytics and insights get unified

• Content planning becomes more streamlined

• Format confusion disappears from strategy discussions

For individual creators:

• All creative tools accessible in one location

• Flexible content length without restrictions

• Monetization eligibility continues unchanged

• Publishing process becomes more straightforward

Videos on Facebook - becoming reels

Source: about.fb.com

Getting Ready for the Transition

Steps You Can Take

Before the rollout reaches you:

• Review which creative tools you currently rely on

• Check your current audience settings across formats

• Brief your team or collaborators on the upcoming changes

When the update arrives:

• Confirm audience settings when prompted

• Explore any new creative tools that become available

• Continue your regular posting routine without major changes

After implementation:

• Track how the unified format affects your content performance

• Take advantage of the streamlined publishing workflow

• Experiment with any expanded creative capabilities

The Bigger Picture

Facebook’s video simplification reflects a broader trend toward reducing complexity in content creation. By eliminating format choices and enhancing available tools, they’re betting that creators will appreciate having fewer decisions to make and more capabilities to explore.

Key advantages:

  • Decision fatigue reduction (no format choice required)
  • Enhanced creative tool access
  • Consistent privacy and audience controls
  • Flexible content length options
  • Preservation of existing content and performance

Timeline reminder: This rolls out gradually over the coming months, giving everyone time to adapt to the unified video experience as it becomes available.

Share article
Katarína Šimčíková
Freelance I Digital Marketing Specialist, Ecommerce Bridge EU

Freelance Digital Marketing Specialist at Ecommerce Bridge with nearly a decade of experience in digital marketing, where I’ve specialised in managing international teams and building strategic partnerships. As former International Team Lead at Groupon, I managed teams across various European countries, handled KPI achievement, and worked daily with agencies in English. These days, I focus on content strategy, link building, and coordinating with international agencies in e-commerce expansion. What truly fulfils me is working with people and seeing everyone happy and satisfied with the results. I’m passionate about researching and writing about the latest trends in e-commerce and digital marketing, bringing fresh insights and industry news to our readers. I hold a Master’s degree in Mass Media Studies and completed international courses in London and Bristol.

Similar articles
Will ChatGPT Become OpenAI’s New Revenue Stream?
3 min. reading

Will ChatGPT Become OpenAI’s New Revenue Stream?

OpenAI is building a payment system so people can buy stuff directly through ChatGPT without leaving the chat. According to Reuters reports, merchants will pay the AI company commissions on sales. It’s a new way to make money after losing $5 billion last year despite hitting $10 billion in revenue.

Katarína Šimčíková Katarína Šimčíková
Freelance I Digital Marketing Specialist, Ecommerce Bridge EU
Marketing Teams Ignore £30 Million Problem: E-commerce Returns
4 min. reading

Marketing Teams Ignore £30 Million Problem: E-commerce Returns

Online shoppers return 30-40% more products than in-store customers, but marketing tools don’t track this data. According to analysis from The-future-of-commerce.com, one fashion brand discovered a £30 million gap between reported revenue and actual earnings after accounting for returns. Most digital marketing metrics completely miss this problem.

Katarína Šimčíková Katarína Šimčíková
Freelance I Digital Marketing Specialist, Ecommerce Bridge EU