Another smart home gadget wants your money. Eufy’s Smart Display E10 just landed in the US after Europeans got first dibs, because apparently that’s how product launches work now.
The 8-inch touchscreen will set you back $199.99, which isn’t exactly pocket change for what’s basically a glorified security monitor. The company teased it in April 2025 before making everyone wait months for the actual release.
$199.99 for an 8-inch screen that watches your doorbell? Smart home gadgets really know how to empty wallets.
Pre-orders kicked off in mid-June 2025, though the thing officially launched in July 2024. Yeah, that timeline makes perfect sense. You can grab it from Eufy’s website or Amazon, where it’ll probably sit in your cart while you debate whether you really need another screen in your life.
The device packs a 1280×800 LCD display with 16.7 million colors, because who doesn’t need millions of color options to watch their doorbell camera? It’s portable too, with a 4,050mAh battery that supposedly lasts 24 hours. When it’s dying, a red ring LED lights up, which is either helpful or mildly ominous.
Here’s what it actually does: streams video from your security cameras and doorbell, shows up to four feeds simultaneously, and plays back recorded events. The instant playback feature works without any buffering delays when reviewing past footage. If you’ve got the HomeBase S380, it’ll even generate daily summaries. How thoughtful.
The E10 comes with 8GB of internal storage, but you can stuff a 512GB microSD card in there if you’re paranoid about missing a single second of footage. It supports Wi-Fi 6 and works on both 2.4GHz and 5GHz networks, though it won’t play nice with third-party devices or voice assistants. So much for that smart home ecosystem dream.
Eufy’s pushing bundles hard. You can snag the E10 with their eufyCam S3 Pro 4-Cam Kit for $799.98, down from $999.98 if you use a coupon before July 7th. Because nothing says “impulse buy” like a limited-time offer on surveillance equipment.
The display includes a 65-decibel siren that’ll wake the neighbors from 10 feet away and four MEMS sensors for whatever technical magic those provide. The device’s always-on standby mode likely consumes around 3-4 watts of power, similar to other smart displays.
At least there’s no cloud requirement for local use, though cloud features remain optional for the data-hoarders among us.