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The Quick Take

The Furbo 360 is the most recognizable name in dog cameras for a reason. It combines 360° pan-and-tilt coverage, treat tossing, barking alerts, 1080p video with night vision, and 2-way audio into a well-designed package that sits on your counter and keeps tabs on your dog while you’re gone.

But “recognizable” and “best” aren’t always the same thing. Furbo’s aggressive push toward subscription tiers has changed the value equation since the original Furbo launched. The camera hardware is excellent — possibly the best in the pet camera category. The question is whether you’ll get enough value from the features locked behind the paywall.

After testing the Furbo 360 for three months, here’s our full breakdown.

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What’s in the Box

  • Furbo 360 camera unit
  • USB-C power cable and adapter
  • Treat guide funnel
  • Quick start guide
  • Sample treats (small bag)

The build quality is immediately apparent. The Furbo 360 has a matte white cylindrical body that looks like a small smart speaker. It doesn’t scream “pet camera” — it blends into most decor without drawing attention. The top has a translucent cover over the treat compartment, and the camera lens sits in a motorized housing that allows full 360° rotation and vertical tilt.

It’s compact (about 6 inches tall, 4.5 inches wide) and light enough to place on a shelf, counter, or end table. The base has a slight rubber grip to prevent sliding, though I’d recommend keeping it somewhere stable since the pan motor does create minor vibration during rotation.


360° Pan and Tilt: The Headline Feature

Previous Furbo models had a fixed wide-angle lens, which meant you aimed it at where you thought your dog would be and hoped for the best. The 360° pan-and-tilt on this model changes the experience completely.

From the app, you can rotate the camera a full 360 degrees horizontally and tilt it vertically to cover essentially the entire room. There’s also an auto-tracking feature (subscription required) that follows your dog as they move through the space. In practice, auto-tracking works surprisingly well — there’s a slight delay as the motor catches up, but it reliably kept my dog in frame during testing, even when she was doing zoomies.

How It Actually Performs

  • Pan speed: Smooth and reasonably quiet. Not silent — you can hear a soft whir — but it didn’t seem to bother my dog after the first day.
  • Tilt range: About 120° vertical, which means it can look down at a dog lying near the camera’s base or up at a dog on furniture.
  • Auto-tracking accuracy: About 85% in my testing. It occasionally loses the dog behind furniture and takes a second to reacquire. Good enough for monitoring, not perfect for continuous recording.
  • Manual control: Drag-to-pan in the app is intuitive and responsive. Minimal lag over Wi-Fi.

The 360° coverage essentially means one Furbo can cover a room that previously might have needed two fixed cameras. For most people, that alone justifies the upgrade from older models.


Treat Tossing: The Feature That Sells Cameras

Let’s be honest — treat tossing is why most people buy a Furbo instead of a regular security camera. And it works well.

The treat compartment holds about 100 small treats (roughly one cup). You load them through the top, and when you tap the button in the app, the Furbo launches a treat 4–6 feet with a satisfying pop sound. The launch sound doubles as a conditioned stimulus — after a few uses, my dog learned to associate the sound with food and would come running to the camera from anywhere in the house.

Treat Tossing Details

  • Compatible treats: Small, round treats up to about 1 cm in diameter. Furbo recommends their own brand, but standard small training treats work fine. Irregularly shaped treats can jam the mechanism.
  • Launch distance: 4–6 feet, with some randomness in direction. This is a feature, not a bug — it keeps it interesting for the dog.
  • Capacity: About 100 small treats per fill.
  • Jam frequency: In three months, I had two minor jams — both from treats that were slightly too large. Stick to the size guidelines and you’ll be fine.
  • The sound: A distinct popping/clicking sound. Loud enough to get your dog’s attention from another room. Some dogs are initially startled; most adapt within a day or two.

The treat tossing feature serves a real purpose beyond entertainment. It can be used to redirect anxious dogs, reward calm behaviour during separation, or simply break up a long day home alone. If your dog has mild separation anxiety, the combination of 2-way audio and treat tossing can genuinely help.


Barking Alerts: Helpful or Annoying?

The Furbo 360 includes a barking detection system that sends push notifications to your phone when your dog barks. In theory, this lets you check in when your dog is stressed, respond with 2-way audio, or toss a treat to redirect them.

In practice, it’s a mixed bag.

What Works

  • The detection is genuinely sensitive — it catches real barking reliably, including single barks and bark sequences.
  • Notifications are fast, typically arriving within 5–10 seconds of the bark.
  • The associated video clip (subscription required) gives you context for why the dog was barking — doorbell, passing dog, squirrel taunting from the window, etc.

What Doesn’t

  • False positives. Loud noises (TV, music, clanging dishes if someone else is home) can trigger bark alerts. The sensitivity settings help but don’t eliminate the issue.
  • Alert fatigue. If your dog barks at everything — delivery trucks, neighbours, leaves — you’ll get buried in notifications. There’s no “smart” filtering that learns which barks are distress vs. routine.
  • Requires subscription for video clips. Without a paid plan, you get the alert but no video context. This dramatically reduces the feature’s usefulness.

