Doorbell Camera vs Outdoor Security Camera: Which to Buy | SecurityCompassHQ

Written by SecurityCompass HQ | Mar 28, 2026 2:38:02 PM
Home / Blog / Doorbell vs Outdoor Camera

April 2, 2025 · 5 min read

The direct answer

If you have one camera budget: get a video doorbell for your front door. If you need side or rear coverage: add a traditional outdoor camera. Most homes benefit from both — they solve different problems at different angles.

What's actually different between them

Video doorbell

  • Vertical (portrait) field of view — captures packages on the ground and faces at head level
  • Two-way audio — talk to delivery drivers or visitors remotely
  • Package alert capability — Ring Pro 2 and Nest Doorbell both have package zone detection
  • — Only useful at front entry points with doorbell access
  • — Wired models require existing doorbell wiring

Outdoor security camera

  • Horizontal (landscape) field of view — covers driveways, yards, and perimeters
  • Flexible mounting — eaves, corners, garages, rear access points
  • Wired options available — continuous power, no battery management
  • — Most models lack two-way audio
  • — Misses face-level and ground-level detail at door

When a doorbell camera is enough

  • You live in an apartment with one front entry and no yard or external areas to cover
  • Your main concern is package theft and porch visitors
  • You're renting and need a no-installation or minimal-installation option (battery doorbell)
  • Budget allows one camera — front door coverage prevents the most common incidents

When you need an outdoor camera (or both)

  • You have a garage, driveway, or back yard with a separate access point
  • A side gate or rear door is used regularly — needs its own coverage angle
  • Your driveway needs coverage for vehicles or after-hours activity
  • A neighbor's fence or alley creates a blind spot the doorbell's portrait view can't cover

The most common pairing that works

Ring Video Doorbell (front door) + Ring Stick Up Cam (garage or back)

Both covered under one Ring Protect subscription (~$10/mo for all cameras). The doorbell handles face-level and package detection at the front. The Stick Up Cam covers the rear or garage approach in wide-angle landscape. Total hardware cost: ~$150–$330 depending on doorbell model.

Full Ring review →  |  Package theft camera guide →

Common placement mistakes to avoid

  • Using a doorbell camera to cover the driveway — portrait orientation misses wide horizontal spaces
  • Mounting a landscape outdoor camera at the front door — misses package drop zone and face-level detail from doorway angles
  • Assuming one camera angle covers two areas — walls, corners, and angles create blind spots regardless of field of view spec
  • Different brands for both cameras — using two Ring cameras shares one Protect plan; mixing brands means two subscriptions

→ Package theft camera guide

→ How many cameras do you need?

→ Get a personalized camera plan →

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