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Eufy's security line includes battery and wired Wi-Fi cameras, floodlight cameras, and video doorbells, many built around the 'no monthly fees' promise of recording locally to the device or to a HomeBase hub rather than the cloud. Recent models such as the Video Doorbell S4 feature multi-megapixel sensors, wide or dual-lens fields of view, on-device AI for person and package detection, and color night vision. The cameras integrate with Apple Home, Alexa, and Google Home. Local storage is central to Eufy's marketing, though encryption practices on the brand's cameras have drawn regulatory and security scrutiny in the US.
Eufy also sells smart locks, including HomeKit-compatible models and locks with integrated cameras (such as the Smart Lock E40 with a built-in 2K camera, night vision, and facial recognition), plus robot vacuums and other connected home products. The locks support keypad, fingerprint, app, and voice-assistant entry and tie into the broader Eufy Security app and ecosystem. Combined with cameras and doorbells, they let Eufy offer a fairly complete entry-security and home-cleaning lineup under one app, all leveraging parent Anker's hardware manufacturing scale to compete aggressively on price.