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Kiwibit Beako 4K Smart Bird Feeder With Solar Roof

 & Jim Fisher Principal Writer, Cameras

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Kiwibit Beako 4K Smart Bird Feeder With Solar Roof - Kiwibit Beako 4K Smart Bird Feeder With Solar Roof (Credit: Jim Fisher)
3.5 Good

The Bottom Line

The Kiwibit Beako 4K records clear video to the cloud or a microSD card and automatically identifies and catalogs visiting bird species, though its identification isn’t always accurate and some features require a subscription.

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Pros & Cons

    • Crisp, colorful 4K video
    • Automatically builds a bird book
    • Dual-bin seeder hopper pops out for cleaning and fills
    • MicroSD slot for local storage
    • Solar roof reduces the need to recharge
    • Removable battery with USB-C charge port
    • Bird identification and 60-day cloud history require a subscription
    • Hit-or-miss species tagging
    • Still pictures in bird book don't look good

The Kiwibit Beako Smart Bird Feeder With Solar Roof ($279.99) catches video of visiting birds in excellent 4K quality, and automates the process of building a bird book. It wins points for being easy to set up, refill, and recharge, and for its microSD local storage support. However, I'm disappointed that its species recognition is often wrong, and the still images it pulls to fill the bird book don't look great. While the Beako offers higher video quality than many smart feeders, it's a step behind our Editors' Choice, the Bird Buddy Smart Feeder Pro ($299), which captures even better pictures and video and works without a subscription fee.

Design and Features: Easy to Install, Fill, and Recharge

Like other smart bird feeders, the Beako features a motion-sensitive camera housed in a bespoke enclosure. Kiwibit did a good job with the feeder portion. As is typical for the category, it's a plastic affair (you can get smart bird feeders made from bamboo, too, but I'm still trying to find one that's worth recommending). It works in conjunction with an app to record birds that stop by for a visit, and (with a subscription) tags them by species and adds them to an in-app bird book.

(Credit: Jim Fisher)

The Beako is a mix of green and clear plastic, so it not only blends into nature, but also gives you a good view of the amount of seed left in its dual-bin, 1.5-liter hopper. You can remove the seed hopper for cleaning or fills, though I found it easier to simply lift up the roof and pour the seed in from a pitcher. The dual bin approach is handy if you want to segregate different kinds of seeds to attract a wider variety of birds. I didn't bother with it, though, and instead I went for a premade songbird mix with millet, sunflower seeds, and corn, supplemented with golden safflower and mealworms, all poured in from the same pitcher.

(Credit: Jim Fisher)

The feeder includes everything you need for setup, though you may need to break out a power drill depending on your installation preferences. It comes with a bracket, screws and anchors for drilled mounting, a tree strap so you can mount without tools, and a pole mount—I used the latter and mounted it to this pole. The bracket and mount secure to the feeder with hex screws and a hex wrench, included in the package.

Most bird feeder cameras have built-in batteries, but Beako does things differently. It's powered by a removable, rechargeable battery that pops out of the bottom of the feeder so you can top it off via USB-C. This is a nice change versus the Birdfy 2 Pro ($299.99) and the Bird Buddy Pro, both of which make you take the cameras out of the housing to bring them indoors to charge. It takes around 6 hours to fully charge the Beako battery. Kiwibit doesn't sell replacement batteries at this time, which seems like a missed opportunity.

(Credit: Jim Fisher)

Solar power definitely helps extend the time between charges, but even with a dual-panel solar roof, I had to bring the Beako's battery inside to charge regularly. I tested it during the winter and got about 17 days of battery life when I had the feeder set up in a clear area free of tree cover, and about 10 days when I moved it to a shadier spot. Both figures were with the camera set to record 10-second clips, the default setting. You'll get far less life if you want to record longer videos; I upped the Beako to its maximum 3-minute clip length and burned through a battery in just four days. The Beako's longevity isn't as good as the Birdfy 2 Pro, which can go for three weeks without solar and well over a month with a solar panel, but is much better than the Bird Buddy Pro, which I ended up charging weekly, even with a solar roof attached.

Kiwibit App and Service: Subscription Not Required, But Recommended

Kiwibit sells a few different versions of the Beako; all use the same camera and app (available on both Android and iOS), but solar power and bundled subscription options vary.

