What’s the Best Camera to Watch My Small Business?
The short version? You don’t need to spend thousands on a 'pro' system when the Wyze Cam v4 offers the same 2.5K clarity and reliable storage for a fraction of the hardware cost.
If there’s one industry that has watched the rise of smart home security with palpable hysteria, it’s commercial security. And for good reason. Commercial security is big business, and companies like Wyze are a real threat.
Just look at the numbers. Commercial security system installation for a small business is going to run between $1,500 and $8,000 just for a basic setup. Mid-size commercial systems can approach $25K. Commercial-grade cameras run $700 to $1500 each. That’s just hardware. We’re not including the (usually non-negotiable) professional installation, monitoring, cloud storage, and maintenance fees that get stacked on top. These guys’ pricing makes Ring’s insane pricing models look downright charitable by comparison, and Ring, as we all know, is the spawn of Satan.
Unfortunately for them, the gap between commercial and consumer security cameras has been closing for years. Features that used to justify a four-figure investment—high resolution, local storage, two-way audio, smart detection, remote access, continuous cloud backup—are all now commonly available in cameras that cost under fifty bucks. More and more, the real question for small businesses isn’t whether they can afford commercial-grade cameras. It’s whether commercial-grade cameras are worth the price.
And sometimes they are!
We’re gonna be honest here. We’ll look at the concerns and questions you should have when selecting a camera for your business, and we’ll give you straight advice about which security camera best fits your needs, including places where commercial security is still your best bet.
Let’s start by looking at the problem from the commercial security companies’ point of view. Let’s consider the difference the way that they would describe it. If we can steel-man their arguments, it will tell us a lot about what a potential system needs. From there, we’ll find the best options for you.
You’ve worked hard to grow your business. Let’s find you the best security setup to keep it safe.
What’s Better about Commercial Security?
Even today, commercial security cameras do have advantages. Ignoring them would be doing you a disservice. Here they are:
1. Durability—Most commercial cameras have what is known as an “IK10 rating.” That’s a technical way of saying they can withstand a lot of abuse, including vandalism. You can throw rocks at a commercial camera and it will keep doing its thing. Wyze, Ring, Arlo, and Blink cameras can withstand blizzards and storms, but they can’t withstand blunt trauma.
Sure, you could put our cameras up high or behind plexiglass. But if vandalism is a chief concern, home security cameras may not be for you.
2. Ease of Removal—In addition to vandalism, it is also very easy to pull a home security camera off the wall. That problem gets compounded if the footage of the thief is located inside the camera that just got stolen. Now you’ve lost your camera and your incriminating footage, which brings us to...
3. Storage—Where is the footage stored? With a commercial system, the footage is often both in the cloud and locked up in a hardened unit somewhere on site. If the footage is only in the camera or only in the cloud, then either one can be a vulnerability, because…
4. Power and WiFi—This is the big one. You hear it all the time and it’s real. Home systems are at the mercy of electricity and wifi. Cut off their power and they stop working. Cut off their wifi and they’ve nowhere to send their footage and alerts. Commercial companies solve that problem with systems that keep functioning even when the power is out or the internet is down.
5. Insurance—Many insurance companies will give you a discount if you pay for security. Sometimes they will mandate that it must be commercial security.
Designing the Right System for You
So that’s the case that commercial companies would make if they were here, and it’s helpful. Right off the bat we can say that if you’re in a high-risk environment—a jewelry store, a dispensary, a business in a location with an ongoing theft problem—there’s a real case for commercial hardware. We’re not here to tell you otherwise.
But the other reason that list is helpful is that, by looking at it, we can reverse engineer some questions to help you find solid security options to save you a lot of money.
First, what are the things you absolutely must have?
The Essentials
Let’s set a baseline. Here are the things you cannot compromise on if you’re looking for a camera for your business:
- 2K Video—A business security camera has to be able to see faces and license plates. Period. 2K is the minimum. Higher is even better. No scrimping here.
