A pet camera is useful when you need to know what your dog or cat actually does after you leave: whether they sleep, pace, bark or fixate on the door. It is a monitoring tool, not a fix for distress. For NZ buyers the things that matter most are app reliability, local returns and warranty, NZ power and plug compatibility, any subscription cost, and where the footage is stored.
Quick picks
Prices below are last-checked guide ranges, not live quotes. Stock, warranty, app features and specifications can change, so confirm details on the retailer page before you buy. We have not independently lab-tested these products; recommendations are based on category fit, published specs and NZ availability.
| Category | Product | Price guide | Best for | Skip if |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Best overall | Petcube Cam 360 | $105-$140 | Checking the rest area from work; pan and tilt covers the room | You need treat dispensing or offline playback |
| Best budget | Petcube Cam | $75-$100 | A simple visual check without pan/tilt | You need pan/tilt, treat dispensing or pet-specific alerts |
| Best with treats | Petcube Bites Lite 2 | $210-$280 | Dogs that calmly take treats as a routine; interacting from work | Food guarders, anxious dogs, pets on restricted diets |
| Best for cats | Catit PIXI Smart Mouse Camera | $157-$210 | Cat households already using the Catit app and ecosystem | Dog homes; people who want a simple camera without extra apps |
| Plain alternative | Basic 1080p indoor IP camera (TP-Link Tapo, Reolink) | $40-$70 | A plain visual check with no pet-specific features | You need pet motion zones or treat dispensing |
What matters before buying
- App reliability. A cheap camera is poor value if the app drops out when you are away. Read recent NZ App Store and Play Store reviews before buying.
- Field of view and placement. Position matters more than novelty features. Point the camera at the main rest area, not every room.
- Two-way audio. Useful for some pets, unsettling for others. Hearing your voice with no way to reach you can wind a dog up.
- Privacy and storage. Check where footage is stored, whether a cloud subscription is needed, and that you are comfortable with the provider.
- Welfare use. Use footage to understand behaviour, not to interrupt a distressed pet repeatedly through the day.
The picks in detail
Petcube Cam 360
Best for: Owners who want a clear, full-room view of the rest area from work, with pan and tilt to follow the pet.
Skip if: Your dog is already panicking or vocalising for long stretches. A camera confirms the issue; it does not resolve it.
Subscription: Petcube Care is an optional subscription. Without it, cloud recording and history are limited; live view still works.
Stable app, pan/tilt coverage, night vision, decent wide angle.
App available in the NZ App Store; NZ standard plug; local warranty and returns via Petdirect; Pet Perks membership is free but required for the Pet Perks price.
Price checked Petdirect.co.nz, June 2026. Re-verify before buying.
Petcube Cam
Best for: A straightforward visual check when you only need to see the pet, with no pan/tilt.
Skip if: You need pan/tilt, treat dispensing or pet-specific alerts of a large room.
Simple setup, reliable live view, good entry price.
NZ App Store app; NZ plug; Petdirect warranty and returns.
Price checked Petdirect.co.nz, June 2026. Re-verify before buying.
Petcube Bites Lite 2
Best for: Dogs that calmly engage with treats as a routine, and owners who want to interact a little from work.
Skip if: Food guarders, anxious dogs, or pets on restricted or prescription diets. Do not use treats to paper over distress.
Reliable treat mechanism, camera quality, app stability.
NZ App Store app; NZ plug; Petdirect warranty and returns; check treat size compatibility.
Price checked Petdirect.co.nz, June 2026. Re-verify before buying.
Catit PIXI Smart Mouse Camera
Best for: Cat households already invested in the Catit app and ecosystem who want a cat-oriented camera.
Skip if: Dog households, or anyone who wants a simple camera without another app to manage.
Catit app integration, camera quality, ease of placement.
NZ App Store app; NZ plug; Petdirect warranty and returns.
Price checked Petdirect.co.nz, June 2026. Re-verify before buying.
Basic 1080p indoor IP camera (TP-Link Tapo, Reolink)
Best for: Owners who just need a visual check and do not need pet-specific alerts or treat dispensing. Often the most sensible spend.
Skip if: You want pet motion zones, treat dispensing, or pet-specific features.
1080p, a stable app, local microSD storage if you prefer to avoid cloud subscriptions.
Widely stocked in NZ electronics retailers; NZ plug; standard consumer warranty.
General category guidance, not a single SKU. Confirm current model and price at the retailer.
Non-affiliate option
Setup tips
Point the camera at the normal rest area, not every room. Watch one or two sessions first and look for sleep, pacing, barking, door focus or destructive behaviour. If you see distress, move to a behaviour plan or a support person rather than relying on alerts.
Sources and further reading
Monitoring is not behaviour treatment. If a camera shows persistent distress, the next step is your vet or a qualified, accredited behaviour professional.
