Best Bird Feeders With Cameras, Tested and Reviewed (2025)

by Bella Baker


It also comes with extra plastic flowers and a little brush to clean them with, and the app sends reminders as to when it’s time to clean. As with the Bird Buddy Pro seed feeder, the sensor doesn’t always pick up every bird that visits, which can definitely be a bummer when you see something interesting out the window but it doesn’t show up in the app. Hopefully, this will be remedied on subsequent app updates.

A Unique Smart Birdhouse

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Photograph: Kat Merck

Birdfy

Nest Polygon Smart Birdhouse

Birdfy’s new Polygon Smart Birdhouse isn’t the first smart birdhouse on the market, but it is the most interesting-looking. The parallelogram-esque, turquoise-paneled shape won a Gold award at 2024’s French Design Awards, and it’s easy enough to mount on a pole, fence, or tree. All the camera equipment is located in an easy-to-open rear hatch, and there’s even a remote control at the end of a 10-foot cord to be able to charge (though it has a built-in solar panel, so you likely won’t need to) or reset the 1080p camera.

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Photograph: Kat Merck

It’s simple to integrate with the easy-to-use Birdfy app, which is ready and waiting to assemble a bird’s shareable “story,” from assembly of the nest to hatching to fledgling, and finally “the end,” when the nest is abandoned for the season. Note that the camera does emit an audible click whenever it’s triggered by movement or the app, and the inside is a little larger than most birds would naturally gravitate to. Our test house didn’t attract any visitors this year, but a project director for Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s NestWatch said it should only be a matter of time.

Best App

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Photograph: Kat Merck

Bird Buddy

Smart Bird Feeder Pro

Bird Buddy’s newest upgrade looks much the same as its soon-to-be-phased-out original feeder, save for a snazzy new HDR camera that can also shoot 2K HD video with slow-motion capability. It’s been going strong in my yard for over four months now. In addition to having a visibly larger and more advanced lens, the camera’s now got a larger focus range, wider field of view, and high-fidelity microphone. (A subscription to Premium for $7.50 a month unlocks 2K Ultra with a higher video bitrate, allowing for richer colors, sharper images, and less background noise, but it’s perfectly usable without this. )

The photos aren’t nearly as impressive as the Birdfy Duo’s or Camojojo Hibird’s, and the camera, frustratingly, only captures a handful of the birds that visit. (The non-solar version is currently flagged as a frequently returned item on Amazon due to both this and charging issues, so I recommend the solar version.) But the app is a standout, with a user-friendly design and plenty of helpful alerts, like if a cat is detected nearby, or if it’s time to clean the feeder. It also serves you insights gathered over time, like what time certain species seem to prefer to visit. (Finches apparently like to visit my yard at 10 am daily.) The Bird Buddy also “sleeps” at night and does not seem to emphasize capturing photos of people, so it wouldn’t make a good choice to double as a security camera. Both Bird Buddys work with 2.4-GHz Wi-Fi only.

A screenshot from the app for the Bird Buddy Smart Bird Feeder Pro With Solar showing a yellow bird eating at the ledge...

Screenshot courtesy of Kat Merck

Installation options include a hanger or universal mount for a standard-size pole (not included). If you live in an area frequented by squirrels, I highly recommend abiding by Bird Buddy’s “5-7-9” rule for siting your feeder: 5 feet off the ground, 7 feet away from trees or structures, and 9 feet of clearance above it. Squirrels haven’t shown interest in chewing my Bird Buddy Pro, which is hanging from a shepherd’s hook near a tree, but they will swing on it, spilling much of the seed.

One of the biggest downsides of both Bird Buddys is the infuriatingly small, hinged opening for filling the 4 cups’ worth of seed. The feeder comes with its own spouted cup, but I have yet to fill the feeder without making an enormous mess. I also tested the 3-in-1 Nutrition Set ($39), which includes a screw-on tray that can variably become a water fountain, jelly dish, or fruit stake for fruit-loving species like orioles. I’ve used it as a jelly dish and water fountain and found that it blocks enough of the perch area that birds tend to shift out of camera view to avoid it. Overall, this upgrade over the original may be worth it if you plan to take advantage of some of the app’s sharing features, especially Premium’s ability to share your feeder livestream with others.