The Beako works without a subscription, but only saves the past 24 hours of video on the cloud, limits videos to a maximum 20 seconds, and doesn't tag birds by species. If you don't mind using a microSD card, it's an economical option, though going through all the videos manually takes some time. That said, if you have a slow internet connection or simply don't want to pay for a subscription, the memory card option is welcome, and something you don't get with our other top-rated feeders like the Birdfy 2 Pro or Bird Buddy Pro.

Adding a subscription is a good idea if you prefer cloud storage to microSD. Kiwibit's paid service extends cloud storage to 60 days or 30GB of video (whichever comes first) on a rolling basis, adds automated species identification and tagging, increases the maximum record time to 3 minutes, and pulls still images of visitors to populate the in-app bird book. The Kiwbit service costs $4.99 monthly or $47.49 annually for a single device, and $9.99 monthly or $105.99 annually for unlimited feeders.

I reviewed the $279.99 Beako With Solar Roof, which has 4.4W solar built into its roof panels to extend the time between charges. The Beako is also available with an external 3W USB-C solar panel for $269.99, a pay-as-you-go subscription, or a lifetime subscription for $299.99. Take these prices with a grain of salt, because the Beako is frequently sold below its list price, as is the case for most smart feeders. At the time of publication, the solar roof version is $219.99, and the external solar version is $189.99 with a pay-as-you-go subscription, and $279.99 with a lifetime plan. There's no option to get the solar roof and lifetime subscription together at this time.

(Credit: Jim Fisher)

To compare, the Birdfy 2 Pro is available for purchase with a pay-as-you-go or lifetime bird identification subscription ($4.99 monthly, $49 annually, $69.99 lifetime) and includes 5GB of lifetime storage, 30 days of 20-second clips, and 5GB to save your favorites indefinitely. You can buy more storage a la carte (20GB is $1.99 monthly/$19.90 annually, 80GB is $3.99/$39.90, and 200GB is $5.99/$59.90), or upgrade your video plan to record 30 seconds at a time ($1.99/$19.90 for one device, $2.99/$29.90 for two) or extend rolling storage to 60 days ($5.99/$59.90 for up to five devices, $8.99/$89.90 for up to 10). Birdfy offers a wide range of backyard bird tech, including nesting boxes, a bird bath, and hummingbird feeders, which explains why it has so many tiers and pricing options. Meanwhile, Bird Buddy keeps things a little simpler and doesn't require a subscription for species recognition. Bird Buddy has a Premium tier ($69.99 individual, $98.99 family annually) that gets you higher-quality 2K video, among other sundry features, but it's fully equipped without a monthly fee.

It's pretty easy to get the Beako up and running. Download the Kiwibit app from the Apple App Store or Google Play, and it will guide you through connecting the feeder to your home Wi-Fi network—it takes only a couple of minutes. Like many smart home devices, the feeder only works with 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi, so you'll want to make sure that frequency is enabled. I had no issues connecting it to my dual-band eero 6+ mesh network. On a typical day with three-minute videos enabled, the Kiwibit sent about 2.8GB of video to the cloud. Not every clip is full-length (the Kiwibit cuts off the video once a bird flies away), so you can shorten the clip if you don't want to fill up the 30GB cap too quickly. I'd suggest setting the upper limit to 30 seconds or a minute per clip.

The app is organized into four tabs: Home, Birds, Activity, and Account
(Credit: Kiwibit/PCMag)

The app itself is broken up into four main pages: Home, Birds, Activity, and Account. Home shows a list of Kiwibit feeders (in case you have more than one set up), and lets you pop into the camera to take a live look any time. This is where you'll go to change camera settings, too. I left most of the default settings, but made a point to disable time/date watermarks (Video Settings > Watermark), extend the clip duration from the default 10 seconds (Motion Detection > Recording Setting), and enable the feeder's automatic nuisance animal alarm (which sounds a klaxon whenever a squirrel stops by). The latter isn't really effective with my squirrels, as they learned to ignore it after a couple of days, but they have to eat, too.

The app lets you change camera and motion detection settings, and set up an alarm to scare squirrels away
(Credit: Kiwibit/PCMag)

The Birds page is a record of every species that's visited your feeder. Its gallery shows thumbnails of each species, along with the number of visits. Tap on any bird to see a record of all visits, and tap any of those entries to play the recorded video, assuming it hasn't yet scrolled off your account. If you don't have a subscription, videos and photos expire after 24 hours, but subscribers can look back up to 60 days.

