// WIRED US/UK — INTELLIGENZA ARTIFICIALE
4 Best Floodlight Security Cameras (2026) After Thorough Testing
Floodlight security cameras are a great way to light up your property. Shady areas around your home can make life easier for would-be burglars, and make it harder for you to plug in the car or take out the trash. Motion-triggered lighting is an essential minimum, but with a floodlight security camera, you get that and a videofeed. Floodlight cameras are also far more configurable and reliable than lights; they let you check in on your property from the office or bed, and they can alert you to intruders.
While this guide covers floodlight security cameras, we also have guides to the Best Outdoor Security Cameras, Best Indoor Security Cameras, Best Video Doorbells, and Best Subscription-Free Security Cameras.
Updated June 2026: I added an Arlo camera, mentions for TP-Link and Reolink cameras, removed a discontinued device, and updated prices.
With two adjustable light panels capable of putting out up to 2,000 lumens, this floodlight camera is the best option for most folks. It can be wall- or ceiling-mounted, making it ideal for tucking under eaves, and it has an IP65 rating, so it can operate in all sorts of weather. This dual-lens camera combines a 3K wide-angle lens with a 2K telephoto lens, and it can pan 360 degrees and tilt 120 degrees to track subjects. The telephoto lens supports up to 8X zoom to capture details up to 50 feet away. To record locally, you can insert a microSD card up to 128 GB or connect to an Eufy HomeBase 3 ($150). There’s support for continuous recording, and also optional cloud storage from $4 per month for a single camera for a 30-day event history.
Eufy’s alerts are swift and fairly accurate (it sometimes flags my big cat as a human), with onboard AI capable of detecting humans, pets, and vehicles. The live feed is usually quick to load, but can take a few seconds. Extras include activity and privacy zones, black-and-white night vision, two-way audio, and a 95-decibel siren. The options to pick preset positions for the camera to patrol, and schedule and tweak the intensity of the warm (4,000K) light are very welcome. The AI tracking is competent at following subjects, and the camera returns to your preferred position when subjects leave the frame. The main weakness is the frame rate (15 frames per second), which means fast-moving subjects can sometimes appear blurry.
While this is ostensibly very similar to our top pick, there are a few reasons you may want to spend a little more for Reolink’s TrackFlex Floodlight camera. The dual floodlight panels can put out up to 3,000 lumens, and you can adjust not only the brightness but also the temperature, from a cool 3,000K all the way up to 6,500K. The camera is very good at automatically tracking subjects and can pan through 355 degrees and tilt 50 degrees. It also has three passive infrared (PIR) sensors for 270-degree out-of-field motion detection. The main lens boasts up to 4K resolution, and the second lens offers a 1080p, 6X hybrid zoom view of whatever it is tracking. Throw in a 110-decibel alarm, dual-band Wi-Fi 6, and a host of local recording options, and this camera looks more and more attractive.
The TrackFlex performed well in my tests, alerting accurately, and the live feed was very quick to load. The onboard AI is good at identifying people, slightly less so for pets, vehicles, and packages, but it is included without the need for a subscription. That also extends to AI video search, so you can ask for footage of the “man in the red shirt.” I don’t love the Reolink app, but you can avoid the upselling tabs, and it loads camera feeds comparatively quickly. If you don’t care about pan-and-tilt, you can get the same excellent floodlight with a fixed dual-lens 180-degree view camera (see the Elite Floodlight below).
Arlo’s Wired Floodlight Camera is the perfect pick for folks with an Arlo system, sporting two adjustable panels that can produce up to 2,000 lumens. The design is a little softer and friendlier than my top pick, with oval pan