Best for DIY

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Photograph: Kat Merck

If you have an existing bird feeder you like, or are interested in building your own and are just looking for a camera, you can do much worse than the Hibird DIY. It’s compatible with both 2.4-GHz and 5-GHz Wi-Fi bands—a rarity for bird feeder cameras—and the cute green owl face streams the same 4K HD video and 1080p pics as the bigger Hibird feeder, above. No subscription is needed, though a Hibird rep says that may change in the future. There’s an auxiliary solar panel included for charging, and you can mount it via its ¼-inch nut on the included bendable arm and bracket, or jury-rig a custom solution. It pairs seamlessly with the Hibird app, with access to AI (which is just OK), livestreaming, and the Dr. Bird Chat GPT-like feature, where you can ask bird-related questions. (The answers are corny and not as granular as they could be, but it still could be useful for some.)

Compare Our Top Feeder Picks

Honorable Mentions

Birdfy

Bath Pro

A lower maintenance way to enjoy birds in your yard, this recycled-plastic birdbath comes outfitted with a dual-lens camera sending 1080p photos and 2K video via the Birdfy app and utilizing the app’s AI for bird identification. With the IP66-rated birdbath’s sturdy metal base (you can buy it for less without) and solar-powered battery and fountain pump, all I had to do was make sure the 3.5-liter, 1.65-inch reservoir was topped off with water. Theoretically. In reality, it only took 24 hours for me to realize this new toy was not actually serving as a birdbath in my yard but as a high-traffic hand-washing station for raccoons. This still would have been an entertaining experience had it not been for the same problem that plagued Birdfy’s Pro Duo feede: a constantly dropping camera connection. Even when the birdbath was stationed directly outside the wall where my router was, the camera would go offline at least once a day—sometimes multiple times a day. Rebooting remedied the issue for another 12 hours or so, but then it went right back offline. Like the Pro Duo, this is an otherwise quality-made and -engineered product, and I’m hoping Birdfy can work out the camera kinks.

Birdfy

Feeder 2 Duo

Birdfy’s flagship upgrade for 2025, winner of this year’s CES Innovation Award and an American Good Design Gold Award, has the best photo and video quality of any Birdfy smart feeder. There’s one dual-lens front-facing camera (2-MP/1080p wide angle and 3-MP/2K portrait) and one 2-MP/1080p side camera, and both capture sharp, highly detailed video with high-quality sound. The front-facing camera will even pan and crop to ensure it’s focused on a bird. (Note that there’s also a cheaper, single-camera version of the Feeder 2 that we haven’t tested.) The feeder’s IP66-rated plastic body, which has held up very well so far in Pacific Northwest winter weather, is wall-, pole-, or tree-mountable. An auxiliary solar panel and lifetime AI bird identification are both included. The reservoir holds slightly less seed than the original plastic Birdfy, at 42 ounces vs. Birdfy 1’s 50 ounces, which is just as well, as this feeder seems to be a magnet for squirrels who like to chew on it and steal the seed. I had constant trouble with the rodents chewing off the sides and compartment dividers during my two months of testing. Like the original Birdfy, there were some issues with non-bird movement triggering the camera, but overall I was impressed with both the image quality and the Birdfy app’s updated AI identification. That said, there are some serious flaws that kept this camera from earning top billing. Both cameras repeatedly dropped connections during the two-month testing period, even though I was using the required 2.4-GHz Wi-Fi network (Birdfy cameras cannot run on 5 GHz). The solar panel, which must be mounted separately, also failed to keep the cameras consistently charged in cloudy weather. I also didn’t love that the cameras didn’t work in tandem—they don’t offer views in the same app window as with the Birdfy Hum, below. Birdfy says this will soon be rectified with an app update, so prospective buyers may want to wait until Birdfy works out some more kinks.

