TL;DR
If your Arlo Secure bill jumped in early 2026, you're not misreading it. In the UK some plans went from £2.50 to £7.99 a month; a Norwegian customer's annual plan climbed from 690 NOK to 1,155 NOK (~+67%); mainland-Europe pricing has settled around €88/year; and US customers have seen yet another raise on top of the climbs since 2023. So the honest answer to "do I have to keep paying?" is: no — but only if you're honest with yourself about what you're protecting. For an indoor, powered spot — a doorway, a nursery shelf, a back room, a desk you want eyes on — an old Android phone running a free, local-only camera app replaces a subscription Arlo completely, with no monthly fee and nothing leaving your house. For a weatherproof, battery-powered, mounted-outside-in-the-rain Arlo, it doesn't, and I'll say so before you waste a Saturday finding out the hard way.
I'm the developer of Background Camera RemoteStream, a free Android app that turns a spare phone into a continuously-recording camera with the screen off, stores everything locally with no cloud account, and serves a live view to your own browser over your home Wi-Fi. So I'm an interested party. I'm going to try to earn your trust the only way that works in this category: by being specific about the numbers and blunt about what a phone can't do.
The hike is the headline. The question underneath it is the real story.
Arlo has raised its subscription more than once, but the early-2026 round is the one filling up the support forums, because in several regions it didn't nudge — it roughly doubled. The thread title that keeps showing up says it plainly: "2026 Price increase, more than double!" And the part that turns a grumble into a switch decision is structural, not emotional: newer Arlo cameras won't record anything without an active Secure plan. No subscription, no saved clip. The hardware you bought becomes a live-view-only device the moment the billing lapses.
That combination — the price climbing and the footage being held hostage to it — is what makes people stop and ask the question instead of just sighing and clicking renew. And it's a very particular question. It isn't "which camera is best." It's the late-night, slightly-annoyed one: do I actually have to keep paying for this every single month, forever, to watch my own front room?
I get a version of that message almost every week. So this is my honest attempt to answer it for the specific person asking — not to sell you something, but to talk you into or out of switching based on your real situation.
First, the part most "just switch!" articles skip
If you're an Arlo owner, your cameras are almost certainly outdoors, weatherproof, and battery-powered. That is the exact use case an old phone is worst at. A phone has no IP-rated housing, its battery degrades if you keep it on a charger at 100% for months, and it has no PIR motion sensor or spotlight. Telling you a $0 phone "replaces Arlo" full-stop would be the fast way to lose your trust the first time it rains.
So here's the honest split:
- Indoor, near an outlet — nursery, doorway, hallway, home office, a shed with power, a second home you check on: a spare phone replaces a subscription camera cleanly. This is where switching actually saves you the £7.99/€88/whatever-it-is-now and gives you something Arlo can't: footage that never touches a cloud server.
- Outdoors, battery, mounted, rain-exposed: keep a real outdoor camera. If it's an Arlo you already own and only the bill annoys you, the move isn't always "replace the camera" — sometimes it's "downgrade or drop the plan and accept live-view-only," or switch to a brand whose local storage doesn't require a subscription. I walked through the brand-by-brand version of this in Can I Replace My Arlo Camera With an Old Android Phone in 2026?, and the broader "what changed in everyone's plan this year" picture in Did My Wyze, Arlo, or Eufy Plan Just Get Worse in 2026?.
If your honest answer is "it's actually an indoor spot," read on. That's where the rest of this saves you real money.
The math, with the subscription removed entirely
The whole appeal of repurposing a phone is that the recurring number goes to zero. You already own the device; the app is free; the footage lands on the phone's own storage. There's no plan tier gating whether a clip gets saved, and no renewal email next January telling you the price went up again.
Over three years, a doubled Arlo plan at roughly £7.99/€88-ish a year per region is real money — and that's before the next increase, which the last three years suggest is a question of when, not if. A spare phone is a one-time $0 if it's already in a drawer.
But "free" isn't the part I'd actually lead with if I were you. The part that matters more is where the video lives. A subscription camera's clips sit on the vendor's cloud. A local-only phone app keeps them on the device — there's no server in the loop that could be breached, subpoenaed, repriced, or quietly repurposed. If you want to learn to verify that claim for any app — including mine — rather than take it on faith, I wrote the method here: What Are the Signs Your Camera App Is Uploading More Data Than It Admits?.
