The Ring Indoor Cam (2nd Gen) is the Alexa household's pick, distinguished by a manual privacy shutter that physically covers the lens — a feature almost no rival offers. Digital Camera World rated it 4.5/5, with TechRadar, Trusted Reviews, and T3 all at 4/5, praising its low price, compact size, and seamless Echo integration. The universal complaint is that, like all Ring cameras, it stores no video at all without a Ring Protect subscription, and TechRadar found it 'fairly unchanged' from the first gen. If you live in Alexa and value the privacy shutter, it is an easy, cheap recommendation.

Full review
The Privacy Shutter Difference
The headline addition for this generation is a manual privacy shutter, and reviewers consistently called it the camera's most meaningful feature. Digital Camera World, which scored it 4.5/5, noted that 'the Ring Indoor Cam includes a manual privacy shutter — a feature very few smart security cameras have.' Sliding the shutter physically covers the lens and mutes the mic, which is genuinely reassuring for a camera you might place in a bedroom, home office, or living room — you are not trusting a software toggle, you are looking at a closed cover.
That single feature reframes the indoor-camera privacy conversation. Where most cameras ask you to trust that 'privacy mode' really disables the lens, Ring lets you see it is off. For privacy-conscious buyers, it is the reason to choose this over a cheaper cube.
Alexa Integration and Setup
As an Amazon-owned product, the Ring Indoor Cam slots into the Alexa ecosystem more cleanly than anything else here. A voice command pulls the live feed up on an Echo Show, and the camera joins Alexa routines without third-party workarounds. Setup is famously quick — Trusted Reviews called it 'extremely cheap and more than good enough for keeping an eye on your home,' and reviewers noted the Ring app has matured, climbing above 4 stars on both iOS and Android after years of complaints.
T3 echoed the value framing, describing it as 'compact, private and affordable,' which is the camera in three words. It is small enough to sit unobtrusively on a shelf and cheap enough to buy several.
Image Quality in Detail
Video tops out at 1080p with color night vision. That is fine for the camera's core job — confirming who is in a room and what is happening — but it is a step behind the 2.5K Wyze Cam v4 and the 4K Eufy Indoor Cam S350 when you need to read fine detail. Color night vision helps in dim rooms with some ambient light, and the footage is clean and usable, if not class-leading. For most indoor monitoring, 1080p is adequate; for evidence-grade detail, the higher-resolution picks are better.
The Subscription Reality
Here is the catch that every reviewer raises: the Ring Indoor Cam stores no video at all without a Ring Protect subscription. There is no microSD slot and no free local recording — without a plan you get live view and motion alerts but cannot review anything after the fact. This is the structural opposite of the Wyze, Eufy, and Tapo cameras, all of which record locally for free.
Over time that subscription adds up, and it is the single biggest reason to think twice. If you are already paying for Ring Protect to cover a doorbell or other Ring devices, adding this camera costs nothing extra in storage. If this would be your only Ring device, weigh the recurring fee carefully against the subscription-free alternatives.
Where It Falls Short
TechRadar's verdict — 'new privacy shield, but fairly unchanged' — sums up the main disappointment: aside from the shutter, this is largely the same camera as the first generation, with the same 1080p sensor. The no-storage-without-subscription model is the other major drawback, and the Amazon ecosystem lock-in means it works best only if you are already in Alexa. Buyers outside that orbit get less value than a subscription-free rival would deliver.
Who It's Best For
The Ring Indoor Cam (2nd Gen) is the right pick if you are committed to Alexa, value the physical privacy shutter, and either already pay for Ring Protect or don't mind doing so. It is compact, cheap, and private in a way few cameras are. Look elsewhere if you want free local recording or higher resolution — the Wyze Cam v4 and TP-Link Tapo C225 both store footage for free, and the Eufy Indoor Cam S350 far out-resolves it.
Strengths
- +Manual privacy shutter physically blocks the lens — rare and reassuring
- +Best-in-class Alexa integration, including Echo Show live view
- +Compact, affordable, and dead-simple to set up
- +1080p HD video with color night vision
- +Two-way talk and customizable motion zones
Watch-outs
- −No video storage at all without a Ring Protect subscription
- −Largely unchanged from the first gen apart from the shutter
- −1080p resolution trails 2K/4K rivals
- −Amazon ecosystem lock-in
How it compares
The Ring Indoor Cam (2nd Gen) is the only camera here with a physical privacy shutter, and it has the tightest Alexa integration. But its 1080p sensor trails the 2.5K Wyze Cam v4, the 4K Eufy Indoor Cam S350, and the 2K TP-Link Tapo C225, and unlike the Wyze, Eufy, and Tapo it stores nothing without a subscription. It is priced and positioned similarly to the Blink Mini 2, another Amazon-owned budget pick.
Who this is for
At a glance: Alexa users who want a private, affordable indoor camera with a physical lens cover.
Why you’d buy the Ring Indoor Cam (2nd Gen)
- Manual privacy shutter physically blocks the lens — rare and reassuring.
- Best-in-class Alexa integration, including Echo Show live view.
- Compact, affordable, and dead-simple to set up.
Why you’d skip it
- No video storage at all without a Ring Protect subscription.
- Largely unchanged from the first gen apart from the shutter.
- 1080p resolution trails 2K/4K rivals.
Rating sources
“The Ring Indoor Cam includes a manual privacy shutter—a feature very few smart security cameras have.”
“new privacy shield, but fairly unchanged”
“extremely cheap and more than good enough for keeping an eye on your home”
Our 4.2 score is the average of these published ratings. More about methodology.



