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The latest version of the Ring Battery Video Doorbell Pro is a huge step up, and easy to recommend if you don
https://www.techradar.com/sg/author/james-day · 2026-06-15 · via Latest from TechRadar

TechRadar Verdict

The second-generation Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus is a step up rather than a token refresh. The jump to 2K Retinal resolution, HDR, 6x Enhanced Zoom and true-colour low-light sight sharpens what Ring already did better than most: the head-to-toe view that frames a courier and parcel in one shot. Add a quick-release battery that takes the misery out of recharging, and it's one of the easiest premium doorbells to live with. Familiar caveats apply: the best features need a subscription, and buying into Ring means buying into Amazon's wider surveillance ecosystem. Accept both, and it's an excellent front-door upgrade.

Pros

  • +

    Sharp 2K Retinal video with HDR

  • +

    Head-to-toe view

  • +

    6x Enhanced Zoom

  • +

    True-colour low-light sight

  • +

    Dual-band Wi-Fi 6 +

Cons

  • -

    Key features require subscription

  • -

    Charges over Micro-USB

  • -

    Privacy and data concerns

  • -

    Only one finish available in UK and Australia

Why you can trust TechRadar We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you're buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen): two-minute review

A video doorbell is a parcel monitor, a deterrent, and a low-key surveillance node pointed at your own front step, and Ring has spent the better part of a decade making that proposition feel normal.

The second-generation Battery Doorbell Plus is the company sharpening its best idea: taking the head-to-toe doorbell and giving it the resolution it always deserved.

Where ordinary doorbells frame a visitor's torso and chin and little else, the Plus shows a tall, square 1:1 field of view — 140 degrees in both directions — that takes in the person, the doorstep and whatever's been left on it.

This generation shoots in 2K Retinal resolution (1920 x 1920) with HDR, so you can identify a courier, read a label and confirm whether the parcel is on your step or your neighbour's — and a 6x Enhanced Zoom lets you pinch in without the image collapsing. It's the spec that separates a useful doorbell from a novelty, and the upgrade that justifies picking the Plus over Ring's cheaper Battery Doorbell.

Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen) mounted on front door

(Image credit: Future)

Night performance has been rethought, too. Rather than dropping straight to grey mush after dark, the Plus uses true-color low-light sight to hold onto colour in dim conditions, only switching to adaptive black-and-white night vision once it's dark.

Two-way talk with noise cancellation does the doorstep-conversation job cleanly. The other quality-of-life change is the Quick Release Battery Pack: instead of unmounting the whole unit to charge, you pop out the battery, recharge it and slot it back.

Installation takes under 30 minutes, connecting to Wi-Fi through the app and mounting with the supplied tools, then lining it up so the head-to-toe view actually reaches the floor. No hub required. If there's a grumble, it's a small one: in 2026, a $179.99 / £149.99 / AU$249 doorbell still charges over Micro-USB rather than USB-C, so you'll be hunting for the right cable.

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iPhone with still showing man at front door, captured by Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen)

(Image credit: Future)

On the upside, it runs dual-band Wi-Fi 6, so a 2K stream holds up better than Ring's older 2.4GHz-only doorbells, with Ring recommending a 10Mbps upload to keep it smooth.

Then there's the Ring tax, in two senses. Financially, person alerts, package alerts and saved recordings all live behind a Ring subscription; without one, the doorbell is reduced to real-time alerts and live view, which rather undersells a 2K camera.

Philosophically, buying Ring means accepting its history of police-data partnerships and the broader unease about Amazon-owned cameras pointed at public pavements. None of that is new, and none of it stops the hardware being good, but a review that ignored it wouldn't be doing its job.

Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen): price & availability

  • List price: $179.99 / £149.99 / AU$249
  • Announced March 2026
  • Available in the UK, US, and Australia

Sitting in the upper-middle of Ring's range of video doorbells, the Plus costs more than the $99.99 / £79.99 / $149 standard Battery Doorbell and less than the $249.99 / £219.99 / AU$399 Battery Doorbell Pro, which steps up to Retinal 4K and 3D motion detection.

With a list price of $179.99 / £149.99 / AU$249, the Battery Video Doorbell Plus isn't an impulse buy, but Ring discounts aggressively and its doorbells routinely sell well under list, so few people pay full price for long.

