Best Dash Cams Under $100 in 2026: 5 That Get the Plate

A dash cam only earns its spot on your windshield the day something goes wrong. Fender bender, insurance dispute, someone keying your door in a parking lot, thats when footage pays for itself. The good news: you no longer need to spend $200 to get video sharp enough to read a plate. These five all come in under $100, and a couple of them dip closer to $60 when sales hit.
Quick Jump
Rove R2-4K
Redtiger F7NP
Kingslim D4
Garmin Dash Cam Mini 2
Vantrue N1 Pro
The 31-Second Rundown
What actually matters in a cheap dash cam
Resolution gets all the marketing attention but the memory card matters just as much. Dash cams rewrite footage in a loop all day, every day, and a standard microSD will die within months. Buy a high endurance card (Samsung Pro Endurance or SanDisk Max Endurance) and you’ll avoid the single most common dash cam failure.
Heat is the other quiet killer. A windshield in July sun can pass 150°F inside the cabin. Most of the cams above use capacitors instead of batteries partly for this reason, capacitors shrug off heat that swells and kills lithium cells.
One more thing on parking mode. Every cam here advertises it, and every one of them needs a hardwire kit (usually $15 to $20 extra) to actually use it, since your 12V socket cuts power when the car turns off. Budget for that if overnight monitoring is the whole reason you’re buying.
Local storage with no subscription is the right call for car footage, same reason we liked the setup in our Blink Outdoor 4 review. And if you’re upgrading the car on a budget anyway, our best car gadgets under $30 roundup pairs well with any of these.
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