The Arlo Video Doorbell ships in both wired and battery-powered configurations and is the brand's flexible mid-tier doorbell, with a 180-degree square field of view that captures the full porch including packages on the ground. Reviewers at The Verge and others called out its strong app, integration with Arlo's home-security ecosystem, and the absence of a hub requirement. Continuous video recording and AI features need an Arlo Secure subscription.

Full review
Video and Hardware Quality
The Arlo Video Doorbell tied to this listing is the 2K second-generation model, which records at 1944x1944 in an unusual 1:1 square aspect ratio. That square format paired with the 180-degree field of view delivers a true head-to-toe view, framing a visitor's face and a package on the ground in the same shot, which is one of the widest and most complete porch views in this group. HDR sharpens contrast in difficult lighting.
The higher 2K resolution gives the camera room to push up to 12x digital zoom while staying usable; Tom's Guide reviewers reported being able to read package text and pick out fine facial detail even when zoomed in. Color night vision is another standout, lighting scenes in color rather than infrared grayscale when there is ambient light. The hardware is compact at roughly 5.6 inches tall and weighs about 7.2 ounces.
Features, Subscription and Storage
Arlo packs in capable detection: person, vehicle, package and animal recognition, plus a built-in siren you can trigger from the app. The free experience covers live view and real-time notifications, and a one-month Arlo Secure trial ships in the box. But like Ring, the meaningful features hide behind a plan.
An Arlo Secure subscription is required for recorded cloud video history (up to 60 days), the AI object-recognition categories, activity zones and the Early Warning emergency response add-on; without it, you get alerts but no playback. Plans start around $7.99 per month billed annually after the trial. There is no local-storage hub option as eufy offers, so all saved footage is cloud-bound and gated. As with Ring, budget for that ongoing fee when comparing it against subscription-free alternatives.
Installation, Ecosystem and Who It's For
Flexibility is the Arlo's selling point. It ships ready to run on its built-in rechargeable lithium-ion battery, which Arlo estimates needs charging roughly twice a year under light use, or it can connect to existing 16-to-24V doorbell wiring for continuous charging. Critically, it does not require a separate base station to operate, so installation is simpler than eufy's hub-dependent setup. The body is IP65-rated against rain and temperature extremes.
On compatibility, Arlo is the broadest in this roundup, working with Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant and Apple HomeKit, so it fits more households regardless of which ecosystem they have invested in. That cross-platform reach plus the wide square 2K view makes it a strong pick for buyers who want maximum flexibility in mounting and smart-home pairing, provided they accept the mandatory subscription for recordings and the battery life that drops under heavy traffic.
Strengths
- +180° diagonal field of view
- +Built-in siren
- +Two-way audio
- +Package detection
Watch-outs
- −Requires Arlo subscription for cloud storage
- −Battery life can be limited
How it compares
The 180° diagonal view captures packages at feet level, a unique advantage over competitors.
Who this is for
At a glance: Users wanting a wide field of view and built-in deterrent features.
Why you’d buy the Arlo Video Doorbell
- 180° diagonal field of view.
- Built-in siren.
- Two-way audio.
Why you’d skip it
- Requires Arlo subscription for cloud storage.
- Battery life can be limited.
Rating sources
“Image: Arlo Arlo has announced a new wire-free video doorbell that runs on rechargeable batteries, which should make it much easier for most people to install.”
Our 3.9 score is the average of these published ratings. Ratings marked * were derived from the reviewer’s written analysis or video transcript — the publisher didn’t print an explicit numeric score, so we inferred one from their own words. Click through to verify. More about methodology.