My recommendation: turn barking alerts on for the first few weeks to learn your dog’s patterns, then adjust sensitivity or turn it off if you’re getting too many false positives. It’s most useful for dogs who rarely bark — a notification from a normally quiet dog is a meaningful signal.


Night Vision

The Furbo 360 uses infrared LEDs for night vision, providing a clear black-and-white image in complete darkness. The night vision quality is solid — comparable to dedicated security cameras in this price range.

You can see your dog clearly at distances up to about 25 feet in complete darkness. Details like facial expressions and body posture are visible up to about 15 feet. The IR LEDs are not visible to dogs (despite what some forums claim), so they won’t disturb your pet’s sleep.

One note: the night vision activates automatically based on ambient light levels. There’s no manual toggle in the app, which is slightly annoying if you want to force it on in a dimly-lit-but-not-dark room.


2-Way Audio

The 2-way audio lets you listen to your home and speak through the Furbo’s built-in speaker. The microphone picks up sounds clearly from across a room, and the speaker is loud enough for your dog to hear you from about 20 feet away.

Audio Quality Assessment

  • Microphone: Good sensitivity. Picks up barking, whining, and ambient sounds clearly. Some background hiss in very quiet rooms, but nothing unusual.
  • Speaker: Loud and clear for voice. Slight tininess/compression on the dog’s end, but dogs aren’t audiophiles. They’ll recognize your voice.
  • Latency: About 1–2 seconds of delay, which is typical for cloud-connected cameras. Fine for talking to your dog, awkward if you’re trying to have a real-time conversation with a human through it.
  • Echo cancellation: Works well — no feedback loops when using 2-way audio.

The 2-way audio is most useful combined with treat tossing. Call your dog’s name, wait for them to approach the camera, then toss a treat. It’s surprisingly effective at providing comfort during separation.


Video Quality

The Furbo 360 records in 1080p Full HD, which is perfectly adequate for a pet camera. The image is sharp enough to see your dog’s expression and body language clearly. Colours are accurate in daylight, and the wide-angle lens (before pan/tilt) covers a good field of view.

  • Resolution: 1080p (no 2K or 4K option)
  • Frame rate: 30fps — smooth, no stuttering
  • Field of view: ~160° wide-angle base, extended to full room coverage with pan
  • Zoom: 4x digital zoom via the app. Quality degrades noticeably past 2x.
  • Streaming quality: Depends on your Wi-Fi. On a stable connection, the live feed is smooth with minimal buffering.

Is 1080p enough in 2026? For a pet camera, yes. You’re not trying to read license plates — you’re checking if your dog is on the couch. 1080p is plenty.


The Subscription Question: Furbo’s Tiers Explained

This is where things get complicated — and where Furbo draws the most criticism. The hardware is a one-time purchase, but many features are locked behind subscription plans.

Free (No Subscription)

  • Live streaming
  • 2-way audio
  • Manual treat tossing
  • Manual pan and tilt
  • Basic barking alerts (notification only, no video)

Furbo Basic Plan (~$8.99 CAD/mo)

  • Everything free, plus:
  • Cloud video recording (event-based clips)
  • Barking alert video clips
  • Activity zone detection
  • 24-hour event history

Furbo Plus Plan (~$16.99 CAD/mo)

  • Everything in Basic, plus:
  • Auto dog tracking
  • Dog selfie alerts (AI detects when your dog is looking at the camera)
  • Full-day video timeline
  • Smart alerts (person detection, package detection)
  • Up to 30-day cloud history
  • Covers unlimited Furbo cameras

Is the Subscription Worth It?

Here’s my honest take:

Without any subscription, the Furbo 360 is still a decent pet camera — you get live viewing, 2-way audio, treat tossing, and manual pan control. That’s more than many competitors offer at the same price point.

The Basic plan is worth it if you want bark alert video clips and event recording. Without it, you’re flying blind when you get a notification — you know your dog barked but not why.

The Plus plan is hard to justify for most people. Auto-tracking is cool, and the dog selfie feature is fun for about a week. But $16.99/mo ($203.88/yr) on top of the hardware cost is steep. For comparison, a Wyze Cam subscription runs about $2/mo.

My recommendation: start with the free tier, try the Basic plan trial if offered, and decide from there. Most people will be happy with Basic.


Pros and Cons Summary

Pros

  • ✅ 360° pan-and-tilt is a genuine game-changer for room coverage
  • ✅ Treat tossing is reliable and dogs love it
  • ✅ Excellent build quality and attractive design
  • ✅ Night vision is clear and effective
  • ✅ 2-way audio quality is above average for pet cameras
  • ✅ Usable without a subscription (basic features are free)
  • ✅ App is well-designed and responsive

Cons

  • ❌ Subscription tiers lock key features behind a paywall
  • ❌ Barking alert false positives are a common frustration
  • ❌ No local storage option (SD card) — cloud only
  • ❌ 1080p only (no 2K/4K option)
  • ❌ Auto-tracking requires the most expensive subscription tier
  • ❌ Pan motor is audible (soft whir)
  • ❌ No battery backup — loses power in an outage