Kiwibit

Beako 4K Smart Bird Feeder

The Beako is one of the more thoughtfully designed bird feeders I’ve tested. The plastic seed reservoir is removable from the IP65 body for refilling, so you don’t have to take the whole thing down; the 3-watt solar panel can mount onto the back for pole installation; and the 8-MP photos and 4K HD video are much better quality than you’ll find from competitors. The whole setup is fully functional without a subscription, though one is necessary to access all features. I also like that the videos record as long as a bird is doing something interesting, even if it’s several minutes long. The only downside is that the solar panel stopped working after about six weeks. I was still able to charge the battery, but I’d prefer not to have this extra task.

Harymor

Bird Feeder With Camera

This Amazon feeder’s app leaves much to be desired, but it does get major points for staying fully charged for two months with its 3-watt built-in roof solar panel, despite getting very little sun in my Pacific Northwest winter backyard. Like many inexpensive feeder cameras, most of the Harymor’s advertised features—such as AI identification and the ability to take 2K video—are hidden behind a subscription paywall ($4 a month, or $48 a year), in this case in the VicoHome app. However, even when the subscription is activated, the AI is wrong more often than it’s right.

Sehmua

Bird Feeder With Camera

From the same makers as the Harymor bird feeder, above, the Sehmua is nearly identical to the Harymor, but without the built-in solar roof. The panel it comes with needs to be mounted separately. I was especially amused by the box it arrived in, which features a hummingbird. (This is, of course, a seed feeder.) Unlike other feeders that also require an auxiliary solar panel, the Sehmua has a weird USB-C dongle that hangs off the back; it’s not removable, and it’s used for charging the camera as well. What the Sehmua does have going for it over the Harymor, though, is much improved AI, which also links to a bird species’ Wikipedia page and gives options for corrections. It’s also fully usable out of the box with a yearlong free-trial subscription—a rarity among bird feeders in this price range—via the user-friendly Ubox app. Specs for the camera weren’t provided, but the photo and video quality are quite solid, though not as sharp as Bird Buddy’s or Birdfy’s. The field of view is also decent, at 140 degrees. There’s a lifetime free subscription version for $10 more, which Sehmua’s rep assures me is otherwise exactly the same. I also like that this one’s app labels all captures with a bird ID, so you can scroll down the day’s list and immediately see what’s worth clicking on.

FeatherSnap

Scout Smart Bird Feeder

Former WIRED reviewer Medea Giordano tested the FeatherSnap Scout when it debuted in June 2024, and I retested it in early 2025. It’s got a dual feed bay (4.2 cups each side, for a total of 8.4 cups capacity), built-in solar panel, expandable perch, and pretty solid 4-MP photo resolution, the clarity and quality of which were on par with more expensive cameras like the Bird Buddy. There’s also an option to view video in 0.5-speed slo-mo. As with most of the cheaper cameras, however, many of the features (like AI identification and video) are hidden behind a subscription. I didn’t find the ornithologist-trained AI identification to be super accurate, and the app was overall cumbersome to use, taking a while to load and then requiring multiple steps to engage the AI feature. I also didn’t like that users must make an account that requires an address and phone number just to use the feeder, even if they’re not buying a premium plan. And if they are buying a premium plan, they can’t do it through the app store. They have to go through Feathersnap’s website, which requires entering raw credit card info—no alternative pay options like PayPal or Apple Pay—and their address once again. I also found it automatically charged my credit card at the end of the monthlong subscription feature without warning, and there was no option to stop the recurring charge other than deleting my account.

FeatherSnap

Smart Hummingbird Feeder

FeatherSnap just released its new HD-camera hummingbird feeder in May 2025, but like the Scout, it only supports still photos and a live feed without a subscription, which is a hassle to sign up for and difficult to cancel. It also holds up to 4 cups of nectar, but there are no instructions on how long one should leave liquid in the feeder (hummingbirds can become ill and die quickly from spoiled nectar), and that amount seems excessive for several days’ worth. That said, this is otherwise a sturdy and well-made feeder with multiple mounting options, an ant moat on top, and a convenient built-in solar panel that does a terrific job of holding a charge, even during extended cloudy periods. Despite the hassle with FeatherSnap’s subscription situation, described above, this feeder experienced no connectivity or other issues during my testing period.