You should also factor the subscription into the lifetime cost. Plans start affordably for a single device and climb for multi-device households. Although the doorbell functions without a subscription, the experience is hollow: you'll be notified that something happened without being able to review what. Treat the subscription as part of the purchase, not an optional extra, and the value equation looks honest.

  • Value score: 4/5

Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen): subscription plans

Features such as instant notifications, Live View and Two-Way Talk are available out of the box and for free on all Ring devices. A Ring subscription (branded Ring Protect) allows you to review, save and share your videos.

With a Ring subscription, starting from $4.99 / £4.99 / AU$4.95 per month per device, you can store unlimited Ring footage in the cloud for up to 180 days, to rewatch, download to your own device or share with friends and family. Person and package alerts also require a subscription.

You get a 30-day trial subscription when you first set up your Ring device. Video storage defaults to 30 days, with the option to extend it to up to 180 days.

Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen): specs

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Type

Battery-powered video doorbell

Resolution

2K Retinal (1920 x 1920) HDR

Zoom

6x Enhanced Zoom (digital)

View

Head-to-toe, 1:1 aspect ratio

Field of view

140 degrees horizontal x 140 degrees vertical

Night vision

True-colour low-light sight; adaptive black-and-white in darkness

Audio

Two-way talk with noise cancellation

Motion detection

Customizable Motion Zones

Power

Quick release battery pack (rechargeable, removable); Micro-USB charging cable included; hardwire for trickle charge (8–24VAC); solar compatible

Connectivity

Wi-Fi 6, dual-band; 10Mbps upload recommended

Smart detection

Person and package alerts (Ring subscription required)

Storage

Cloud; defaults to 30 days, extendable to 180 days with subscription

Smart home

Amazon Alexa

Weather resistance

IP55

Finish

Nickel Silver (UK/US/Aus); Polished Night Navy, Polished Mocha, Polished Sandstone (US only)

Dimensions

6.6 x 2.1 x 1.4 inches. / 16.73 x 5.35 x 3.6cm

Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen): design

  • Well-built
  • Quick-release battery
  • Hub-free wireless install

I’ve never been the biggest fan of Ring’s bulky designs, but the second-gen Plus is a bit more suitably restrained: a slim, rounded slab that won't embarrass a period porch or a new-build alike.

Build quality is reassuring, and the button has a satisfying press, though for UK and Australian customers it only comes in a single Nickel Silver finish, so there's no matching it to your door furniture the way some rivals allow.

Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen) on table

(Image credit: Future)

The most practical design feature is the Quick Release Battery Pack. On older Ring doorbells, recharging meant unscrewing and removing the whole device — exactly the sort of faff that leads to a flat battery and a fortnight of excuses. Here you release the battery alone, charge it and reinsert it, with the doorbell staying put.

Buy a spare — the standard pack or the new Quick Release Ultra Battery Pack — and downtime drops to seconds. If a permanent supply suits you better, it hardwires to existing doorbell wiring for continuous trickle charging.

Image 1 of 2

Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen) disassembled
(Image credit: Future)

Setup follows Ring's well-worn path through the app, and crucially needs no separate hub or bridge. The only thing to get right is the angle: head-to-toe view only delivers its full benefit if you mount the doorbell so the frame reaches the doorstep, so it's worth spending a minute on placement rather than slapping it up at eye level out of habit.

  • Design score: 4/5

Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen): performance

  • 2K Retinal head-to-toe view
  • True-colour low-light
  • Subscription gates smartest features

Fitted to a typical front door, the Plus does the important things well, and the move to 2K makes the difference obvious. The higher resolution and tall, square frame capture a visitor from hairline to doormat, so you see the face and the parcel in one shot.

The 6x Enhanced Zoom lets you crop in on a label or a face without the picture completely falling apart. Motion alerts arrived promptly during testing, live view loaded quickly, and two-way talk was clear enough to hold a proper exchange with a courier rather than barking over each other.

Image 1 of 2

Side view of Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen) mounted on front door
(Image credit: Future)

It might split opinion, but Ring uses AI-powered features to identify and announce who is at your door. Instead of generic motion alerts, I received AI prompts such as “A person is walking in the room with a vacuum cleaner”. I loved it, my cleaner hated it, and well, I guess that’s the point.

After dark, true-color low-light sight holds onto color under external lighting, so a late-night clip is worth reviewing; only in near-total darkness does it fall back to adaptive black-and-white.

