If you’re looking for a wider selection of discounts, check out our best Cyber Monday deals roundup.
Arlo ticks all the boxes with crisp 2K video, a wide 160-degree field of view, two-way audio, and a direct Wi-Fi connection, and the Pro 5S is my pick for the best outdoor security cameras. The Arlo app is fast to load, offers rich notifications, and supports two-factor authentication, so you can log in with your fingerprint or face, phone permitting. There is an expensive subscription for topic detection, smart alerts, and cloud storage.
As my top choice among the best indoor security cameras, the Tapo C120 has it all. It records video up to 2K resolution, supports two-way audio (with little lag), and supports microSD cards up to 512-GB for local recording. It has impressive color night vision, on-device smart detection (people, pets, and vehicles) without a subscription, and it also has an IP66 rating, which means you can even use it outdoors (provided you can run a power cable). We like this camera at its normal price (it’s about $35), so it’s a deal.
Doorbells can’t get any smarter than this, and the Nest Doorbell tops our best video doorbell guide. Many new doorbells claim higher resolution than Nest’s 1080p (including Nest’s new wired models), but at 30 frames per second with HDR support, it still delivers quality footage. You also get smarts like facial recognition, so you know if the kids are home or if there’s a stranger lurking on your porch. But you need an expensive Google Home Premium subscription, from $10 per month ($100/year), although that covers all your Nest cameras.
This versatile, pan-and-tilt camera is ideal if you want a convenient device. Built-in solar panel keeps the battery topped up. The camera features a dual-lens system with a main lens that boasts a 135-degree field of view and records sharp video, paired with a telephoto lens that offers 3X zoom in the center of the frame (it goes up to 8X hybrid zoom). It also has 8GB of storage built in to keep things local.
More and more good quality, affordable security cameras are hitting the market, and the Blink Mini 2 is one of our favorites. It can record 1080p footage at up to 30 fps, offers good low-light performance, and claims to have person detection on the device. The problem is that a subscription costs $4 per month or $40 per year for a single camera, but it gives you 60-days of unlimited cloud video history. This camera is ideal for sitting quietly on a shelf and keeping an eye on your home while you’re away.
You can record continuously at up to 4K resolution with this battery-powered pan-and-tilt camera, which is a rare combination, but you’ll need to charge it often (weekly), even with solar panels, unless you live in a very sunny place. It can rotate up to 355 degrees and tilt up to 90 degrees, supports Wi-Fi 6 (2.4 or 5 GHz), and has a versatile L-shaped bracket for easy installation on a wall or ceiling.
Security cameras with floodlights are great for your garage or backyard, as motion triggers the light and color video. The E340 is a dual-lens camera with a 3K wide-angle lens and a 2K telephoto lens with up to 8X zoom to capture details up to 50 feet away. Adjustable light panels provide up to 2,000 lumens. It rotates 360 degrees and tilts 120 degrees, and records locally to a microSD card or HomeBase 3 (both sold separately).
A delicious 25 percent discount on Google’s latest indoor Nest Cam is a big temptation to upgrade to 2K. You can expect crisp video, familiar facial recognition, and accurate animated alerts day or night, but you need a Google Home Premium subscription ($10 per month) to get the most out of it, and there’s no local storage option.
This incredibly versatile device features a dual-lens design, which combines a regular 4K camera with a 130-degree field of view with a 2K telephoto lens that supports 3x optical zoom. You can pan up to 360 degrees and tilt up to 75 degrees, there are four preset positions, privacy mode, two-way audio, and AI tracking with onboard AI to detect people, pets, and sounds. Record locally to a microSD card or with HomeBase 3 (both sold separately).
Offering everything you could want, including crisp 2K video at 24 frames per second, two-way audio, and a compact design that includes a privacy shutter, it’s no wonder it’s an upgrade pick in our best indoor security cameras guide. The Arlo app is fast to load, offers excellent notifications, and supports two-factor authentication, so you can log in with your fingerprint or face, phone permitting. We’ve seen discounts before but never this low. Just remember to keep expensive subscriptions in mind.
This is one of the cheapest video doorbells worth considering, offering 1080p video, but with a limited field of view (135 degrees horizontal and only 80 degrees vertical). Notifications lack images or videos and come slower than some competitors, but they come. Two-way audio is standard, and it takes two AA batteries. Buy it with a sync module to enable local recording.
This two-camera kit comes with a Home Hub, and, although there are newer models, it’s still an excellent system. The EufyCam 3 has built-in solar, up to 4K video resolution, and 16GB of local storage (expandable to 16TB) on a connected HomeBase 3 hub. You also get people, pet, and vehicle recognition on the device, and the system can even recognize familiar faces.
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