- Color Night Vision—Half the stuff you’re worried about happens at night. Night vision is a must and settling for flat, infrared black and white images when color is widely available would be crazy. Good security footage is all about good detail.
- Cloud and Local Storage—The vulnerabilities with cloud are that someone could cut your internet and then you couldn’t store video. The vulnerability with local is that someone could physically steal the footage. Secure your investment by having both, which means...
- Subscription—You’re going to need one. Most of our articles are about finding value even without a subscription. Here, you’re going to want the best subscription value you can find.
The Upgrades
Here’s where that list of commercial company strengths really comes in handy. There are some optional upgrades that will get you even closer to commercial standards, but without commercial prices. Let’s list them out.
- Independent Power—Get a wireless battery cam. First of all, you’re not going to have to worry about the eye sore of a cord at your place of business. Secondly, you can put them wherever you want instead of being stuck by an outlet. But most importantly, it’s going to give you a camera that keeps doing its job, even if someone cuts the power. Today’s battery cams can run for months on a single charge. This is a smart upgrade that addresses the biggest advantage of commercial security.
- Router on a UPS—UPS stands for “uninterruptible power supply,” and believe it or not, they’re pretty cheap. You can find a good one between $30 and $60. If your router is plugged into a UPS, your battery cameras will all keep recording to the cloud for hours, even if the power is cut. That gets you pretty close to the commercial standard. Could thieves still come in and tear out the UPS? Sure. But they can’t do it from the street. They’re going to have to pass in front of your cameras.
- Pan Cams—You might just want a simple camera that stares at the cash register or the safe. But having a camera that can swivel and move and follow the action is generally better when it comes to security.
- Spotlights and Two-Way Audio—Believe it or not, these are still effective deterrents. It’s not all about just recording what happened. Sometimes the ability to shine a light or interact through the microphone can stop bad behavior before it happens.
- Human Monitoring—If your camera offers a subscription where suspicious footage is reviewed by a human with authority to call the police, that’s an upgrade from simple smart detections, and it moves you another step closer to commercial-grade security.
- Descriptive Detections—Today’s AI can send you a description of what the camera sees. Getting an alert that says “motion detected” is all well and good, but it’s a big upgrade if you can get “person dressed in black breaking a window.”
Alright, we’re ready! We know what we have to have, and we know some smart upgrades that will be even better. Let’s look at some cameras and decide what’s best.
The Cameras
We’re going to look at three types of cameras—simple wired cams, battery cams, and pan cams—and we’re going to judge them by the standards we’ve established. At the end, since we’ve decided it’s essential here, we’re also going to take a minute to compare just subscription services, so you can see what each company offers you for your monthly fee.
Wired, Fixed Cameras
These are your basic cams for people who aren’t really worried about most of the issues we’ve described above. They just want a simple, reliable camera to give them a little peace of mind.
|
Feature |
Wyze Cam V4 |
Ring Indoor Cam Plus |
Blink Mini 2K+ |
Arlo Essential Indoor/Outdoor Cam (3rd Gen) |
Eufy SoloCam C120 |
Google Nest Cam (2nd Gen, Indoor) |
|
Resolution |
2.5K (2560x1440) |
2.5K (2560x1440) |
2.5K (2560x1440) |
2.5K (2560x1440) |
2K (2304x1296) |
HD (1920x1080p) |
|
Night Vision |
Color (Starlight Sensor) |
Color (Ring Vision) |
Color (Spotlight Required) |
Color (Advanced Sensor) |
No (B&W Infrared Only) |
No (B&W Infrared Only) |
|
Local Storage |
MicroSD Slot (Max 256GB) |
Requires Alarm Pro $249.99 + MicroSD Card + Ring Home Plan |
Via $35 Sync Module + USB drive |
Requires $100 Hub + MicroSD or USB drive |
Fixed 8GB (Additional storage requires Homebase) |
Fixed 6 hour history on-device (Additional cloud storage available with plan) |
|
Motion-Activated Spotlight |
Yes |
No |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
Weather Resistance |
IP 65 |
Not listed |
IP 65 |
IP 67 |
IP 65 |
IP 54 |
|
Price |
$35.98 |
$59.99 |
$39.99 |
$69.99 |
$49.99 |
$99.99 |
Let's run the chart through our own criteria. We said 2K resolution is non-negotiable. We said color night vision, because half of what you're worried about happens at night and black-and-white infrared footage is a real step down in what you can actually see and prove. We said cloud and local storage, because footage that lives only in the cloud disappears when your internet goes down, and footage that lives only on a drive or card walks out the door if someone takes the drive or card.