PeckPerk

Smart Bird Feeder With 2K Camera

One of the most unique-looking smart feeders on the market, the PeckPerk sports a teardrop shape inspired by a weaver bird nest, fronted by a 5-inch-long perch styled to look like twigs. Of particular interest to me, some of its early web copy promoted it as “squirrel proof.” I couldn’t figure out why this might be until 7 am one Saturday morning, when I heard what sounded like a tinny burglar alarm ringing somewhere beyond the bushes outside my living room window. I went outside, and lo and behold, a squirrel was sitting on the PeckPerk, munching away at a sunflower seed while a high-pitched alarm blared right in its face. I could tell this was not the first time this had happened (sorry, neighbors!), as the squirrel was completely unfazed. PeckPerk does get points for trying, though. (And it should be noted this alarm is easily disabled.) It also gets points for being exceedingly easy to fill, being one of the few feeders that can mount well on a tree or on a tripod, and having solid night vision with its 2K camera. However, not only does it require a subscription to record video and the mounting of an auxiliary solar panel, limiting where it can be placed, the app interface was extremely rudimentary compared with other feeders’ and not at all intuitive.

Harymor

Hummingbird Feeder With Camera

I expected this hummingbird feeder to look somewhat like its seed-feeder sibling, above, but other than its also using the VicoHome app, it bears absolutely zero resemblance. It’s got a funny little red umbrella-shaped top, and the box, which features a vaguely Asian-themed font, has no brand name listed. I do like that it comes with a big bottle brush and a smaller brush for the flowers, and that it has interchangeable lavender and bluish-purple flowers to go with the standard yellow. I used one of each to see if there was one our resident Anna’s hummingbirds preferred, but they seemed indiscriminately interested in all of them. Like the seed feeder, there are only still photos and live feed without an additional subscription, and I didn’t love how many false alarms seemed to be recorded. There’s an indentation on the lid that holds water for an ant moat, but since the solar panel must be mounted separately, ants could easily use the cord to reach the feeder.

Birdfy

Hum Feeder Duo

Birdfy’s Hum Feeder Duo is the hummingbird feeder version of the Duo seed feeder, above. Both versions of the Hum consist of a clear, BPA-free, anti-mold bottle that screws into a red base with a trio of plastic flowers. The duo has two 3-MP 2K cameras—one front-facing and one side-facing. The cameras charge together and work together to provide a side-by-side view in the app. I had zero problems with setup—after an overnight charge, the feeder was up and running in about 10 minutes. One charge lasted a little over a week in Pacific Northwest November temperatures, though for $20 more you can spring for the solar panel add-on with a patented ant moat (I have not tried this yet). I appreciate that the app shows battery life alongside temperature and humidity, which is helpful for gauging when to replace the liquid, although a more explicit notification like Bird Buddy’s would be helpful. Like the seed feeder above, however, my testing period was not without issue. In fact, I only had the Hum up for a couple weeks before the sensor appeared to have failed, occasionally capturing wind-driven motion but failing to register any birds. It’s also currently flagged on Amazon as a frequently returned item due to charging issues.

  • Photograph: Kat Merck

  • Courtesy of Limitless Innovations

Limitless Innovations

Hello Birdie

This is a solid, well-constructed IP65 feeder that’s usable without a subscription, and I liked the loop at the top for easy hanging from a shepherd’s hook. It also has as squirrel sensor that makes comical hawk noises when it spots a rodent (it even works on rats, as I found out one unfortunate evening). But the photo resolution is not good despite being advertised as 1080p, the AI is abysmal, and the solar panel failed to charge or even supplement the battery on two test models I tried. There are much better feeders out there for half the price.

FAQs

How Does WIRED Test Bird Feeders?

I test all feeders in my rural-surburban backyard in the Pacific Northwest. I mount seed feeders on a 1-inch pole with a baffle, using the provided mounting hardware and hose clamps. If pole mounting isn’t feasible, I mount on a fence. I hang hummingbird feeders from a shepherd’s hook mounted on the side of my house. I fill the seed feeders with Audubon Wild Park bird seed and the hummingbird feeders with a nectar mixture of 4-to-1 granulated sugar and water. I keep each feeder up for a minimum of four weeks, with all app notifications enabled.

