Originally answered on Quora in early June 2026 as a "can I just stop paying Wyze?" question. This is the dev.to canonical at T+7d, expanded with the fresh 2026 numbers — Wyze Cam Plus Annual at $29.99, AlfredCamera's free-tier squeeze and its new $35.99/yr price, and what the App Store privacy label actually says about a "free" cloud camera — plus a from-the-inside read on what you keep and what you give up when you make the switch.
TL;DR
Yes, you can replace a single Wyze Cam with an old Android phone you already own, and in 2026 the trade is better than it was a year ago — not because the phone got better, but because the subscription got worse. Wyze Cam Plus Annual went from $19.99 to $29.99 per camera in March 2026, and multi-camera households are now nudged toward Cam Unlimited at $99/year. The hardware was never the expensive part; the recurring bill is the product.
A local-only camera app on a spare phone covers the core job — live view and continuous recording of a door, room, or driveway — for $0, with recordings on the phone and viewing over your own Wi-Fi. You keep continuous recording, live local viewing, and screen-off operation. You give up the "watch from anywhere" cloud relay by default (a free home VPN restores it) and motion-tagged cloud clips (you replace those with local storage you control). For most people replacing one indoor Wyze Cam, that's a straight upgrade on cost and privacy.
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 every number here is checkable, and I'll be honest about what you lose, because telling you a phone is a perfect Wyze clone would be a lie that ends with you uninstalling.
"Replace my Wyze Cam" usually means "stop paying the Wyze subscription"
When people ask whether they can drop their Wyze Cam for an old phone, they're rarely unhappy with the little camera itself. They're unhappy with the line item. So it's worth being precise about what that line item costs in 2026.
In March 2026, Wyze raised Cam Plus Annual from $19.99 to $29.99 per camera per year. The monthly option stayed at $2.99 (so $35.88 if you pay monthly). Households with more than a camera or two get steered toward Cam Unlimited at $9.99/month or $99/year. None of that buys you a better camera — it buys longer cloud history and smarter AI event detection, the features that increasingly sit behind the paywall while the free tier gets thinner.
This is not a Wyze villain story. It's the math of the cloud-camera business, and it's why your plan keeps feeling worse no matter whose logo is on the device. A subscription is an annuity, and annuities have to grow: raise the price, narrow the free tier, or monetize what's sitting on the servers. Most vendors reach for all three eventually. I unpacked the mechanics across vendors in Did My Wyze, Arlo, or Eufy Plan Just Get Worse in 2026? — the short version is that the camera is the loss leader and the recurring bill is the actual product.
If your instinct on reading a price increase is "let me just switch to a free cloud app," it's worth knowing how the other end of that market is moving too — because it's moving the same direction.
The "free" alternative is getting more expensive and more revealing
The obvious move when Wyze raises its price is to jump to a free cloud app like AlfredCamera. Two things to know before you do.
First, the price. AlfredCamera held the same annual Premium price for nearly five years and then, effective March 16, 2026 in the US, raised new annual Premium Standard subscriptions roughly 20% — from $29.99 to $35.99 per year. The free tier still exists, but it's the demo: lower resolution, watermarking, limited history, and steady nudges toward the paid plan. "Free" here means "free until you actually want to rely on it."
Second — and this is the part most people never check — there's the privacy label. According to AlfredCamera's own App Store privacy disclosure, the app tracks your location, collects device identifiers and usage data used to track you across other apps and websites, and links data such as contact info and user content to your identity. For a security app, that's backwards: you install a camera to watch your front door, and the app is also, by its own disclosure, building a profile that follows you around the rest of the internet. None of that is illegal or even unusual for an ad-supported cloud service — but it's the opposite of what most people assume they're getting when they reach for "the free one."
So the realistic 2026 choices for replacing a Wyze Cam are: pay Wyze $29.99+, pay Alfred $35.99 and accept the tracking, or step off the cloud-camera treadmill entirely. The third option is the one an old phone unlocks.
What an old Android phone actually replaces — feature by feature
Here's the honest mapping between what a Wyze Cam does and what a local-only app on a spare phone does. I'll mark each as keep, changes, or lose so you can decide whether the trade fits your situation, not a generic one.
