The Ring Indoor Cam (2nd Gen), at just $24.99 (half off its original $49.99 price), is a little white disc that gives you a clear, no-fuss window into your space, ready to mount on a shelf or stick to a wall.
Open the box, and you’ll find the device itself, a privacy cover already in place, a 6.5-foot USB cable, and a 10-watt power adapter that plugs into any standard outlet. No batteries to worry about, no ladders required for a basic install—just peel off the backing on the adhesive mount (or screw it into place). The whole process takes five to ten minutes, assuming your Wi-Fi is at least 2 Mbps upload on the 2.4-gigahertz band.
- Get the whole picture — Watch over your home or business day or night in 1080p HD video with Live View and Color Night Vision.
- Help cover every corner, counter and more — Perfect for businesses or homes that need the flexibility to cover and protect multiple indoor spaces by...
- Versatile mounting options — Find the perfect angle on a table, or mount up high with the flexible swivel mount. Indoor Cam is plug-in, making it...
Fire up the Ring app—free on your phone or tablet—and the cam syncs without drama, pulling in a 1080p feed that’s sharp enough to read the fine print on a cereal box across the room. The lens covers 143 degrees diagonally, wide enough to frame most living spaces without blind spots, and it holds steady all day with good colors. At night, color night vision kicks in, while motion trips an alert straight to your notifications, with a few seconds of pre-roll footage to show what led up to it. Customize zones in the app to ignore the fan whirring in the corner, and you’ll avoid the false alarms that plague bigger systems. Two-way talk pipes through with decent noise cancellation. The built-in siren adds a cautious edge when needed and can be activated with the press of a button on your phone.
A manual cover—attached right out of the box—slips over the lens and mutes the mic with one swipe, so you have full control over when the cam goes dark. Black out sensitive areas like a bathroom door or your nightstand through software zones and add end-to-end encryption so videos can’t be seen by prying eyes. Ring’s app dashboard ties it all together, from live pings to connected devices like doorbells or outdoor cams, so one glance covers it all. Ring Home members receive more: ordinary tiers include device modes for arming when you’re gone, while premium adds 24/7 cloud recording for up to 14 days—but this is restricted to 10 devices per location and requires reliable internet. The video history for events is 180 days, and a beta search feature searches through clips for specific things, such as that one parcel drop.