I look at all app features available both with a subscription or without, seeing how often I get notifications and noting whether they are accurately picking up just birds or any type of outdoor movement, and how well the AI feature is able to distinguish bird species. I also look at connectivity, seed capacity, video quality, and how well the feeder bodies hold up to squirrels and inclement weather.

Feeder samples are either provided by companies or purchased and expensed, and either donated afterward or kept in storage for comparison with newer or similar models or brands.

What Do I Need to Know Before Setting Up a Smart Feeder?

  • Keep feeders super clean. The last thing you want to do to your feathered guests is make them ill from eating moldy seeds or spread avian diseases. Every two weeks, scrub feeders with warm, soapy water and then either soak them in one part bleach to nine parts water or one part white vinegar to one part water—both methods are recommended by Audubon. Rinse and dry thoroughly before adding more seed (you don’t want bleach residue either). Keep an eye on bird flu outbreaks and pay attention to what the birds look like at your own feeders. If you suspect something, you’ll want to remove the feeder until things look better.
  • Only get a hummingbird feeder if you’re dedicated to keeping it spotless. You need to be even more diligent about cleanliness here. You need to clean a hummingbird feeder every two to three days. Nectar sitting in the sun harbors bacteria growth quickly, which can cause hummingbird tongues to swell and almost always ends in their death. Red attracts these birds, but don’t use red nectar. There are no studies conclusively proving that dye harms birds, but at best it’s unnecessary and at worst might make them sick. Instead, go for feeders with red pieces to get their attention or stick to planting hummingbird-friendly flowers and skip the feeder altogether.
  • Add a water source too. Birds need clean water for drinking and bathing, so you can make your backyard more of an oasis by providing it. Birdfy makes a smart birdbath, reviewed above, or you can also make your own fountain out of anything—even a favorite pot, or a bucket—using a solar pump kit. I’m currently testing this one and will report back. The same cleaning technique outlined above goes for baths. You can also consider adding regular bird houses—analog or a smart version, like Birdfy’s Polygon, above—for birds to nest.
  • Give birds time. You likely won’t see birds at your feeder day one. Give them time to find it and trust it. If after a few weeks you still don’t have visitors, it might be time to reevaluate what kind of bird seeds you’re using or where you’ve placed it.
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Photograph: Kat Merck

As is the case with any bird feeder, squirrels love to eat at smart bird feeders, which are not squirrel-proof, regardless of marketing claims. However, most of the smart feeders we’ve tested are just as sturdy, if not in some cases sturdier, than analog bird feeders. If the feeder is hanging, the worst that will probably happen is that the squirrel’s weight will cause it to swing wildly, spilling seed onto the ground. If it’s mounted, the worst-case scenario is likely the squirrel eating all the seed, chewing the edges, and covering up the camera with its fuzzy butt.

The yard where I test smart feeders year-round is lousy with the large and persistent rodents, and the squirrel damage I’ve sustained on test feeders has been minor. With the Birdfy Pro Duo, below, the animals chewed off the edges to better get at the seed supply when it was low, and the FeatherSnap Scout had its mounting bent. Top of mind is the 5-7-9 method of siting a bird feeder—at least 5 feet off the ground, at least 7 feet away from any structures, and at least 9 feet away from anything a squirrel could jump from (branches, fences, roofs).

Another option is an aftermarket baffle added to feeders hanging on shepherd’s hooks, or a pole with a built-in baffle, like this one offered by Birdfy. Another option is using seed treated with capsaicin, or hot pepper. Birds don’t have capsaicin receptors like mammals do, so they’re not affected by the taste. That said, I’ve found capsaicin only keeps squirrels away for a couple of days, whether because they’ve gotten used to it or the pepper loses its potency when exposed to the elements. As a last resort, you could always just learn to live with the squirrels and dedicate a feeder to them, although my neighbor does this and I’m of the mind it brings even more squirrels to the area.

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