GeoCam vs IFTTT for Blink Geofencing
IFTTT can chain almost anything, but using it to geofence Blink cameras is harder than it looks. Blink has no native IFTTT service, so any "if I leave home, arm Blink" recipe ends up routed through Alexa or hand-built Webhooks. GeoCam is a single app that talks to Blink directly from your phone — and one subscription covers your whole household.
What "IFTTT for Blink" actually means in 2026
Blink does not publish an official IFTTT service. To trigger Blink arm/disarm from an IFTTT applet you take one of two routes, both with caveats:
- Through Alexa. Blink integrates with Alexa, and Alexa exposes routines to IFTTT. You build an Alexa routine to arm or disarm Blink, then trigger that routine from IFTTT. This chains three accounts (IFTTT → Alexa → Blink). Any link breaking — a re-auth, a skill update, an offline echo device — silently breaks the whole chain.
- Through IFTTT Webhooks. You can wire IFTTT's Webhooks service to a self-hosted endpoint that calls Blink's reverse-engineered HTTP API. It works until Blink rotates auth tokens or changes endpoints — which they do, since the API isn't public.
Either route needs at least two applets: one for "leaving home" to arm, one for "arriving home" to disarm. IFTTT's free tier currently includes only two applets total, so a second household phone usually means moving to a paid IFTTT plan.
Where IFTTT geofencing falls short for security cameras
- Trigger latency. IFTTT location triggers are not real-time. The IFTTT app polls and propagates events on its own schedule; the gap between "I left the zone" and "Blink received the arm command" is typically several minutes. For a security camera, that gap is exactly what you wanted to eliminate.
- Single-device location only. The IFTTT location service reads from the phone running the IFTTT app. There is no built-in "everyone is out" check — if your partner has their own phone, you build separate per-person applets and combine them yourself.
- Per-person cost scaling. Each additional household member needs their own IFTTT account and applets. With IFTTT Pro pricing applied per account, a family of three on IFTTT costs more than three GeoCam subscriptions — and GeoCam covers the whole household on one €3.99/month plan.
- No failure visibility. When an applet doesn't fire, there's no surfacing in the IFTTT app. You only notice when you check Blink and realize the cameras didn't change state.
How GeoCam handles the same job
GeoCam is purpose-built for one workflow: location-driven Blink arming. It authenticates with your Blink account directly from the app — no chained services, no Webhooks endpoint, no Alexa skill in the middle. You set a zone on a map and the OS-level geofence APIs handle transitions in the background. With Pro, every household phone runs the app and the system waits for the last person to leave before arming. One subscription covers the whole family — no per-account math.
For the wider context, see how to arm Blink cameras automatically.
Side-by-side
| Aspect | GeoCam | IFTTT for Blink |
|---|---|---|
| Native Blink connection | Direct from the app | Routed via Alexa or Webhooks |
| Applet / cost ceiling | Single subscription, no applet count | 2 free applets, then paid plan |
| Multi-person presence logic | Built-in last-out logic (Pro) | Manual combination of per-phone applets |
| Family-friendly pricing | €3.99/mo per household (unlimited phones) | Paid tier × number of family accounts |
| Failure visibility | In-app status of last action | Silent applet failures |
Best fit
Choose GeoCam if you want Blink home/away to "just work" without managing applets, Webhooks endpoints, or three-account chains — and you want everyone in the house covered on one subscription.
Choose IFTTT if Blink is one node in a much larger cross-service automation graph you already maintain and you are comfortable rebuilding it when an upstream service changes.