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Arlo Essential 2K Outdoor Camera Review

Arlo drops the price of entry to its system

In This Article

In This Article

Verdict

Verdict

Maintaining what’s great about the Arlo system, including a brilliant app, simple controls and excellent smart notifications, the Arlo Essential 2K Outdoor Camera gives a cheaper way to get into the system. Well-built and capable of shooting high-quality 2K video during the day and decent (if not a little soft) full-colour video at night, this camera cuts the price but not the quality. The main thing likely to hold people back is the relatively high subscription costs.

Pros

Cons

Key Features

Introduction

If you like the idea of Arlo security cameras but have been put off by the relatively high prices, the Arlo Essential 2K Outdoor Camera could be the set that tempts you into the ecosystem.

With a two-pack costing the same as a singlePro 5camera, this set of 2K video cameras gives you the same physical control and detection abilities in a much cheaper package.

There are some minor limitations, but at this price, who’s complaining?

Design and installation

Available as a two-pack for £199.99 or a three-pack for £259.99, the Arlo Essential 2K Outdoor Camera is far cheaper and more affordable than the previous wireless range of cameras. Oddly, it’s not available as a single camera in the UK, although you can buy just one camera in the US.

To keep the price down, some differences in the design, compared to the regular range of Arlo cameras, have been made; there’s nothing particularly concerning about what’s changed, and I’d argue that some alterations are for the best.

First, the body of the camera has had an overhaul. While the cameras still have that distinctive lozenge shape, the Arlo Essential 2K Outdoor Camera is taller than it is deep; the Pro 5 was longer but shorter.

Part of the change is because the camera now has an integrated battery. The limitation is that the camera has to be removed for charging, and you can’t just swap batteries; however, how many people actually had spare batteries and did this?

This could mean a bigger issue for longevity, as you can’t replace a battery that has died. That said, given that the battery shouldn’t have to be charged very often, it’s likely that you’ll upgrade the camera before the battery has any noticeable problems.

Rather than the proprietary magnetic charger that the old system used, the Essential cameras use standardUSB-C, with the port protected by a rubber, waterproof cover. This is a welcome change, as you can use any USB-C cable.

If you don’t want to charge the camera regularly, then there’s an optional solar panel that plugs into the USB-C port, keeping the camera topped up.

Arlo provides a mount in the box. This has two parts: a mounting bracket has to be screwed to a suitable vertical surface, and then there’s a moveable ball joint that screws into the back of the camera. It’s pretty easy to install, and then to focus the camera where you want it.

As with recent Arlo cameras, the Arlo Essential 2K Outdoor Camera can be connected to your Wi-Fi network or to an Arlo SmartHub if you have one. I just used the app to connect the camera to my home Wi-Fi.

Features

Once connected to Wi-Fi, the Arlo Essential 2K Outdoor Camera appears as a device in the app, alongside any other Arlo cameras or doorbells that you have. You can view a live stream from the devices page, or you can tap the camera to go into a more detailed page that includes a scrollable list of events.

To view an event, you need an Arlo Secure subscription plan. It’s £4.49 a month (or £44.90 a year) for a single camera, with 30-days of video history; Secure Multi-Cam adds support for up to four cameras and costs £10.99 a month (109.99) a year; and Secure Plus unlocks unlimited camera support, boosts history to 60 days, and ups the maximum recording quality to 4K (4K cameras required) and costs £14.99 a month (£149.99 a year).

That’s quite a lot of money, although the advantage is that Arlo Secure is very good, and the system is simple to use.

One of the benefits that Arlo Secure brings is smart notifications. With these enabled, you can choose to be alerted for your choice of people, vehicles, animals or all other motions. Detection quality is very good, and being able to cut down on alerts to only get important notifications makes the cameras more useful.

There’s a further option to add activity zones, with only motion inside a zone being recorded. With this camera, zones are rectangular and resizable at any of the four corners; with the Pro 5, zones have six control points, which makes them a little more flexible and able to fit around more complex layouts.

Even with activity zones and smart notifications, it’s important to point the camera so that it’s not in a very busy area. With PIR motion detection used first to pick up motion, the camera can drain its battery fast if it’s woken up too often.