I like that the Bird page is automatically populated, but I am disappointed by the hit-or-miss image quality—the Beako pulls out still frames from the camera's video clips and crops in heavily to get a close-up view of birds. Sometimes it gets a good thumbnail; other times, it picks one with poor lighting or a bad pose, and there's no way to change it. All and all, I find the Beako's still images underwhelming, though to be fair, the feeder and app are more focused on video.

If the app gets a bird species wrong you can change the tag manually
(Credit: Kiwibit/PCMag)

The Activity tab shows a list of every visitor in a daily calendar view. You can scroll back to any day you'd like (within the 60-day window) and view clips. There are buttons to filter out by species, and this is also where you'll go to fix tags on any birds that the feeder misidentifies. The Beako does a decent, but not spectacular, job tagging species. It's most accurate when the light is good, and the bird isn't backlit, but struggles if the sun is in the background, creating flare, or on overcast days when the light is dull enough to keep its camera from getting a good look at the colors and patterns of plumage.

In these instances, the feeder will most often leave a bird listed as unidentified, and occasionally will make an incorrect, wild guess as to the species. I saw a few female house finches tagged as California towhees (a bird that does not venture into Pennsylvania, where I live) and noted a red-winged blackbird that was identified as a raven (a bird that's many times larger), for instance. I am a little surprised at how many times it left house finches (one of my most frequent visitors) unidentified. I also noticed that the Kiwibit only ever tagged a single species per clip, even if a couple of different types of birds are stopping by simultaneously or in sequence. I caught a house sparrow dining next to a house finch in one clip where only the finch was tagged. Another time, when a finch swept in to scare away a black-capped chickadee, the latter was the only tag. Bird Buddy and Birdfy do a better job in this scenario.

(Credit: Jim Fisher)

You can go into any visit to add or fix a tag, but if you're new to birding and don't know a sparrow from a wren, you'll benefit more from the Bird Buddy Pro, which has the best species identification I've seen, or the Birdfy Feeder Pro 2, which is in between the Bird Buddy and Beako in accuracy. Still, the Beako gets the species right more often that not, which I can't say about budget-priced feeders like the Birdkiss Smart Bird Feeder or the Detiko Bamboo Feeder that I'm currently evaluating.

The Account tab rounds out the app pages. From here you can manage your subscription and devices, change the language, access online documentation the like.

One note, I've tested the Kiwibit on and off for several months, starting with the non-solar version last spring before switching out to the solar roof edition in late November 2025. Over that time, I've seen marked improvement in its app. Useful features like manual species tagging and watermark removal were added after launch. Updates and bug fixes come out a few times a month, so it's clear to me that the Kiwibit team is working to refine and improve Beako, and I have some hope that my gripes about species identification will be made irrelevant over time.

Video Quality: Clear 4K Recordings With Sound

The Beako may not have class-leading subject identification, but I'm quite happy with its video quality. It records 16:9 widescreen video at 4K (3,840 by 2,560) resolution, better than the soft 1080p you get with budget-line feeders like the Birdkiss or the first-generation Birdfy camera. Colors look good, the microphone picks up chirps and bird songs with excellent clarity, and while the framerate is locked at 15fps, the footage isn't choppy. The camera switches to a monochrome night vision mode if a bird happens to stop by before or after sunset. Resolution isn't the be-all, end-all for video quality—the Birdfy 2's 1080p camera records clips that look just as good as the Beako, for instance, and a little smoother with an average 20fps framerate. I expect the vast majority of smart feeder clips will either live on your phone or end up on social media, and the Beako is more than good enough for that purpose.

Of course, how good the video looks is largely dependent on the light and the sun's position, as with every bird feeder camera I've tested to date. The Beako's best clips come on bright days when the sun really hits the birds, showing off their colors, while clips are dull in overcast weather. The camera does a good job adjusting exposure for backlit scenes. When the sun is behind the birds, its clips tend to start out dark but quickly brighten to get a good exposure of the subject. Lens flare is visible when the sun comes in from a low, steep angle, and I noticed some chromatic aberration (false purple halos) toward the image's corners, but nothing egregious.