Apply those three standards to the chart above, and the picture gets pretty simple, pretty fast.
Ring fails the storage test immediately. There is no local storage option on a Ring camera. Ever. If your internet is interrupted, your Ring camera has no memory. That's not a storage solution. It’s the illusion of security.
Arlo fails on color night vision. It only has infrared black-and-white in darkness. And it halfway fails on local storage. Yes, you can get local storage through Arlo, but the camera doesn’t have it. You have to purchase additional hardware.
Nest fails on storage as well. It has no local storage option at any price, and still manages to be the most expensive camera on the board.
As of writing this, Eufy discontinued the C120, so they dont offer a wired, fixed camera at this time.
That leaves the Wyze Cam v4, which is also the cheapest camera in the comparison by at least $14. At $35.98 it meets every essential we defined: 2.5K resolution (the highest here), color night vision via a Starlight sensor that pulls color from ambient light without needing a spotlight, local microSD storage, a motion-activated spotlight, a 99dB siren, two-way audio, and even an IP65 weather rating, which makes it the only camera in this group that can also work outside. If you want to point it at your parking lot instead of your lobby, you can. None of the others can say the same.
No contest here. Even by higher, business security standards, Wyze wins this one easily.
Wireless, Battery Cameras
This is the section for serious business owners who read the Upgrades section above. No cord. No outlet. No dependence on your building's power. These cameras keep doing their job, even if someone cuts the breaker before they come through the back door. Let's see who passes.
|
Feature |
Wyze Battery Cam Pro |
Ring Spotlight Cam Pro |
Blink Outdoor 2K+ |
Arlo Pro 6 2K |
Eufy SoloCam S220 |
|
Resolution |
2.5K (2560x1440) |
2.5K (2560x1440) |
2.5K (2560x1440) |
2.5K (2560x1440) |
2K (2304x1296) |
|
Power Source |
Rechargeable Battery (6,200mAh) |
Rechargeable Battery (6,040mAh) |
2x AA Disposable Batteries |
Rechargeable Battery (5,505mAh) |
Rechargeable Battery (6,500 mAh) |
|
Weather Resistance |
IP 65 |
IP 65 |
IP 65 |
IP 65 |
IP 67 |
|
Night Vision |
Color (Starlight Sensor) |
Color (Ring Vision) |
Color (Spotlight Required) |
Color (Advanced Sensor) |
No (B&W Infrared Only) |
|
Local Storage |
MicroSD Slot (Max 256GB) |
Requires Alarm Pro $249.99 + MicroSD Card + Ring Home Plan |
Via $35 Sync Module + USB drive |
Requires $100 Hub + MicroSD or USB drive |
Fixed 8GB (Additional storage required Homebase) |
|
Price |
$89.98 |
$199.99 |
$89.99 |
$124 |
$99.99 |
Same criteria. 2K video. Color night vision. Cloud and local storage. Other upgrades are a bonus.
Ring fails storage. Again. The same way it always does. There is no local storage option on a Ring camera. That's a company-wide policy. The moment your internet goes down, those cameras are just wall art. Moving on.
Blink has good video quality with color night vision at a decent price. Solid camera. Blink will also allow local storage, but only if you buy a separate Sync Module 2 for $35. The camera can’t do it. Blink’s subscription models also get a little pricey. More on that below. But this is a decent option, albeit at a higher price point.
