Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Alistair Charlton

Ring Battery Video Doorbell Pro review: radar tech and clever birds-eye view make this doorbell a winner

The Video Doorbell Pro is Ring’s flagship battery-powered doorbell and uniquely uses radar for 3D motion detection - (The Independent / Alistair Charlton)

Ring’s flagship battery-powered video doorbell looks a lot like all of its other models – practically identical, in fact – but this is the first to have the ‘Pro’ name, and with that it gains a suite of powerful new features.

Launched in 2024, the Battery Video Doorbell Pro is priced at £199.99 from Ring itself, or it can be bought with a plug-in chime for £209.99 – a saving of £20 on the usual combined price. This makes it twice as expensive as Ring’s most affordable video doorbell, which costs £99.99, while the mid-range Battery Video Doorbell Plus costs £129.99, and Ring’s wired doorbells (which are powered by your existing doorbell wiring instead of a rechargeable battery) start at £49.99.

Such a difference in price means the Pro appeals most to power users who know they will get the most out of every feature. These features include radar-powered 3D motion tracking and a clever birds’ eye view mode that plots the path of a visitor (or trespasser) on a satellite image of your home. If those features appeal to you, then the Battery Video Doorbell Pro stands alone and might well be worth the premium over its lesser relatives.

How I tested

The doorbell comes with a removable battery, charge cable, screwdriver, screws, optional mounting plate and everything you need for installation. (The Independent / Alistair Charlton)

I installed the Ring doorbell, created an account and made use of the free 30-day subscription to Ring Home included when purchased. I assessed the video and audio quality, as well as the app’s performance, how quickly notifications arrived on my phone, how well the system worked when accessed remotely, and the strength of the doorbell’s Wi-Fi connection.

Why you can trust us

The Independent is committed to providing unbiased reviews and expert shopping advice across a range of home improvement products. Our team of experts has spent years testing and rating the latest smart home tech in our homes, gardens and under real-world conditions, so you can be sure our verdicts are authentic and based on personal experience with each product featured. When it comes to video doorbells, our expert testers consider everything from camera quality and ease of setup to ongoing subscription costs. .

Ring Battery Video Doorbell Pro

It can be hard to know where to start with the Ring Video Doorbell range. Of the seven models available in 2025, three look identical yet vary in price by a full 100 per cent. To make things even more confusing, the newest model is one of the cheapest, and the most expensive is also the oldest.

The doorbell I’m reviewing here came out in 2024. It is the flagship of Ring’s battery-powered video doorbells and the first to carry the Pro name.

We’ll come to the specifications in a minute, but first the hardware. The grey plastic doorbell measures 12.8 cm tall, 6.2 cm wide and 2.8 cm deep. As always, it comes with everything you need to install it yourself, including screws, wall plugs, tools (although you’ll need a drill), a charging cable for the removable battery, and an optional plate for mounting the doorbell at an angle.

Like other Ring doorbells, the Battery Video Pro does not come with a chime. Instead, when a visitor presses the button you’ll be notified via the Ring smartphone app. You can have the doorbell alert you through compatible Alexa smart speakers too. Ring sells a plug-in chime separately for £29.99. You can also get the Chime Pro, which costs £49.99 and doubles as a Wi-fi signal booster, and can be useful if you intend to install the doorbell a long way from your router.

A special screwdriver for locking the battery compartment with a security screw is included in the box. (The Independent / Alistair Charlton)

Camera

This doorbell shares its camera with other models of Ring. It has a 2048 x 1536 resolution that creates a square-ish, high-definition image of a head-to-toe view of visitors, and can be used to spot packages left on your doorstep. The Ring app also has a function for notifying you when a delivery is left in the doorbell’s field of view.

That resolution might not sound enormous compared to today’s 4K smartphones, but it’s plenty for a doorbell and the 159-degree lens (horizontal and vertical) gives a nice clear view of your home’s surroundings.