Control over when the camera can and can’t record is handled via the app, which has Away, Home and Standby modes, similar to an alarm system. For each mode, you can choose which cameras are active and which ones are off. Manual control is useful, but you can automate modes usingIFTTT, or via the app with both schedules and geolocation supported.

Arlo now only supports geolocation at one location, whereas the old app used to let you control each device based on its location. There is a workaround: useSmartThings, which lets you turn individual cameras on and off, including the Arlo Essential 2K Outdoor Camera. The only restriction with SmartThings at the moment is that I couldn’t get it to display the live stream from the camera.

I could stream the video to an Alexa-powered smart display, such as theEcho Hub, or a Google smart display.

Recorded video is available in the app, either by tapping an individual camera or going to the Feed section, which shows a thumbnail list for all devices. This list can be filtered by date, device, and event type (person, animal, vehicle, or other motion). All clips can be viewed or downloaded.

Video quality

The Arlo Essential 2K Outdoor Camera has a 130-degree field of view, which is slightly less than the 160-degree field on the Arlo Pro 5. I found that with the camera mounted on my garden office, pointing towards the house, I could capture a lot of my garden; certainly, enough to see what’s happening.

Recording at 2560×1440, the Arlo Essential 2K Outdoor Camera is capable of shooting sharp images, particularly during the day. Compared to the Pro 5, the daytime footage wasn’t quite as vibrant and a touch softer, but it’s easy to make out individuals and see what’s going on.

At night, the Arlo Essential 2K Outdoor Camera can turn on its spotlight and shoot full-colour night vision. The image sensor used isn’t quite as good as the one on the Pro 5, so there’s quite a bit of noise introduced into the image and finer details, such as lawns, are eradicated. It’s also hard to find a still frame that shows someone in sharp detail, although I could clearly see what was happening.

Battery life

Battery life is quoted at between four and six months, although a lot of this depends on how often the camera has to wake up to record video.

In my experience with the camera, I found that it lost around 1% a day, so that’s just over three months. If you place the camera somewhere busier, then expect it to drain faster.

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Should you buy it?

You want a quality experience at a lower initial price

Taking everything great about Arlo, including the app and powerful cloud service, and distilling it into a cheaper device, these cameras are a great budget alternative to the main range.

You want the best image quality or no subscription fees

If you want the best night-time video quality, then thePro 5camera is a better choice. Those who don’t want to be saddled with monthly subscription costs should opt for an alternative camera, too.

Final Thoughts

The price of these cameras makes the Arlo Essential 2K Outdoor Camera quite an attractive proposition. For the most part, the cameras are good: sharp daytime video, an excellent app and simple controls for setting what the camera can and can’t notify you about, plus when recording can or can’t happen.

Night-time vision lags behind that of thePro 5, and the relatively high price of the cloud subscription may put some people off. For alternatives, see my guide to thebest outdoor security cameras.

How we test

Unlike other sites, we test every security camera we review thoroughly over an extended period of time. We use industry standard tests to compare features properly. We’ll always tell you what we find. We never, ever, accept money to review a product.

Find out more about how we test in ourethics policy.

Used as our main security camera for the review period

We test compatibility with the main smart systems (HomeKit, Alexa, Google Assistant, SmartThings, IFTTT and more) to see how easy each camera is to automate.

We take samples during the day and night to see how clear each camera’s video is.

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FAQs

No, but without an Arlo Secure subscription, you can’t record video, and you get more basic motion detection.

No, this camera has an integrated battery.

Full specs

Starting life on the consumer PC press back in 1998, David has been at the forefront of technology for the past 20 years. He has edited Computer Shopper and Expert Reviews, and once wrote a book on ho…

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Why trust our journalism?

Founded in 2003, Trusted Reviews exists to give our readers thorough, unbiased and independent advice on what to buy.

Today, we have millions of users a month from around the world, and assess more than 1,000 products a year.

Editorial independence means being able to give an unbiased verdict about a product or company, with the avoidance of conflicts of interest. To ensure this is possible, every member of the editorial staff follows a clear code of conduct.

We also expect our journalists to follow clear ethical standards in their work. Our staff members must strive for honesty and accuracy in everything they do. We follow the IPSO Editors’ code of practice to underpin these standards.