More cars in India now have a dash cam stuck to the windscreen than don’t and for good reason. With rising traffic and hit-and-run incidents and the occasional reckless overtake are part of daily driving in most Indian cities and having footage tends to settle arguments that would otherwise go nowhere. So the question isn’t whether to buy a dash cam for car or not, it’s which one actually works when you need it. And that’s trickier than it sounds. A 4K camera with a weak sensor can perform worse at night than a well-built 1080p model and a dash cam that cannot survive an Indian summer parked in direct sun is not a dash cam worth buying at all.
This guide walks through how to pick the right type of dash cam for the way you actually drive, the buying mistakes worth avoiding and a set of specific picks across price points, ending with a quick-reference table.
Before comparing brands or specs, work out which of these three categories actually matches how you drive.
Front-only dash cam: Records only the front view, budget-friendly and enough for most city drivers doing a daily commute who mainly want basic protection in the event of a front-facing incident.
Front and rear dash cam: Records both the front and back of the car, which matters in traffic-heavy cities where rear-end collisions are common. This is the category most of our main picks fall into and it’s the right default for most highway and city drivers.
Three-channel dash cam (front, rear and cabin). Adds a camera inside the car, which matters most for ride-share drivers and anyone running a vehicle commercially. Useful for resolving passenger disputes as much as accidents.
Falling for ‘4K’ marketing: Many buyers assume 4K automatically means the best quality. Sensor quality matters more than resolution: a cheap 4K camera often performs worse at night than a good 1080p or 2K model with a proper sensor. Look for a Sony Starvis sensor or equivalent, strong dynamic range and genuinely clear night footage. A readable number plate in the dark matters more than the resolution number on the box.
Ignoring heat resistance: Indian summers regularly cross 45°C and a low-quality dash cam can shut down, corrupt its memory card, or suffer a swollen battery in that heat. Look for a supercapacitor instead of a lithium battery and check the manufacturer’s stated temperature tolerance. This is one of the few specs in this category that genuinely matters more in India than almost anywhere else.
Buying parking mode you can’t use: Parking mode records when someone hits your parked car or when suspicious movement happens nearby, but it requires a hardwiring kit and proper installation to work continuously. If you’re not planning to hardwire the camera, don’t pay extra for advanced parking features you won’t be able to use.
Ignoring memory card quality: Dash cams continuously overwrite footage in a loop, which is harder on a memory card than normal use. A cheap card can fail within months. Use a high-endurance microSD card, 64 GB or 128 GB at minimum.
Not checking field of view: Too narrow and the camera misses side incidents. Too wide and number plates start to distort at the edges of the frame. A field of view between 140° and 170° is the practical sweet spot.
Buying on price alone: Very cheap dash cams tend to combine poor night recording, weak sensors, unreliable app connectivity and frequent file corruption. Spending a little more for reliability is usually cheaper than losing footage when you actually need it.
Ignoring installation quality: A poorly installed dash cam means loose wiring, rattling and the risk of power cut issues. Professional installation with proper wire routing is worth paying for, particularly for any hardwired parking mode setup.
The cheapest dash cam in this guide and available in two configurations. The front-only version (Rs 5,499) covers just the road ahead; add a 2 MP, 1080p rear camera for Rs 5,999 if you want rear coverage too. Both use Sony’s original Starvis sensor (IMX335) rather than Starvis 2 and the listing itself describes the resolution as 3K upscaled to 4K rather than native, worth knowing before you compare it against the true Starvis 2 cameras further down this list. Either way, you get a 140° field of view, HDR for plate readability, Wi-Fi app access and a 1.47-inch display. The GPS logger and hardwiring kit are sold separately by the brand, which keeps the base price low but adds to the real cost if you want those features.
Qubo’s 3K pick uses a genuine Sony Starvis 2 sensor (IMX675) on the front camera, a 3.2-inch live display and built-in GPS, Wi-Fi and a microphone, all controllable through the Qubo Pro app. At Rs 11,990, this is a front-only camera; a front-and-rear version with a 2 MP rear camera is available for Rs 13,990 if you want rear coverage as well. The 140° field of view and emergency event lock cover the basics most buyers need either way. Storage support goes up to 1 TB, though the card itself isn’t included.
The A510 uses the same Starvis 2 IMX675 sensor as the Qubo Pro 3K above, but adds built-in ADAS: lane departure and forward collision warnings layered on top of the recording itself. The 2-inch IPS screen is smaller than Qubo’s and the rear camera is 1080p rather than 2 MP, but the ADAS layer is the genuine differentiator if driver-assistance alerts matter more to you than display size.
Worth calling out on its own, given how much this guide has emphasised heat tolerance: Qubo states this model runs on a supercapacitor rated for minus 20°C to 85°C, which is about as explicit a heat-resistance claim as you’ll find on a dash cam at this price in India. The front camera records genuine native 4K (3840×2160p) and the sensor behind it is Sony’s original Starvis generation (IMX415) rather than Starvis 2. That’s still a capable sensor, just not the newest one on this list, so don’t expect quite the same low-light step-up as the Starvis 2 cameras above. Built-in ADAS, GPS and a 2.8-inch display round out the package.
The F7N Elite pairs a genuine Starvis 2 sensor with 5.8 GHz Wi-Fi 6, which REDTIGER says transfers footage to the app roughly ten times faster than older dash cam Wi-Fi. A 3.18-inch touchscreen and voice control round out the usability case. A 128 GB card is included in the box, which most competitors on this list don’t offer. Parking mode needs a separately sold hardwiring kit, in line with the buying-mistake warning above.
The most expensive front-and-rear pick here and the only one explicitly built around native 4K rather than upscaled or interpolated resolution: 70mai is specific that the Starvis 2 IMX678 sensor captures full 3840×2160 detail with no software upscaling. Combined with a 150° field of view and a 3-inch screen showing live GPS and speed data, this is the pick for buyers who actually want the resolution number on the box to mean what it says.
The only three-channel pick in this guide, recording front, cabin and rear simultaneously, which matches the use case our buying-mistakes section above flagged for Uber and Ola drivers specifically. The Starvis 2 IMX675 sensor and a supercapacitor built for Indian summers carry over the strengths of REDTIGER’s other model on this list. A 64 GB card is included,and the cabin and rear channels can be switched off if you only need front-and-rear coverage on a given day.
Woodman is an Indian car-accessory brand and its Starvis 2 dash cam looks like a genuinely interesting budget proposition: a supercapacitor built for Indian heat, a 3-inch display, 24/7 parking monitoring and free home installation across India. The catch, as of writing, is that this specific model is still in a pre-book phase rather than standard retail: the brand’s own site lists a Rs 999 pre-book deposit against a stated launch price of Rs 3,799, with free installation bundled in. That’s worth knowing before treating it as a direct alternative to the fully available picks above; we’d suggest checking current availability before recommending it as a primary purchase.
| You need… | Buy this |
| The cheapest front-only option | Onelap Vidsure (front-only) |
| The cheapest front-and-rear option | Onelap Vidsure (front-and-rear) |
| A front-only camera with a screen and app | Qubo Dashcam Pro 3K |
| Built-in driver assistance alerts | 70mai A510 |
| Maximum heat tolerance for Indian summers | Qubo Dashcam Pro 4K |
| Fast app transfers and touch controls | REDTIGER F7N Elite |
| Genuine native 4K, no upscaling | 70mai A810 |
| Front, rear and cabin coverage for ride-share use | REDTIGER F17 |