The camera also benefits from both greyscale and colour night vision. The former uses infrared to produce a black-and-white image, even in total darkness, while the latter attempts to add some colour. This can create a better-quality image, but in my testing I found it added little. Since there’s a lamppost near my front door, colour night vision recordings consisted of a background tinted yellow by the street light, while the rest of the images, including any visitor, was left in greyscale. I found it was best to stick to black-and-white.

Features and connectivity

At its core this video doorbell works like most others, in that it alerts you via a smartphone app when the button is pressed. You can then use the doorbell’s camera, speaker and microphone to have a video call with the visitor, telling them you’ll be there in a minute, or that you’re not in but the parcel can be left on your doorstep.

The Ring also works as a security camera, alerting you to motion and giving you the ability to ward off anyone loitering by the door. Every interaction with the doorbell is recorded to Ring’s cloud storage service, where footage can be viewed and downloaded to your phone. However, the cloud service is only available via a paid subscription – more on which in the next section.

The removable battery is charged with the included USB cable and should last for weeks or even months between charges. (The Independent / Alistair Charlton)

What sets this Pro model apart from the rest of Ring’s battery-powered family is how it uses radar technology to detect motion in 3D and create a birds’ eye view. This requires a bit of setting up, where you use satellite imagery in the Ring app to tell the camera which way it is facing from your property, and where it should monitor. For example, you can tell it to start recording when it spots movement on your drive and front lawn, but to ignore movement in the road or on your neighbour's property.

Once set up, the doorbell will alert you to movement (or to the button being pressed) in the usual way, but as well as a view from the camera, the app shows the route the visitor took as they approached. This is laid onto a satellite image and shows, for example, if someone has loitered around your car before approaching the door, or peered through the shed window, then walked away. This form of motion detection works from up to six metres away and covers almost 180 degrees horizontally. It’s a nice additional feature, especially if you’re concerned about car theft and you park close enough for the doorbell camera to be within range. But you could save £70 and go for the Battery Video Doorbell Plus instead, which is almost identical but lacks radar, 3D motion and birds’ eye view.

That model also misses out on the Pro’s Audio+ and noise cancellation technology, which is another nice-to-have, since it aims to cut out background noise and improve the audio of your recordings, but I don’t think missing out on it is a dealbreaker.

Storage and subscription

Since Ring doorbells lack internal storage, video recordings are stored using the company’s cloud subscription service (The Independent / Alistair Charlton)

Ring doorbells do not store their video recordings locally. Instead, footage is uploaded to Ring’s cloud storage service, where it can be accessed via the smartphone app. Cloud storage is only available when paying for the Ring Home subscription, which starts at £4.99 a month or £49.99 a year for the Basic tier, as of January 2025.

For that, recordings are saved online for 180 days before being automatically deleted; subscribing to this tier also unlocks features like person and package detection, which otherwise do not function. Two more tiers, called Standard and Premium, are also available. These are priced at £7.99 and £15.99 a month, respectively, and only the latter lets you record 24/7 video with your Ring doorbell (or other Ring security cameras).

The Ring Battery Video Doorbell Pro will continue to work if you do not pay for any subscription, but no footage will be recorded and saved to the cloud. Instead, the doorbell will alert you when the button is pressed and you’ll be able to view a live video feed, but if you miss the notification you won’t be able to view a recording later.

Buy now £159.00, Amazon.co.uk

The verdict: Ring Battery Video Doorbell Pro

If you want the best battery-powered Ring doorbell, the Ring Battery Video Doorbell Pro is it. It has the most features and benefits from functions like radar-powered 3D motion detection, birds’ eye view, and colour night vision. The lens has a view wide enough to see from a visitor’s face to the floor, and the camera is clever enough to alert you when packages are left on the doorstep.

As with other Ring doorbells, the Battery Pro also connects with Alexa smart speakers and smart displays, can show a live video feed on your television via the Fire TV streaming stick, and forms a more complete smart home security system when used with other Ring products.

However, if you don’t need the extra features of this Pro model, Ring’s other video doorbells still offer all of the basics – along with exactly the same design and camera – but for a lower price. The money saved from buying one of those could be spent on a chime, or put towards a Ring Home subscription.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.