XDA’s writer this week solved a flaky smart doorbell with a $20 Wi-Fi extender. The harder problem he did not have to fix is the app behind the camera. Most of us spend more time in the doorbell’s mobile app than at the front door, and the gap between the polished ones (Ring, Google Home) and the rough ones is measured in minutes per false alert. We tested 7 of the best smart doorbell apps on Android, looking at the speed of the live view, the false-positive rate of person detection, and whether the subscription tier is actually needed for basic clip storage.

What to look for in a smart doorbell app

Five criteria separate the apps that survive a month from the ones we uninstall:

Quick comparison

AppBest forLocal storageSubscriptionSmart home
RingThe Amazon ecosystemNoRequired for video historyAlexa, IFTTT
Google HomeNest hardware and Google AssistantNoRequired for full featuresGoogle, Matter
Eufy SecuritySubscription-free local recordingYes (HomeBase or SD)OptionalAlexa, Google, HomeKit (E340)
Arlo SecureMulti-camera householdsYes (SmartHub)Required for AI featuresAlexa, Google, Apple HomeKit
ReolinkPower users who want POE and local NVRYes (SD or NVR)OptionalAlexa, Google
Aqara HomeApple HomeKit and Matter householdsYes (G4 SD card)OptionalHomeKit, Matter, Alexa
Blink Home MonitorBattery-first, low-cost setupYes (Sync Module 2)Required for cloud clipsAlexa
TP-Link TapoBudget cameras and 24/7 local recordingYes (SD or NVR)OptionalAlexa, Google

The 7 best smart doorbell apps for Android

1. Ring — best for the Amazon ecosystem

The Ring app is the most polished of the doorbell apps. Live view starts in under three seconds on a fast connection, motion zones are easy to draw, and Alexa integration is the deepest of any app in the category. The Neighbors social feed is a love-it-or-hate-it feature, and we can disable it cleanly. The trade-off is the cloud-only model: without the Ring Home subscription, the app shows live video but does not store any clips.

Where it falls short: subscription mandatory for any video history. No local storage. The Amazon-data-share posture upsets privacy-minded users.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, web, Fire devices.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the right pick for an Alexa household that does not mind a small monthly fee.

2. Google Home — best for Nest doorbells

The Google Home app handles Nest doorbells (including the wired and battery models) and pairs cleanly with Google Assistant for hands-free announcements (“There is someone at the front door”). The familiar-face detection is the strongest in the category, and the on-device person detection on Nest doorbells avoids one of Ring’s bigger privacy critiques.

Where it falls short: full features (face detection, longer clip history) need Google Home Premium. The app’s recent redesigns have been unstable for some users.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, Google smart displays.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the right pick if there is already a Nest Hub or a Pixel in the house.

3. Eufy Security — best subscription-free pick

The Eufy Security app stores clips locally on the HomeBase or the doorbell’s internal SD card. No monthly fee, no cloud dependency, and the Eufy E340 model adds a downward-facing camera that watches packages on the porch. The trade-off is a single-vendor stack: Eufy hardware only.

Where it falls short: a Eufy data-handling incident a couple of years back left lasting trust questions, even after the company patched it. Smart-home integration is shallower than Ring or Google Home.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the right pick when the monthly fee is the deal-breaker and we are comfortable in the Eufy ecosystem.

4. Arlo Secure — best for multi-camera households

The Arlo Secure app handles the Arlo doorbell alongside whatever else lives on the Arlo SmartHub. The AI tier (cars, packages, animals) is sharper than most competitors, and the multi-camera live view shows up to four feeds at once. The downside is that almost every meaningful feature lives behind the Arlo Secure subscription.

Where it falls short: the Arlo Secure subscription is required for cloud history, AI categorisation, and even some basic features that were free in older releases.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, Apple TV, Fire TV.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the right pick for households running three or more Arlo cameras.

The Reolink app is the power-user pick. Reolink doorbells run as standalone cameras with optional Power-over-Ethernet, local SD recording, and the option to feed everything into a Reolink NVR for whole-home video archive. The app is heavier than Ring or Nest, but the configuration depth lands well for the tinkering audience.

Where it falls short: the UI is dense compared to Ring or Google Home. The push notifications can lag when the camera runs over a heavily loaded network.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, Windows, macOS.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the right pick for the home-lab crowd who already runs an NVR.

6. Aqara Home — best for HomeKit and Matter

The Aqara Home app pairs the Aqara G4 doorbell with HomeKit, including Home Key for keypad unlock, and exposes the doorbell to Matter alongside Alexa. The G4 records to a local SD card without any cloud fee. The trade-off is the dependency on the Aqara hub on the back end.

Where it falls short: the app is less polished than Ring or Google Home. The G4’s battery life is shorter than Eufy or Blink.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the right pick for Apple Home or Matter households who want a doorbell with Home Key support.

The Blink Home Monitor app pairs with the Blink doorbell and the Sync Module 2, which together support a USB drive for local clip storage. The Sync Module path is the cheapest way to skip the subscription. The downside is a more basic feature set than Ring or Google Home.

Where it falls short: Blink’s free tier no longer stores clips in the cloud. Without the Sync Module 2 plus a USB drive, clips do not save anywhere.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, Fire TV.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the right pick for the household that wants Amazon-grade hardware on a budget and is comfortable with a small one-time hub purchase.

How to pick the right one

If we already have Alexa: Ring. If we already have Google Home or a Nest Hub: Google Home. If we hate monthly fees: Eufy Security or Reolink. If we have multiple Arlo cameras: Arlo Secure. If we use HomeKit or Matter: Aqara Home. If we want the cheapest Amazon-stack option: Blink Home Monitor. If we want a 24/7 local recording setup we can plug into a NAS: Reolink with an NVR is the answer.

FAQ

What is the best smart doorbell app for Android in 2026?

Ring for polish, Google Home for Nest hardware, Eufy Security for the no-subscription path. The right answer depends on which doorbell we own and which smart-home ecosystem we already use.

Is the Ring subscription worth it?

Without the subscription, the Ring app shows live video only, no recorded clips. For most households, that makes the subscription effectively mandatory.

Can I avoid the smart doorbell subscription?

Yes, with Eufy, Reolink, Aqara, or Blink (with the Sync Module 2). Each one stores clips locally on a hub, an SD card, or a USB drive.

Does Ring work with Google Home?

Limited. Ring works deeply with Alexa, less so with Google Home. For Google Assistant integration, pick a Nest doorbell.

Which smart doorbell app is the most private?

Eufy and Aqara record locally and avoid mandatory cloud upload. Reolink supports the same with an NVR. Ring and Google Home are cloud-first by design.