Arlo passes on color night vision but conditionally fails again on local storage. Like Blink, you have to buy extra hardware to do it. And this time the privilege is gonna cost you a hundred bucks!
The Eufy SoloCam S220 is a good camera but it fails on color night vision. IR only. Again. Now we should note that the S220 has the best outdoor rating, IP67, of any camera in this chart. That means it can withstand not just a rainstorm but being submerged. That will come in great if your establishment is ever underwater or you need to hide your camera in a fish tank. For most business uses, though, what you actually need is color night vision, and this camera fails.
The Wyze Battery Cam Pro is the one. At $89.98, it hits 2.5K HDR resolution, delivers genuine color night vision, supports local microSD storage, offers cloud backup via Cam Plus, runs approximately six months on a single charge, has a built-in spotlight and siren, and is IP65-rated for outdoor use. In fact, if you’re using it outside and want to keep it charged indefinitely, Wyze makes a solar panel add-on for $25. That's a camera that runs itself, stores footage in two places, and keeps working when your power doesn't, and at a price $10 lower than the next lowest on the board.
Another easy win for Wyze. This time, it had to directly address the power vulnerability we flagged, and it still won in the other categories, too!
Pan Cams
These cameras give you more coverage and the ability to follow the action. One camera that can swivel, track movement, and cover a wide area is genuinely more useful than a fixed camera pointed at a single spot.
|
Feature |
Wyze Solar Cam Pan |
Wyze Cam Pan V4 |
Blink Mini P/T |
Ring P/T Indoor |
Arlo Essential P/T |
Eufy SoloCam S340 |
Eufy Indoor Cam E30 |
|
Resolution |
2K (2304×1296) |
4K (3840x2160) |
1080p HD |
1080p HD |
2k 2304 x 1296 |
Wide-Angle: 3K (2880x1620) Telephoto: 2K (2304×1296) |
4K (3840x2160) |
|
Pan and Tilt |
360° Pan / 70° Tilt |
360° Pan / 180° Tilt |
350° Pan / 125° Tilt |
360° Pan / 169° Tilt |
360° Pan / 180° Tilt |
355° Pan / 70° Tilt |
360° Pan / 75° Tilt |
|
Power Source |
Internal Battery (6,400 mAh) + Solar |
Wired |
Wired |
Wired |
Wired |
Internal Battery (10,400 mAh) + Solar |
Wired |
|
Night Vision |
Color (Starlight Sensor) |
Color (Starlight Sensor) |
Infrared (B&W) |
Color (Limited) |
Color (Spotlight Required) |
Color (Spotlight Required) |
Color (Spotlight Required) |
|
Local Storage |
MicroSD Slot (Max 512GB) |
MicroSD Slot (Max 512GB) |
Via $35 Sync Module + USB drive |
Requires Alarm Pro $249.99 + MicroSD Card + Ring Home Plan |
Requires $100 Hub + MicroSD or USB drive |
Fixed 8GB (Additional storage required Homebase) |
Fixed 8GB (Additional storage required Homebase) |
|
Price |
$79.98 |
$59.98 |
$39.99 |
$59.99 |
$49.99 |
$199.99 |
$69.99 |
Right out of the gate we dismiss Ring and Blink. At 1080p resolution, we probably should have just left them off the chart. That's in addition to their usual storage problems (see above). For a business situation, 1080p resolution is a non-starter. The stakes and the need for detail are just too high to settle for anything less than 2K.
Arlo fails on local storage, same as it has in every section of this article. The Arlo Essential Pan Tilt is a 2K indoor camera with color night vision, and it would be a reasonable choice if it could save footage anywhere on its own hardware. It can't. Local storage requires the separate SmartHub, which adds $100 to the price before you've recorded a single frame.
