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Can I Replace My Eufy Camera With an Old Android Phone in 2026? What “No Monthly Fee” Doesn't Cover

Originally answered on Quora in early June 2026 as a "do I actually need to keep paying for / keep trusting Eufy?" question. This is the dev.to canonical at T+7d, expanded with the current 2026 numbers — what Eufy's "no monthly fee" really covers, what it quietly doesn't, and the one episode in Eufy's history that makes the word "local" worth a second look — plus a from-the-inside, honest read on where an old phone can replace a Eufy and where it genuinely can't.

TL;DR

Eufy is the odd one out in the "replace my camera with an old phone" question, because Eufy is the one major brand where you don't have to pay a subscription to use your cameras — its local-storage model, recording to a HomeBase or microSD card with no monthly fee, is real and still intact in 2026. So unlike Wyze or Arlo, "replace my Eufy" almost never means "stop paying a bill." It usually means one of three other things: you don't want to buy the hardware in the first place, you want to repurpose a spare phone for a single indoor spot, or — most often, from the messages I get — you stopped fully trusting "local only" after Eufy's own cameras were caught uploading to the cloud while marketed as local. For an indoor, powered spot, an old Android phone running a local-only app covers all three honestly. For Eufy's weatherproof, battery, outdoor cameras, it does not, and I'll say so plainly.


I'm the developer of Background Camera RemoteStream, a free, no-cloud, no-account Android app that turns an old phone into a continuously-recording camera with the screen off. So read this as an interested party — but Eufy is the brand where I have to be most careful with my claims, because Eufy actually got the "no subscription" part right, and overselling against a competitor that did the hard thing would be the fastest way to lose your trust. Every number here is checkable, and I'll be blunt about what a phone can't do.

"Replace my Eufy" rarely means "stop paying" — and that's the point

With Wyze and Arlo, the question is about a bill. Wyze owners are staring at a $29.99 Cam Plus renewal; Arlo's cheapest Secure plan has climbed to $7.99/month, and newer Arlo cameras won't even record without it. (I went through both in Can I Replace My Wyze Cam With an Old Android Phone in 2026? and last week's Can I Replace My Arlo Camera With an Old Android Phone in 2026?.)

Eufy is different, and credit where it's due. Eufy built its whole brand on "no monthly fee," and that promise is genuine: cameras paired with a HomeBase, or with a microSD card, record and store video locally with no required subscription, and that model is still standing in 2026. Cloud backup exists, but it's optional — Eufy's Basic cloud plan runs about $2.99/month per camera for rolling event history, with a Premier tier around $9.99/month for up to ten cameras. If you never want it, you never pay it. Most eufy owners genuinely don't.

So if your only complaint were a monthly bill, I'd tell you to just keep your Eufy in local mode. There isn't a bill to escape. The reasons people still ask about a phone are the three below.

The part Eufy owners don't expect: "local only" wasn't always local

Here's the episode that sits underneath a lot of these questions, and it's worth telling straight because it's the most important difference between "a box that says local" and "an architecture that can't upload."

In late 2022, security researcher Paul Moore demonstrated that Eufy cameras — sold explicitly on a "no cloud, your data stays with you" promise — were uploading thumbnail images and facial-recognition data to Eufy's AWS cloud servers even when cloud storage was switched off. Other researchers showed that unencrypted live camera streams could be pulled up in a web browser without much trouble. Anker, Eufy's parent company, first denied it, then admitted that its cameras were not end-to-end encrypted as marketed and had produced unencrypted streams for its web portal. A class-action lawsuit followed.

To be fair to Eufy in 2026: Anker apologized, tightened encryption, and the local-storage model works as advertised today — I'm not telling you your current Eufy is secretly uploading. What I am saying is that this is exactly why "it says local on the listing" stopped being enough for a lot of careful people. A store listing is a promise. The only way to be certain nothing leaves your house is to run a setup where there is no cloud server in the loop to upload to — no thumbnails, no face-ID database, no web portal that could ever serve your stream to anyone. That's an architectural guarantee, not a marketing one, and it's the real reason a phone-as-camera appeals to ex-Eufy-trusters specifically. (If you want to learn to verify any camera app's upload behavior yourself, I wrote the five-tell method in What Are the Signs Your Camera App Is Uploading More Data Than It Admits?.)

The second thing "no monthly fee" doesn't cover is the hardware itself. Eufy's local model usually assumes you bought into the ecosystem: a HomeBase-anchored eufyCam kit runs from roughly $150 to several hundred dollars depending on how many cameras, and the storage-heavy HomeBase S380 is the piece that expands to 16TB. None of that is a subscription — but if you haven't already bought it, "free local storage" still has a hardware bill in front of it. A spare phone you already own skips that line entirely.

What an old Android phone actually replaces — feature by feature

Here's the honest mapping between what a Eufy does and what a local-only app on a spare phone does. I'll mark each as keep, changes, or lose, because Eufy is a strong product and a fair comparison helps you more than a flattering one.

No subscription — keep (it's a tie, and that's fine). This is the one place a phone doesn't beat Eufy, it matches it. Both can run with zero monthly fee. The phone's edge is only that it has no hardware cost on top if you already own the device.

Continuous local recording — keep. A purpose-built phone app records continuously to the phone's own storage, bounded by free space rather than a plan tier or a HomeBase capacity you bought. Footage stays on the device.