The app tends to pick bad poses or blurry shots for its bird book, so you're better off taking your own frame grabs from videos if you want to share a photo
(Credit: Kiwibit/PCMag)

As mentioned, the Beako is more about video than stills. It pulls out photos to populate the visitor list shown on the Birds page in the app, but doesn't surface stills in its Activity feed. You can get frame grabs from video clips if you want to share a still image—the 4K resolution comes in handy here as each frame is 8MP, versus 2MP for a 1080p camera—but you have to do it manually. You can also download still images from the gallery in the Birds page of the app, but there are more throwaways than keepers, in terms of poses and lighting.

Not every photo is bad, the app grabbed this frame and added it to the house finch entry on the Birds page of the app
(Credit: Kiwibit/PCMag)

The lack of good stills is one of the reasons I'm rating the Beako a little bit lower than the Birdfy 2 or Bird Buddy Pro. The Birdfy 2 Pro offers more interesting views because its camera has two lenses: a wide-angle lens like the Beako and a portrait lens that captures birds in more detail with a blurred background, a feature I haven't seen from any other smart feeder. The Bird Buddy Pro records 1440p video at 30fps with a vertical aspect and has 5MP still resolution; it's not 4K, but its video and photos better capture detail and texture versus the Beako.

Final Thoughts

Kiwibit Beako 4K Smart Bird Feeder With Solar Roof - Kiwibit Beako 4K Smart Bird Feeder With Solar Roof (Credit: Jim Fisher)

Kiwibit Beako 4K Smart Bird Feeder With Solar Roof

3.5 Good

The Kiwibit Beako 4K records clear video to the cloud or a microSD card and automatically identifies and catalogs visiting bird species, though its identification isn’t always accurate and some features require a subscription.

Get It Now

Buy It Now

About Our Expert

Jim Fisher

Jim Fisher

Principal Writer, Cameras

My Experience

Images, and the devices that capture them, are my focus. I've covered cameras at PCMag for the past 14 years, which has given me a front row seat for the changeover from DSLRs to mirrorless cameras, the smartphone camera revolution, and the emergence of drones for aerial imaging. I have extensive experience with every major mirrorless and SLR system, and am also comfortable using point-and-shoot and action cameras. As a Part 107 Certified drone pilot, I’m licensed to fly unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) for commercial and editorial purposes, and am knowledgeable about federal rules and regulations regarding drones.

The Technology I Use

I use all of the major camera systems on a regular basis, swapping between Canon, Fujifilm, L-Mount, Micro Four Thirds, Nikon, and Sony systems. I still find time to use Leica M rangefinders and Pentax SLRs on occasion, too. I keep an iPhone 13 in my pocket for the rare occasions I'm not carrying a camera.

I'm not a brand-specific photographer. For product review photos, I swap between a Canon EOS R5 and a Sony a7R IV. I use Flashpoint and Godox TTL lights and Peak Design tripods, and I most often reach for a Think Tank or Peak Design backpack to carry equipment.

When it comes to computers, I'm an unapologetic Mac person and have been for the past 20 years. I write in Pages and use Numbers for spreadsheets. I currently swap between an Intel i9 MacBook Pro and an Apple Silicon Mac Studio for writing and use a calibrated BenQ 32.5-inch with the Studio for photo and video editing. I rely on a LaCie 6big RAID for media storage. I also keep a PC around for gaming, but please don't tell my Macs about it; they'll get jealous.

I split time between several different software apps depending on the type of editing I'm doing. For Raw image processing, Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic is my standard. I pair it with a LoupeDeck CT console to supplement my keyboard and trackpad, and I lean on RNI All Films 5 presets when I want to give an image a film look. I use Apple Final Cut Pro for video editing.

My first digital camera was the Canon PowerShot Elph S200, and my first DSLR was the Pentax *ist DL. I have a soft spot for antique film gear. I still use a 1950 vintage Rolleiflex Automat TLR and love trying mid-century Leica lenses on film and digital alike. I mainly use whatever's in front of me for review for digital snaps, but I pick up either my Leica M Typ 240 or Pentax K-3 III Monochrome when I want to step away from review work. In my downtime, I enjoy bird watching, reading, video games, and both good and bad movies, especially in the sci-fi and horror genres.

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