If you're looking for a purely outdoor option, the Eufy SoloCam S340 is one of the most interesting cameras on this chart. It's solar-powered with no cord, has a dual lens system with 3K and 2K sensors, pan-and-tilt coverage, IP67 weather resistance (underwater!), and free person and vehicle detection via onboard AI. It legitimately passes on most of what we've asked for. But storage is a problem. Local storage is fixed at 8GB, and not expandable without a HomeBase hub that costs $150. Shooting 2K or 3K video, 8GB is going to fill up fast, which means you're probably going to have to buy the hub. You'll be $350 into this thing just for basic functionality. Nice camera though.
For an indoor option, Eufy's closest answer is the Indoor Cam E30. To their credit, it's a genuinely good camera. It's 4K, pan-and-tilt, has local microSD storage, and passes the color night vision test… mostly. Here’s the thing: the color night vision is actually spotlight-dependent. When the light fires, you get color video out to about sixteen feet. When it doesn't—either because you've turned it off, or because you don't want a blinking light advertising the camera's position—it drops back to infrared black and white. In a business context, you may not want your camera announcing itself. And we’ve already said that color is too important to settle for black and white.
That brings us to Wyze, and like Eufy, we’ve got two options. If you have a power outlet at your mounting point, the Wyze Cam Pan v4 is the best camera on this chart. It's 4K, has true color night vision that uses ambient light (no need to leave the spotlight on), microSD local storage up to 512GB, plus two-way audio, a 100dB siren, and motion-activated spotlight. It also has IP65 weather resistance for outdoor use.
If, on the other hand, you need a pan cam that runs without a cord and without your building's power, the Wyze Solar Cam Pan is the answer. It's a 2K, solar-powered camera with an integrated panel that only needs one hour of sunlight per day. No outlet to depend on. No interruption.
Indoor or outdoor, outlet or no outlet, Wyze has you covered again with two cameras that check all the business security boxes.
Subscriptions
We told you upfront that you'd need a subscription for your business security setup, so let's close the loop. Here's what each brand actually charges, what you get for it, and (for the brands that offer it) what it takes to get a real human being on the phone who can call the police.
|
Company |
No Subscription Features |
Basic Subscription |
Basic Plan Features |
Premium Subscription ( |
Premium Plan Features |
|
Wyze |
Live stream, Motion Detection, Local Storage (via MicroSD Card). |
Cam Plus $2.99 /mo |
1 Camera. 14-Day Cloud Storage, Smart AI Detection (Person, Pet, Vehicle, Package), Local Storage (via MicroSD Card) |
Cam Unlimited Pro $19.99 /mo |
Unlimited Cameras. 60-Day Cloud Storage, Smart AI Detection, Local Storage (via MicroSD Card), Facial Recognition, AI Video Search, AI Video Description Alerts, Professional Monitoring & Emergency Dispatch. |
|
Blink |
Limited Live View, Motion Detection, Local Storage (via Sync Module 2 ($49.99) + USB Flash Drive) |
Blink Basic $3.99 /mo |
1 Camera. 60-Day Cloud Storage, Smart AI Detection (Person and Vehicle, Only on Select Models) |
Blink Plus AI $19.99 /mo |
Unlimited Cameras. 60-Day Cloud Storage, Smart AI Detection (Person and Vehicle, Only on Select Models), AI Video Description Alerts. |
|
Ring |
Limited Live View, Motion Detection, Local Storage (Not available). |
Ring Solo $5.99 /mo |
1 Camera. 180-Day Cloud Storage, Smart AI Detection, |
Ring AI Pro $29.99 /mo |
Unlimited Cameras. 180-Day Cloud Storage, Smart AI Detection, Facial Recognition, Local Storage (requires Alarm Pro $249.99 + MicroSD + Ring Home Plan), AI Video Search, AI Video Description Alerts, Professional Monitoring (requires Ring Alarm) & Emergency Dispatch |
|
Arlo |
Live View, Motion Detection, Local Storage (via Arlo SmartHub + MicroSD or USB drive). |
Arlo Plus $7.99 /mo |
1 Camera. 30-Day Cloud Storage, Smart AI Detection |
Arlo Premium $24.99 /mo |
Unlimited Cameras. 30-Day Cloud Storage History, Smart AI Detection, Professional Monitoring |
|
Nest |
Live View, Motion Detection, 3-Hour Event History, Local Storage (Not available). |
Google Home Standard $10/mo |
Unlimited Cameras. 30-Day Cloud Storage History, Smart AI Detection (Familiar Faces), |
