Device category

Security Camera Lights

Understand red, blue, green, white, and flashing status lights on security cameras and video doorbells.

Popular security camera lights guides

RedSolid or blinkingCheck Soon

Blink Camera Red Light

A red light on a Blink camera usually points to setup, connection, low battery, recording, or camera status depending on the model and pattern.

Security Camera Lights · Blink

Orange or amberSolid or blinkingCheck Soon

Arlo Camera Orange Light

An orange or amber light on an Arlo camera usually points to battery, sync, connection, charging, or setup status depending on the camera model.

Security Camera Lights · Arlo

YellowSolid or blinkingCheck Soon

Wyze Camera Yellow Light

A yellow light on a Wyze camera usually means the camera is starting, connecting, ready for setup, or having trouble connecting depending on the pattern.

Security Camera Lights · Wyze

BlueSolid, blinking, or spinningNormal or Check Soon

Ring Camera Blue Light

A blue light on a Ring camera can indicate setup, live view, two-way talk, recording, charging, or connection activity depending on the model and pattern.

Security Camera Lights · Ring

GreenSolid or blinkingNormal or Check Soon

Security Camera Green Light

A green light on a security camera usually means power, network connection, ready status, or setup progress depending on the brand and model.

Security Camera Lights · General

RedSolid or visible at nightNormal or Check Soon

Ring Doorbell Red Light

A red light on a Ring doorbell may be related to infrared night vision, power, setup, or model-specific camera behavior depending on when it appears.

Security Camera Lights · Ring

BlueSolid or blinkingNormal or Check Soon

Arlo Camera Blue Light

A blue light on an Arlo camera usually means syncing, charging, connection, or camera status depending on the model and blink pattern.

Security Camera Lights · Arlo

Check the exact model

Light meanings can change by brand and model. Use the guide as a fast starting point, then confirm with your official manual when the light is safety-related or device-specific.

When to stop troubleshooting

If a device is hot, smoking, sparking, leaking, giving an active alarm, or connected to health or vehicle safety, stop and follow official safety guidance.

How to use this category

Start by matching the device type, then compare the light color and blink pattern. A red light, orange light, green light, or blue light can mean something completely different depending on whether it is solid, blinking, flashing, pulsing, or alternating with another color.

This category currently includes 7 starter guides, and it is designed to expand with more brand-specific and model-specific pages over time.

What to check before replacing anything

Before buying parts or doing a reset, check power, batteries, cables, Wi-Fi, app status, device labels, and the official manual for your exact model. Many warning lights are caused by simple setup, charging, connection, or maintenance conditions.

Why exact light patterns matter

A device light is usually a status signal, not a full explanation by itself. The same color can mean normal operation on one device and a serious warning on another. A solid green light often means ready or charged, but a blinking green light may mean pairing, syncing, updating, or waiting for a connection. A solid red light may mean a fault, while a single red blink every minute might simply be a battery reminder on some devices.

Use the guides in this section as a quick starting point. If the device controls safety, power, heat, security, driving, medical monitoring, or alarms, confirm the meaning with the official support page or manual before taking major action.

Common first checks

  • Look for a label beside the light, such as power, internet, alarm, battery, online, fault, Wi-Fi, or status.
  • Write down the exact color and whether the light is solid, blinking, flashing, pulsing, or alternating.
  • Check whether the device recently restarted, updated, lost power, lost Wi-Fi, or had a battery changed.
  • Restart only when it is safe to do so, and avoid factory resets until basic checks fail.
  • Use the model number to confirm the meaning with official documentation.