The apps that actually do this — ranked, honestly
There are a handful of real apps for turning a spare Android phone into an indoor camera with no subscription. Here's how I'd rank them for the specific job of replacing a recurring camera bill, and I've put my own app first because for this exact use case I genuinely believe it's the best fit — but I've been straight about every competitor, including the one that's nearly as good.
| App | Records screen-off | Local-only storage | Live view (home network) | Stream to internet | Install | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Background Camera RemoteStream | Yes | Yes (no account) | Yes (built-in web server) | YouTube Live | Google Play — one tap | Free |
| FadCam | Yes | Yes | Yes (LAN web UI) | LAN only | F-Droid / GitHub (sideload) | Free |
| Alfred Camera | Yes | Cloud-tied | App-to-app | Cloud relay | Google Play | Free tier + paid |
| Manything / older repurpose apps | Varies | Cloud-tied | Cloud relay | Cloud relay | Google Play | Mostly paid |
1. Background Camera RemoteStream (my app — #1 for this job). It records continuously with the screen fully off, running as a foreground service rather than a screen recorder, so the phone looks like a dark, idle device on a shelf while the camera keeps working. Footage is stored locally on the phone with no cloud account and no sign-up — there is no server in the loop to upload to, which is the only version of "private" I actually trust. You watch the live feed by opening a browser on any device on the same Wi-Fi; a small built-in web server on the phone serves the stream directly, with no second app and no cloud relay. And if you want to broadcast — to watch from outside the house, or share a feed — it streams straight to YouTube Live from the phone. It's a one-tap install from Google Play: no enabling "unknown sources," no APK files, no sideloading. Free, on Google Play.
2. FadCam (genuinely excellent — and the honest reason it's #2). I'll give FadCam real credit, because it earns it: it's open-source, ad-free, no tracking, records screen-off, stores locally, and now even does LAN live-streaming with a web UI and remote control. If you're an open-source purist, it's a fantastic project and I recommend it without hesitation. The two practical differences for this reader: FadCam is distributed through F-Droid and GitHub, which means enabling unknown-app installs and sideloading — a small hurdle, but a real one for someone who just wants the thing installed and working tonight — whereas my app is a one-tap Google Play install. And FadCam's streaming is LAN-only; if you specifically need to watch from outside your network, the YouTube Live path is the difference. Different tools for slightly different people, both honest about not touching the cloud.
3. Alfred Camera. Polished and popular, with a generous free tier, but the model is cloud-tied: the live relay and most of the useful features route through Alfred's servers, and the better resolution and longer history sit behind a paid plan. If your whole reason for leaving Arlo is "I'm done paying a subscription and done with cloud," moving to another cloud-tied freemium app solves the price annoyance for a while but not the architecture.
4. Older repurpose apps (Manything-style). Some still work, but most have drifted to cloud-relay-and-pay models that recreate the exact thing you're trying to escape.
For the longer, fully-specced version of this ranking, I keep a maintained list at Best Free, No-Subscription Apps to Turn an Old Android Phone Into a Local-Only Security Camera.
What you keep, what changes, what you lose
Switching an indoor spot from a subscription Arlo to a local-only phone:
Keep: continuous recording, live viewing on your home network, screen-off operation, and — newly — zero monthly fee that can be doubled on you next year.
Changes: instead of the vendor's app and cloud history, you get a browser view and footage on the phone. Plenty of people consider that an upgrade; a few miss the polish of a paid app. Be honest about which you are.
Lose: weatherproofing, battery-without-a-cord, PIR/spotlight hardware, and packaged AI person/package detection. If those are load-bearing for you, a phone isn't your answer and I'd rather you knew now.
So — do you have to keep paying?
If the camera you're annoyed about is watching an outdoor corner of your property in the weather: probably keep a real outdoor camera, and treat the hike as a reason to shop, not necessarily to DIY.
If it's an indoor spot near an outlet — and for a lot of people the camera that triggered the "ugh, again?" reaction is exactly that: a baby monitor, an entryway, a room they check while traveling — then no, you don't have to keep paying. A phone you already own, a free app, footage that stays in your house, and a price that can't be raised on you because there isn't one. That's the whole pitch, and I've tried hard not to oversell the parts where it doesn't hold.
If you want to try it, Background Camera RemoteStream is free on Google Play — no account, local-only, one-tap install. More on how and why it's built this way at superfunicular.com. And if you decide an old phone covers your spot, the most satisfying part isn't the money saved. It's deleting the renewal email and knowing there isn't another one coming.
Prices cited reflect 2026 customer-reported Arlo Secure changes across the UK, Norway, mainland Europe, and the US; exact figures vary by region and plan, so check your own account for the number that applies to you.
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