Google Home Advanced $20/mo |
Unlimited Cameras. 60-Day Cloud Storage History, Smart AI Detection, 10-Day 24/7 Continuous Recording (requires Wired Power). |
|
Eufy |
Live stream, Smart AI Detection (Person, Pet, Vehicle, Package), Local Storage (via HomeBase or 8gb Built-In). |
Cloud Backup Basic $2.99 /mo |
1 Camera. 30-Day Cloud Storage History, Redundant Cloud Backup (in addition to local storage). |
Cloud Storage Premier $9.99 /mo |
Up to 10 Cameras. 30-Day Cloud Storage History, Redundant Cloud Backup, Professional Monitoring (Available via Add-on Plan). |
Without a subscription the differences are stark. Ring cameras without a subscription are borderline useless. Blink and Nest aren't much better: motion alerts, a small buffer of footage, and that's it. The only cameras that give you something genuinely useful for free are Wyze and Eufy, both of which include local microSD storage and working AI detections out of the box, no monthly fee required. For the rest, the hardware is essentially a down payment on a subscription.
Basic subscriptions unlock the same core features across every brand: cloud storage for recorded events, smart AI alerts (person, vehicle, package), and longer video history. Monthly costs run from about $3/mo at the low end up to $10/mo, and every company offers a higher-tier plan to cover multiple cameras.
Premium subscriptions, meaning actually premium, not just "unlimited cameras," are worth discussing. Ring's Premium tier ($19.99/mo) adds 24/7 continuous recording, alarm sensor triggers (if you own Ring sensors), and AI-powered video search. All legitimately useful for a business that needs to go back and find a specific moment. Ring still has all the problems and vulnerabilities we listed above, but we congratulate them for finally getting something interesting on the board. Nest's Advanced plan ($20/mo) adds 60 days of event history plus 10 days of continuous recording.
The real premium option is Wyze. For the same $19.99/month, Wyze becomes the first company on the board to introduce real human monitoring—a live person who can respond quickly to a detection and contact emergency services—and does it without forcing you to buy any extra sensors, or alarms, or equipment. The whole system is built around just the camera. Wyze is the only company on the board who will do that.
Arlo offers human monitoring as part of its premium plan ($24.99/mo) but requires you to buy a full home security system. Eufy also requires you to buy an alarm kit. There is only one company that will give you human monitoring and emergency services contact with a subscription to even just a single camera, and that’s Wyze.
Oh, and we should mention that Ring also has a super, duper premium package, for $99/month, that finally, eighty bucks after everyone else, steps into the world of human monitoring. Because of course they do. Oh, Ring.
Conclusion
We started this article by asking whether commercial-grade security is worth the price. After looking at every serious competitor across three camera categories and a full subscription comparison, the answer seems pretty clear: usually not.
The gap between what commercial security companies charge and what you can genuinely get from a well-configured Wyze setup is not a matter of trivial trade-offs. It's thousands of dollars. Even tens of thousands. Commercial advantages do matter if you're running a particularly high-stakes business or operating in a high-crime area. But for the rest of the small business world, the setups we’ve described above are legitimately effective at a fraction of the price.
The commercial security industry would like you to believe otherwise. They have a lot riding on it.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do these cameras handle multiple users, such as managers and security staff?
Most apps allow "Shared Users" with restricted permissions
What happens to my local storage if a thief steals the camera itself?
If the footage is only on a MicroSD card inside the camera, it is lost; this is why the article recommends a dual-storage approach with a cloud subscription.
Are there privacy laws regarding recording audio in a business setting?
Yes, "Two-Way Audio" features must be used in compliance with local "two-party consent" laws; many businesses disable audio recording to avoid legal liability.


