The video doorbell was the breakout smart home product of the late 2010s and is now the most-installed smart-home device in U.S. homes. Choice matters: a good one tells you who's at the door before you open it, captures package thieves, talks to delivery drivers, and integrates with the rest of the house. A bad one is a flashing light and a useless app.
Wired vs battery doorbells
Wired (hardwired to existing doorbell transformer)
Replaces your existing doorbell button and uses the transformer that already powers your indoor chime. Pros: always powered, continuous pre-buffer recording, faster wake-up time (no missed moments), more processing power for AI features. Cons: requires a working low-voltage doorbell transformer (most homes have one but verify), some modern doorbells need a 16-24V transformer that older homes don't have.
Battery (rechargeable, no wiring)
Mount, charge, done. Pros: renters can install in minutes, no electrical knowledge needed, works on doors without existing doorbell wiring. Cons: 1-3 month battery life depending on activity, slower wake-up means you miss the first second or two of motion, must remove the unit to charge or use a charging cradle, fewer continuous-recording options.
Dual-power doorbells
Increasingly common — a battery-powered doorbell that also accepts the doorbell wiring for trickle charging. Best of both: continuous power when wired, fallback to battery if power is interrupted. Recommended for new buyers if you have doorbell wiring available.
Resolution and aspect ratio
Doorbell resolution has converged on three options:
- 1080p (2MP): the older baseline. Adequate for general identification.
- 1536p / 2K (4MP-ish): the modern sweet spot. Better face identification, more digital-zoom headroom.
- 4K (8MP): overkill for most porches. Useful only if you have a long driveway and want to see the street from your porch.
Aspect ratio matters more than total pixel count for doorbells. Traditional 16:9 cameras crop out the most important part of the frame: the package on the ground. Look for a "head-to-toe" or "tall aspect ratio" (1:1 or 4:3 or even 3:4) doorbell. You want to see the person's face and the package at their feet in the same frame.
Field of view
Most modern doorbells offer 150°-180° horizontal field of view. Wider isn't always better — fisheye distortion at the edges makes faces hard to recognize, and the very wide angle waste pixels on irrelevant porch corners.
For most porches: 160° horizontal works. For corner installations: wider FOV captures both approach directions. For long porches where visitors approach from the front: narrower FOV with more pixels-per-degree on the target zone.
AI detection (person, package, vehicle)
The single biggest doorbell quality differentiator in 2026 is on-device AI:
- Person detection — alerts only when a person is present, not when leaves blow or shadows move.
- Package detection — notifies when a package is left and (separately) when one is removed. The most useful single AI feature.
- Vehicle detection — for doorbells overlooking a driveway.
- Animal detection — separates "dog walked across porch" from "person on porch."
- Familiar face recognition — "Mom is at the door." Privacy-sensitive (see below) and accuracy varies widely.
- Audio detection — doorbell rings, knock, glass break, scream, baby cry.
On-device vs cloud AI: on-device is faster, more private, and works during internet outages. Cloud-based AI can use larger models but adds latency and privacy concerns. The trend is toward on-device for everything except face recognition (which still often runs in the cloud).
Two-way audio
The doorbell speaker quality and microphone quality matter more than the marketing suggests. Cheap doorbells produce a tinny, distorted voice that delivery drivers can barely understand and that's embarrassing to use.
Features to look for:
- Full-duplex audio (you and the visitor can talk over each other; half-duplex requires walkie-talkie style).
- Noise cancellation (especially for windy locations).
- Pre-recorded responses ("Please leave the package at the door, thanks") for moments you can't talk.
- Indoor chime that doesn't sound like a phone notification.
Storage and subscriptions
This is where doorbells often disappoint after purchase:
- Live view usually works without a subscription.
- Recorded video review almost always requires a subscription. Without it, you see motion notifications but cannot review the footage.
- AI detection features may be gated behind a higher subscription tier.
- Multi-camera bundles — subscription pricing per device adds up fast.
Alternatives to subscription cloud:
- Doorbells with local SD card storage. Footage stays on the device. Cheaper long-term, but the doorbell can be stolen with the storage in it.
- Doorbells that integrate with an NVR via RTSP or ONVIF. Footage stored at your NVR.
- Apple HomeKit Secure Video — doorbell records to iCloud storage you already pay for, end-to-end encrypted.
- Home Assistant-recorded doorbells — local Home Assistant install, custom Frigate or similar local-AI integration.
Platform integration
If you've committed to a home platform, prioritize a doorbell that integrates natively:
- Apple Home: HomeKit Secure Video doorbells, with live view on Apple TV, HomePod chime announcements, lock screen previews.
- Google Home: Nest doorbells natively, plus generic Matter / Google Home doorbells in 2026. Cast to Nest Hub displays.
- Alexa: Echo Show displays as in-house chime and live-view monitor.
- SmartThings: good for multi-protocol homes.
Cross-platform Matter doorbells are starting to appear in late 2026 but are still rare. Native platform support is the path for the next year.
Privacy considerations
A doorbell is a camera and microphone pointed at a public sidewalk. Treat that responsibility seriously.
- Local laws on audio recording. Many jurisdictions (e.g., California) require all-party consent for audio recording. Two-way audio is generally fine; passive audio recording of everyone who walks by your house may not be.
- Public-vs-private boundary. Your camera can record what's visible from your front porch. It generally cannot legally capture a neighbor's private space (their back yard through a window).
- Police access. Some doorbell platforms have programs that share footage with law enforcement. Read the privacy policy.
- Facial recognition databases. Familiar-face features require building a database of family/friend faces. Consider whether you're comfortable hosting that with a third-party vendor.
- Privacy zones. Most doorbells let you mask out parts of the frame from recording. Use this for adjacent windows and public areas.
Installation
- Transformer voltage: verify yours is 16-24V AC for wired doorbells. Some older homes have 8-10V transformers that won't power modern doorbells.
- Mounting height: 48"-52" off the ground. Higher and you only capture tops-of-heads; lower and the camera is easy to disable.
- Mounting angle: some kits include angled wedges for porches where the doorbell is offset from the door. Use them — getting the camera pointed at where people stand matters.
- Wi-Fi signal at the door: walk to the doorbell location with your phone and check signal strength before installing. Doorbells with weak Wi-Fi are an endless source of frustration.
Buying checklist
- Wired or dual-power if you have transformer wiring
- Tall aspect ratio (head-to-toe / 1:1 or taller)
- 2K resolution or better
- On-device person + package detection at minimum
- Native support for your home platform
- Storage path you're comfortable with (cloud sub, local SD, NVR, or HomeKit Secure Video)
- Full-duplex audio
- Privacy-zone masking
- Solid Wi-Fi signal at the install location
- Reasonable subscription pricing for the features you actually want
For wider security camera context (PoE, NVRs, 4K), see home security cameras. For lock pairings, see smart door locks.
- EFF — Privacy and surveillance guidance
- Connectivity Standards Alliance — Matter specification