If you’ve ever tried to monitor your front yard by propping a standard indoor security camera against a window pane, you likely already know the frustration that follows. The moment the sun goes down and the camera’s infrared lights kick on, your video feed transforms into a useless, blinding reflection of your own living room. Wyze, the budget-smart-home darling that has made a name for itself by undercutting competitors on price, thinks it has finally solved this “Rear Window” problem with its new Window Cam.
Released just days ago, the $34.98 device is an oddly specific piece of hardware designed to do exactly one thing: watch the outside of your home from the inside. It’s a clever workaround for renters who can’t drill into stucco, or for anyone who simply doesn’t want to deal with climbing ladders and weatherproofing outdoor wiring. Unlike the company’s general-purpose cameras that offer window mounts as an afterthought accessory, this unit is purpose-built for glass. The engineers have completely stripped out the standard infrared (IR) and LED lights that typically cause glare, relying instead on what the company calls “enhanced color night vision.”

The technical secret sauce here is a massive f/1.0 aperture lens paired with a high-sensitivity sensor. In photography terms, an aperture that wide is like opening the floodgates for light; it allows the camera to pull a usable, full-color image from the darkness of a suburban street using only the ambient glow of streetlights or the moon. It’s a smart pivot—rather than fighting the reflection of its own lights, the camera simply swallows whatever natural light exists outside.
However, the hardware does come with some inevitable compromises. While the 1080p sensor is standard fare for the price, the field of view is a bit tight, specifically the vertical range, which sits at roughly 54 degrees. This means placement is critical; if you stick it too high on a window, you might miss packages on a porch, and if it’s too low, you lose the horizon. The mounting system is equally specific: it uses a black bezel that presses flat against the glass to physically block indoor light reflections. It attaches via an adhesive strip that Wyze admits isn’t designed for multiple uses. They toss a spare sticker in the box, but if you move apartments frequently, you’ll eventually be reaching for a scraper and a hair dryer.
Getting power to the unit is less elegant than the “wireless” promise of battery cameras, but more reliable. It comes with a 10-foot microUSB cable—a connector that feels increasingly dated in late 2025—which you’ll need to route to the nearest outlet. On the plus side, because it’s tethered to power, you can opt for continuous 24/7 recording if you provide your own microSD card (up to 512GB). Just keep in mind that while the camera has a microphone and speaker, the laws of physics still apply: trying to have a two-way conversation through a double-pane window is going to sound muffled at best.


The software experience is where Wyze continues to push its subscription model aggressively. While you get basic functionality out of the box, the smart AI features—like having the camera tell you specifically that it saw a “delivery truck” rather than just “motion”—are locked behind the Cam Unlimited Pro service, which runs about $20 a month. Without paying, you’re largely looking at a dumb motion sensor that might ping you every time a tree branch sways in the wind.
Of course, you can’t talk about a new Wyze camera without addressing the elephant in the room: security. The company is still working to rebuild trust after a rough few years. You might remember the significant breach in early 2024 where a caching error allowed thousands of users to briefly view video feeds from strangers’ cameras. That incident, combined with earlier criticisms regarding how long it took to patch vulnerabilities in older hardware, has left some users wary.
To its credit, Wyze has been trying to right the ship since then. Following the 2024 incident, they overhauled their architecture to prevent that specific type of caching error and implemented “VerifiedView,” a feature designed to add verification layers to video access. For the average buyer, the Window Cam represents an undeniable value and a unique problem-solver, but it requires a leap of faith that the company has truly tightened its digital perimeter to match the physical security it promises to provide.
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