There’s a tired trope in the smart-home world: a camera that can “see everything” but still asks you to sift through hours of footage (and buy a subscription) to find the one thing that mattered. At IFA 2025, Reolink tried to do two things at once — make a floodlight camera that actually watches a whole scene, and put the brains for searching that footage on the device itself. The result is the TrackFlex Floodlight WiFi: a hardwired, dual-lens floodlight camera with pan/tilt mechanics, on-device AI search, and enough lumens to make porch pirates squint.
On the hardware side, TrackFlex reads like a checklist of everything Reolink thinks defenders of the driveway want. It records in 4K and pairs a wide lens with a telephoto lens — so you can switch from a situational overview to a zoomed-in face or license-plate shot without losing much detail. The camera sits in a ball-style head that can pan and tilt to cover the whole horizon; Reolink calls it full 360-degree coverage.
Where TrackFlex tries to be clever is in the way it detects motion beyond the lenses’ immediate view. A trio of PIR sensors surrounds the unit and gives it roughly a 270-degree “awareness” bubble; when those sensors spot movement, the camera will swivel to capture it, often tracking a subject before it actually enters the lens-frame. That’s the kind of practical adaptation that can make one camera do the job of several fixed ones.
Light, zoom and a siren — deterrence as a feature
The floodlights themselves are adjustable both in brightness and color temperature. Reolink advertises up to 3,000 lumens and the ability to pick warm or cool white tones, so the lights can be tuned for maximum clarity or a softer residential look. There’s also a 110dB siren built in, and the unit supports two-way audio and smart-home integrations that Reolink says include Google Home and other ecosystems.
The part other makers charge for: local AI search
Perhaps the boldest claim here is not about pixels or pan range but where the video gets analyzed. TrackFlex ships with ReoNeura — Reolink’s on-device AI — and up to 512GB of local storage so users can run natural-language style video searches (think: “white van” or “person carrying an umbrella”) without routing clips to a cloud service. That matters for two reasons: privacy-conscious buyers don’t have to send every frame to a third-party server, and it undercuts the creeping subscription model where advanced search and labeling are paywalled. Reolink says this on-device video search will reduce reliance on cloud plans for the feature set.
There’s a trade-off, of course. On-device AI is constrained by local compute and storage; cloud systems still often edge ahead for the newest detection models or large-scale aggregation features. But for most homeowners who want a fast way to pull up a single event from a night’s footage, local AI can be the difference between a frustrating rummage and a five-second find.
TrackFlex supports Wi-Fi 6 — useful where multiple cameras and smart devices are jostling for bandwidth — and can plug into Reolink’s Home Hub or a NAS if you want a different storage strategy. Reolink was showing pre-order options and early-bird pricing at IFA; official MSRP and regional release dates are being rolled out, but the company hints at competitive positioning against subscription-heavy rivals.
Where it sits in the market
Floodlight cameras have become a crowded category: Ring, Swann, Arlo and others have tried versions that combine bright lights with motion alerts, and each has its own compromises in image quality, tracking and pricing. Reolink’s bet is that people will choose something that both tracks reliably and doesn’t force them into a monthly bill for basic intelligence. If Reolink’s AI search actually works as promised — fast, accurate, and privacy-respecting — it’s a product that could change how many buyers think about “smart” security. If it doesn’t, the extra hardware won’t feel worth it. Several reviewers at IFA called the product a strong step forward but urged hands-on evaluation for tracking smoothness and search accuracy.
A few caveats
No product is magic. Corner mounting makes sense for maximizing the 270-degree sensor advantage, but installation on older houses or tricky eaves might require an electrician. Weather resistance specs are typical for outdoor gear, but real-world durability takes time to prove. Finally, while Reolink is leaning into local storage and AI as a selling point, users who want long-term off-site retention or multi-user cloud tools may still opt into paid plans.
TrackFlex doesn’t reinvent what a floodlight camera is, but it stitches together sensible hardware and a meaningful software promise: stop making homeowners sift through footage, and give them the tools to find the moments that matter — on the device they own. If Reolink can deliver smooth tracking, reliable local AI search, and a price that undercuts subscription-heavy rivals, this could be the model other makers chase next year. Otherwise, it will be another interesting IFA gadget that looks great on the booth floor and needs a few months of real-world use to prove itself.
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