Image 1 of 3

Still image of man holding package and phone, captured by Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen)
(Image credit: Future)

It’s worth noting that I tested this sample on an internal front door, but one with intermittent infrared communal lighting at night, so the low-light functionality became incredibly useful when the lights cut out. Being battery-powered and available with Ring’s additional adhesive stick-on mounting kit makes it suitable for rental properties, too.

Connectivity is more of a quiet improvement: dual-band Wi-Fi 6 gives the 2K stream more headroom than Ring's older 2.4GHz-only doorbells, with Ring recommending a 10Mbps upload speed to keep things smooth.

Image 1 of 5

iPhone showing still image of man's face, captured by Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen)
(Image credit: Future)

The performance ceiling, though, is set by the subscription. Person and package alerts — the difference between 'motion detected' and 'a parcel has arrived' — require a Ring plan, as does the ability to go back and watch what you missed, with recordings held up to 180 days.

Without a plan, the doorbell still rings and still streams live, but it stops short of the intelligence its hardware is clearly capable of. As a generational upgrade, it's a real one: 2K Retinal, HDR, sharper zoom and better low-light all land, so first-gen Plus owners have a genuine reason to look, even if a working 1536p unit is still perfectly serviceable.

  • Performance score: 4/5

Should you buy the Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen)

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen) score card

Attribute

Notes

Score

Value

Strong, sharper hardware at a fair price, but the subscription is effectively mandatory for the full experience.

4/5

Design

Tidy and well-made, with a quick-release battery that improves daily life, though it comes in a single finish outside of the US.

4/5

Performance

Sharp 2K Retinal head-to-toe video with capable low-light sight, with the smartest alerts behind a paywall.

4/5

Buy it if

You want to see parcels and people in one frame

Head-to-toe view is the feature, now in 2K, and it's the most practical thing a doorbell can offer.

You're tired of recharging hassle

The quick-release battery pack and an optional spare all but eliminate doorbell downtime.

You already use Amazon smart home devices

If you have an Echo Show on the kitchen counter, this slots straight in and answers when you ask.

Don't buy it if

You won't pay for a subscription

Without a Ring plan, you lose package and person alerts and recorded footage, which guts the proposition.

You're uneasy about Ring's track record

If Amazon-owned doorbells and their data and policing history give you pause, a Matter-friendly rival may sit easier.

You need the absolute best image

If you want Retinal 4K and 3D motion detection, the £219.99 (about $290 / AU$420) Battery Doorbell Pro is the one to stretch for.

Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen): also consider

If you're not sure whether the new Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus is the right option for you, here are two other doorbells to think about.

Image

Ring Battery Video Doorbell (2nd Gen)

At £79.99 (about $110 / AU$150), the Pro's cheaper sibling now also shoots Retinal 2K with a head-to-toe view; drop to it if you want the Ring experience for less and can live with a built-in, non-removable battery and simpler colour night vision.

Image

Google Nest Doorbell (battery)

The obvious non-Ring alternative, with on-device intelligence and a little free event history, if you'd rather not commit to Ring's ecosystem.

How I tested the Ring Battery Video Doorbell Plus (2nd Gen)

  • Tested at a domestic front door
  • Assessed video, head-to-toe framing, zoom, night vision and audio
  • Trialled the subscription experience

I used the doorbell outside to assess image quality, but mainly mounted the doorbell on an internal front door and used it as my main entry camera, paying particular attention to whether the head-to-toe view and the new 2K sensor delivered on the promise of capturing parcels and people together.

I checked live-view responsiveness, pushed the 6x zoom on faces and labels, held two-way conversations with visitors, and reviewed low-light and night clips after dark.

I've reported on Ring's privacy considerations because they're a material part of the buying decision, not a footnote.

For more details, see how we test, rate, and review products at TechRadar.

First reviewed June 2026

Former Metro tech editor, Stuff editor-in-chief and associate producer on The Gadget Show, James has been writing about consumer electronics and innovation for over 25 years. Experienced in both online and print journalism, he is currently tech correspondent for the Goodwood Festival of Speed Future Lab and editor of private jet magazine, Cloud. You’ll also find him contributing to titles including Enki, The Times, Shortlist, Spear’s, and U3A Matters, all while lamenting the untimely death of the MiniDisc.

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