Best Smart Doorbells Under $100 2026: Top 5 Budget Video Doorbells That Deliver


Smart doorbells have gotten cheaper without losing the features that make them useful. Under $100, you can now get 1080p video, two-way audio, motion detection, and smartphone notifications - everything most people actually need from a video doorbell.

The premium models add better video quality, local storage, and fancier AI features. But for keeping an eye on your front door and knowing when a package arrives or someone rings the bell, the sub-$100 options have closed the gap considerably.

There are a few things to check before buying: whether the doorbell requires existing wiring or works battery-powered, what the monthly subscription costs are for video history, and which smart home platforms it supports. All five picks below are transparent on these points.

1. Ring Video Doorbell (4th Gen)

The Ring Video Doorbell 4th Gen is the most popular smart doorbell in this price range and consistently lands around $90-100 on sale. The 1080p video quality is solid, the motion detection is reliable, and the two-way audio works well enough for conversations with delivery drivers or visitors.

Ring’s app is one of the most polished in the smart doorbell market, and the integration with Alexa devices means you can see live video on Echo Show displays, announce visitors through Echo speakers, and create Routines. If you already own Amazon devices, the ecosystem integration is seamless.

The main ongoing cost is the Ring Protect subscription ($4-5/month) for video history storage. Without a subscription, you lose recordings but keep live view and real-time alerts. The doorbell works battery-powered or wired.

Quick Release battery makes swapping easy - no screwdriver needed.

Best for: Amazon/Alexa households and anyone who wants a polished, widely-supported smart doorbell.

2. Wyze Video Doorbell Pro

Wyze Video Doorbell Pro is remarkable for its price - around $50-60, with 1440p video that outresolves most sub-$100 competitors. The field of view covers both face and package-level, so you see the person at the door and what they’re carrying in a single shot.

Wyze offers local storage via microSD card in the chime unit, which means no subscription required for basic video history. Camplus (Wyze’s subscription) adds AI person detection, longer clips, and cloud backup for around $5/month, but it’s optional rather than necessary.

The app is functional, the two-way audio is clear, and motion detection customization is good. Smart home integration includes Google Home and Amazon Alexa. Apple Home support is available with some limitations.

The wired installation requires an existing doorbell transformer. No battery option.

Best for: Budget buyers who want excellent video quality and optional cloud storage with local backup included.

3. Eufy Video Doorbell E340

Eufy Video Doorbell E340 stands out for one thing: no mandatory subscription. All video storage happens locally on the HomeBase hub (included), with no monthly fees. You get 16GB of local storage standard, and if you want cloud backup it’s optional.

The dual-camera design covers both the face of the visitor (telephoto) and their full body with ground view (wide-angle) simultaneously - a feature usually found on more expensive models. 2K resolution and color night vision are strong for this price tier.

The app is clean and feature-complete with activity zones, quick response messages, and notifications with preview images. Works with Alexa and Google Assistant. HomeKit support is available on select configurations.

The installation is wired. The HomeBase requires an ethernet connection to your router.

Best for: Users who specifically want to avoid subscriptions and prefer local storage.

4. Google Nest Doorbell (Battery)

The Google Nest Doorbell Battery was designed to work without subscriptions and still provide useful video history. With a free Google account, you get the last three hours of event video clips automatically. Nest Aware (subscription) extends this to 30 days and adds familiar face recognition.

The camera quality is excellent - HDR video handles tricky lighting (bright outdoor sun vs. shaded porch) better than most sub-$100 doorbells. Google’s on-device AI distinguishes between people, packages, animals, and vehicles, sending specific alerts rather than generic motion notifications.

Integration with Google Home and Google Assistant is tight. If you have other Nest cameras or a Google smart speaker, the ecosystem connections work well.

Best for: Google/Android households and users who want smart AI detection without a required subscription.

The Blink Video Doorbell is the most affordable option on this list, typically landing under $50. It runs on two AA batteries (no wiring required at all) and gives you 1080p video, two-way audio, and motion detection.

Blink’s free plan includes 60-day trials of cloud storage; after that, cloud clips require Blink’s $3/month subscription. Local storage via a USB drive is supported through the Sync Module 2 (sold separately), which is a good alternative for avoiding monthly fees.

Alexa integration works well, and the app is clean. For a first smart doorbell or a rental property where wiring isn’t an option, the Blink Video Doorbell is a sensible, low-commitment choice.

Best for: Renters, first-time smart doorbell buyers, and anyone who wants battery power with zero wiring.


Bottom Line

The Ring Video Doorbell 4th Gen is the most well-rounded pick if you’re in the Amazon ecosystem, and the app quality justifies the subscription cost for most users. If you want to skip monthly fees entirely, the Eufy E340 with local storage is the best answer at this price. For a no-frills, no-wiring option that just works, the Blink Video Doorbell keeps it simple.


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