Continuous recording — keep. A purpose-built phone app records continuously to the phone's own storage. No 12-second clip limits, no "events only" gating. You're limited by the phone's free space, not by a plan tier.
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. No second app to install on the viewing device, no cloud relay sitting in the middle.
Screen-off operation — keep. A good app runs as a foreground service, not a screen recorder, so the phone's display can be fully dark while the camera keeps working. The phone looks idle on a shelf; it isn't.
Watch-from-anywhere remote view — changes. This is the one real behavioral difference. Wyze relays your feed through its cloud so you can watch from the office. A local-only setup watches over your network by default. If you genuinely need remote access, a free home VPN (Tailscale, WireGuard) puts you back on your own network from anywhere — a one-time setup, no monthly fee, and no third party holding your video.
Motion-tagged cloud clips and AI events — lose (and replace). You give up Wyze's cloud-stored, motion-tagged clip library and its AI person/package detection. You replace it with continuous local recording you fully control. For a lot of single-camera uses — a nursery, a pet, a porch, a driveway — continuous local footage you own beats a cloud clip library you rent. For others (you really want push alerts when a person appears at the door), the hardware camera may still be the better fit. Be honest with yourself about which you are.
Privacy posture — upgrade. With local-only recording there's no cloud account to renegotiate, no privacy label tracking you across apps, and nothing sitting on a vendor's server to be breached. You can verify the "nothing's uploading" claim yourself: watch the app's background data usage in Android Settings while it records. On a true local-only app it stays near zero. Try doing that with a cloud camera and watch the meter climb.
The one technical thing that actually trips people up
The single most common reason a phone-as-camera experiment fails isn't video quality or setup — it's that the recording quietly dies after a few hours. Android aggressively kills background work to save battery, and an app that wasn't built to survive that will get suspended the moment you stop looking at it.
The fix is to use an app designed for long-running foreground recording rather than a general screen-recorder bent into the role. This is exactly the failure mode I designed around; I wrote up why phone cameras stop recording after a few hours, and how a properly built foreground service avoids it, in the free-camera setup guide. If you only check one thing before trusting a phone to watch something that matters, check that it's still recording the next morning.
How to actually make the switch (single Wyze Cam → old phone)
- Pick the phone. Any Android phone from roughly the last five years works. It doesn't need a SIM — Wi-Fi is enough.
- Install a local-only camera app from the Play Store 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.)
- Place and power it. Prop it where the Wyze Cam was, keep it on a charger — a 24/7 camera should never run on battery alone.
- Set up viewing. Open the app's local web address in a browser on your laptop or another phone on the same network. Add a free VPN later only if you need true remote access.
- Verify it survives the night. Leave it recording overnight and confirm in the morning that the file is continuous. This is the test that separates a real camera from a toy.
- Cancel the renewal. Once the phone has earned your trust for a week, let the Wyze subscription lapse. That's the $29.99 (or $99) you came here to stop paying.
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).
The honest verdict
For replacing one indoor Wyze Cam — a room, a nursery, a pet, a doorway you can see on your own network — an old Android phone with a local-only app is a clean upgrade: you keep the core function, you drop a $29.99-and-climbing annual bill, and you trade a cloud profile for footage that never leaves your house. Where the phone is not a drop-in replacement is the watch-from-anywhere-with-instant-AI-alerts use case; if that's the whole reason you bought the camera, either add a free VPN or keep the hardware with open eyes.
The deeper point is that the price increases — Wyze to $29.99, Alfred to $35.99 — aren't anomalies you can dodge by switching vendors. They're the business model working as designed. The only camera setup whose price can't get worse is the one with no cloud bill to raise, because the operator running the service is you.
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.
Prices cited (Wyze Cam Plus Annual $19.99→$29.99, Cam Unlimited $99/yr; AlfredCamera $29.99→$35.99/yr effective March 16, 2026; AlfredCamera App Store privacy disclosures) are current as of June 2026 and worth re-checking against the vendors' own pages, which is exactly the point — the numbers move, almost always in one direction.
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