Live viewing on your home network — keep. You open a browser on any device on the same Wi-Fi and watch the feed served straight from the phone by a small built-in web server — no second app, no cloud relay, no web portal that a stranger could ever reach.

Screen-off operation — keep. A good app runs as a foreground service, not a screen recorder, so the display stays fully dark while the camera keeps working. It looks like an idle phone on a shelf; it isn't.

Watch-from-anywhere remote view — changes. Eufy gives you remote viewing through its app (routed via its cloud). A local-only phone setup watches over your network by default. If you need true remote access, a free home VPN (Tailscale, WireGuard) puts you back on your own network from anywhere — one-time setup, no monthly fee, no third party holding your video.

Smart detection, AI tagging, HomeBase multi-cam dashboard — lose. A phone drops Eufy's on-device AI person/pet/package detection, cross-camera tagging, and the unified HomeBase dashboard that ties a whole kit together. You replace them with continuous local footage you own and review yourself. For a single room, crib, doorway, or pet area, that's a clean trade. For a whole-property, multi-camera system with smart alerts, Eufy's kit is doing real work a phone won't match.

Weatherproof, battery-powered outdoor cameras — this is the honest dealbreaker. Eufy's standout products are weather-sealed, battery cameras (some running months per charge, a few solar) that you mount outside and forget. An old Android phone is none of those things. It isn't weatherproof, and a phone recording 24/7 with the screen off should live on a charger, not a battery. A phone replaces an indoor or covered, powered Eufy — a windowsill, a shelf, a nursery, a porch with an outlet under an eave. It does not replace a battery camera bolted into the open weather. If that's your Eufy, keep it.

Privacy posture — upgrade, by architecture rather than by promise. This is the whole reason an ex-Eufy user lands here. With local-only recording on a phone there's no cloud account, no facial-recognition database, and no web portal that can be made to serve your stream — and you can verify it: watch the app's background-data usage in Android Settings while it records. On a true local-only app it stays near zero. That's the difference between trusting a slogan and checking a number yourself.

How to actually make the switch (indoor Eufy → old phone)

  1. Confirm it's an indoor/powered spot. This only works where you can keep the phone dry and plugged in. Outdoor-on-battery Eufy placements aren't candidates — keep those.
  2. Pick the phone. Any Android phone from roughly the last five years works. No SIM needed — Wi-Fi is enough.
  3. Install a local-only camera app and grant camera + storage permissions. The app I build, Background Camera RemoteStream, is free, has no account, stores locally, and serves a PIN-gated browser view over your Wi-Fi — but the steps are the same for any genuinely local-only option.
  4. Place and power it. Prop it where the Eufy was watching and keep it on a charger. A 24/7 camera should never run on battery alone.
  5. Set up viewing. Open the app's local web address in a browser on another device on the same network. Add a free VPN later only if you need true remote access.
  6. Verify it survives the night. Leave it recording overnight and confirm in the morning that the file is continuous — Android loves to kill background work, and this is the test that separates a real camera from a toy. (More on why phone cameras quit after a few hours, and how a proper foreground service avoids it, in the free-camera setup guide.)
  7. Then decide on the Eufy. If the phone covers the spot, you can repurpose or sell the indoor Eufy unit. There's no bill to cancel — the win here is fewer cloud accounts and one less vendor holding a key, not a refund.

If you'd rather compare the whole field of free apps before committing, I ranked them honestly — including the genuinely excellent open-source FadCam — in Best Free, No-Subscription Apps to Turn an Old Android Phone Into a Local-Only Security Camera (2026), and I mapped how the whole vendor field is shifting in Did My Wyze, Arlo, or Eufy Plan Just Get Worse in 2026?.

The honest verdict

If your Eufy works for you and you run it in local HomeBase mode, you are already in one of the best spots in this whole category — Eufy did the hard thing and made no-subscription real. You don't need to replace it to escape a bill, because there isn't one. An old Android phone earns its place in exactly three situations: you haven't bought the hardware yet and don't want to; you want to repurpose a spare phone for one indoor vantage without growing your kit; or the 2022 "local-only-that-wasn't" episode taught you that the only privacy you can fully trust is the kind a server can't break — a setup with no cloud in the loop at all. For an indoor, powered spot, a phone delivers all three: continuous local recording, LAN-only viewing, $0/month, and nothing that can be uploaded because there's nowhere for it to go.

Where the phone is flatly not a replacement is the weatherproof, battery, outdoor camera Eufy is famous for. There, keep the hardware with open eyes. The deeper point isn't that Eufy is the villain — it's that "local" is a property of an architecture, not a sentence in a listing, and the only way to be sure is to run something that has no server to phone home to.


Background Camera RemoteStream is free, requires no account, stores everything locally, serves a PIN-gated browser view over your Wi-Fi, and can push a public YouTube Live stream when you actually want one. Play Store: play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.superfunicular.digicam · More at superfunicular.com.

Details cited (Eufy's no-subscription local storage via HomeBase/microSD still intact in 2026; optional cloud backup ~$2.99/month per camera, ~$9.99/month Premier for up to ten cameras; HomeBase S380 expandable to 16TB; eufyCam kit hardware roughly $150 and up) are current as of June 2026 and worth re-checking against Eufy's own pages. The 2022 disclosure that Eufy cameras uploaded thumbnails and facial-recognition data to the cloud despite "local only" marketing, and Anker's subsequent admission that the cameras were not end-to-end encrypted, are matters of public record from late 2022.

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