While most smart doorbell makers seem content charging north of $100 for basic features, Blink just dropped its video doorbell bundle to $60 — half off the regular price. The deal won’t last long, apparently. But right now, this might be the cheapest way to get a decent smart doorbell without settling for garbage.
The bundle includes Blink’s latest video doorbell and the Sync Module 2, which normally costs extra with other brands. That’s actually kind of nuts. The doorbell shoots in 1440p HD — sharper than the old 1080p models — with a 150-degree field of view both horizontally and vertically. Translation: you can see packages on the ground and tall visitors without weird blind spots.
Battery life hits two years on three AA lithiums, assuming you stick with default settings. Actually, the doorbell runs on just two AA batteries, which is pretty efficient compared to bulkier battery packs in competing models. Frame rates bounce between 15 and 30 fps, which is fine for a doorbell. You’re not filming an action movie here. The thing works wirelessly or wired to your existing chime, if you’ve got one. Your existing chime needs 16-24 volts AC to work with the wired connection. Motion detection reaches 23 feet when mounted correctly, using frame-to-frame comparison to spot movement.
Here’s where it gets interesting: the Sync Module 2 lets you store footage locally without paying for cloud storage. Other companies would charge monthly for that privilege. Sure, some fancy features need a subscription, but basic recording stays free. Take that, subscription-obsessed tech giants.
The doorbell plays nice with Alexa, obviously — it’s Amazon-owned. The Blink app handles live viewing and notifications on your phone. Setup stays simple enough for regular people, not just tech nerds. The IP65 rating means rain won’t kill it, and it operates from minus 5 to 113 degrees Fahrenheit. For budget-conscious homeowners, this falls perfectly in the affordable range for DIY security systems mentioned by industry experts.
Fair warning: it only works with 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi networks. No 5 GHz support. Night vision is standard, nothing spectacular. But at this price? Those compromises seem reasonable.
At $60, this bundle undercuts Google’s Nest doorbell and pretty much everything else with similar features. The deal’s ending soon, though exact timing remains vague. Classic retail pressure tactics, but the discount’s real enough.