Furbo 360 vs. The Competition

FeatureFurbo 360Petcube Bites 2 LiteWyze Cam Pan v3eufy Pet Camera
Price (CAD)~$250~$140~$55~$170
Pan/Tilt360°No360°No
Treat Tossing
Resolution1080p1080p1080p2K
Night Vision✅ (colour)
2-Way Audio
Barking AlertsSound detection
Local Storage✅ (microSD)✅ (microSD)
Subscription (Basic)$8.99/mo$5.99/mo$2.49/moFree
Auto-Tracking✅ (paid)✅ (free)

The Furbo 360 is the best dog-specific camera — treat tossing and bark detection are designed for pet owners, not general home security. But if you don’t need treat tossing and want to save money, the Wyze Cam Pan v3 offers 360° coverage and local storage for a fraction of the price.

For a broader look at pet cameras, check our Best Pet Cameras 2026 roundup.


Setup and App Experience

Setting up the Furbo 360 took about 10 minutes:

  1. Download the Furbo app (iOS or Android)
  2. Create an account
  3. Plug in the camera via USB-C
  4. Follow the in-app pairing process (Wi-Fi connection via QR code)
  5. Load treats and test the toss mechanism

The app itself is clean and well-organized. The live view loads in 2–3 seconds on a good connection. Pan-and-tilt controls are intuitive — just drag on the screen. The event timeline (subscription required) makes it easy to scrub through the day’s activity.

One minor annoyance: the app pushes subscription upsells fairly aggressively, especially in the first few weeks. Dismissible, but persistent.

Wi-Fi requirements: 2.4 GHz only. If your router defaults to a combined 2.4/5 GHz network, you may need to temporarily separate them for setup, then reconnect. This is the single most common setup complaint in user reviews.


Who Should Buy the Furbo 360?

Buy it if:

  • You want to interact with your dog while you’re away (treat tossing + 2-way audio)
  • You need full-room coverage from a single camera
  • Your dog has mild separation anxiety and you want to provide comfort remotely
  • You’re willing to pay for at least the Basic subscription

Skip it if:

  • You’re primarily looking for home security with pet detection as a bonus — get a security camera instead
  • You refuse to pay any subscription — the free tier is usable but limited
  • You need local storage/SD card support
  • Budget is tight — the Wyze Cam Pan v3 covers the basics for $55

FAQ

Can I use the Furbo 360 without a subscription?

Yes. Without a subscription, you get live streaming, 2-way audio, treat tossing, manual pan/tilt, and basic push notifications for barking. You lose video recording, event clips, auto-tracking, and smart alerts. It’s still functional, but you’re missing context when something happens.

What treats work best with the Furbo?

Small, round, dry treats up to about 1 cm in diameter. Zuke’s Mini Naturals, Charlee Bear, and small kibble pieces all work well. Avoid soft, sticky, or irregularly shaped treats — they’ll jam the mechanism. Furbo sells their own branded treats, but they’re not necessary.

How loud is the treat-tossing sound?

It’s a distinct pop/click — similar to a loud pen click. Audible from 20+ feet away. Most dogs are briefly startled on first exposure, then quickly associate the sound with treats. A few dogs remain fearful of the sound — if your dog is noise-sensitive, introduce it gradually.

Does the 360° rotation scare dogs?

In my experience, no. The motor whir is quiet enough that most dogs ignore it after the first day. Some curious dogs will investigate the camera during rotation — which is actually great for the dog selfie feature.

Can I use multiple Furbo cameras?

Yes. The app supports multiple cameras, and the Plus subscription covers unlimited Furbo devices. If you have a large home, you could place one in the living room and one in the bedroom.

Does the Furbo work with Alexa or Google Home?

Yes — the Furbo 360 is compatible with both Alexa and Google Assistant. You can pull up the live feed on an Echo Show or Google Nest Hub, and use voice commands to toss treats (“Alexa, tell Furbo to toss a treat”).

Is the Furbo 360 good for cats?

Technically yes, but it’s designed for dogs. The treat tosser works with cat treats if they’re the right size. Barking alerts obviously don’t apply to cats. The camera itself works fine as a general pet monitor for cats — you just won’t get cat-specific features.

What happens to my video if I cancel the subscription?

Cloud-stored video becomes inaccessible. There’s no way to export it in bulk before cancelling, so download any clips you want to keep first. Since there’s no local storage, cancelling means you lose all recorded history.


The Bottom Line

The Furbo 360 is the best treat-tossing pet camera you can buy in 2026. The 360° pan coverage solves the biggest problem with earlier models, the treat tossing is reliable and dogs genuinely love it, and the build quality is excellent.

The subscription model is the main drawback. Furbo locks meaningful features — video recording, auto-tracking, smart alerts — behind monthly fees that add up. For a ~$250 camera, it stings to pay an additional $9–$17/month for features that feel like they should be included.

But if you’re a dog owner who works away from home and wants to stay connected with your pet, the Furbo 360 delivers on that promise better than anything else. Just budget for the Basic subscription and set realistic expectations about what the free tier offers.

Overall Rating: 4.2/5

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