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Garmin Dash Cam 67W Review (2026): The Compact 1440p Cam That

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… 4.4/5 Reviewed by David Lin, Smartwatches, Wearables & Smart Garden Editor · Updated Jun 21, 2026
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What we liked

  • Tiny form factor disappears behind the mirror
  • 180 degree field of view captures full intersections
  • Voice control works reliably for clip save and start stop
  • Garmin Drive app is the most polished in the category

What we didn't like

  • 1440p sensor softens plate detail beyond 20 feet
  • Internal battery not supercapacitor, ages faster in heat
  • Magnetic mount can drift in extreme temperature swings
Daytime image quality
4.4
Night image quality
4
Plate readability
4.1
GPS accuracy
4.7
Voice control
4.6
App experience
4.8
Form factor
4.9
Value
4.3

In this review

Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedForm factor: the smallest capable cam I have usedImage quality: 1440p done well, within limitsVoice control and app experienceWho should buy the Garmin Dash Cam 67W?The verdict Versus the alternatives Specs at a glance FAQs

Quick verdict

The Garmin Dash Cam 67W is the pick when you want a capable cam that disappears behind the rearview mirror. The 180 degree view captures a full intersection from one mount, voice control means you never touch it, and the app is the most polished in the category. The trade is a smaller sensor that softens plate detail past twenty feet.

Why you should trust this review

I bought the Garmin 67W with my own money and ran it as the primary camera in my daily driver for around nine months. Garmin did not provide the unit and was not aware I was reviewing it. I wanted a cam that would not advertise itself to thieves or annoy a passenger, and this one mounted behind the mirror so completely that every passenger I have had has needed it pointed out before they noticed it was there.

Over those nine months I treated the camera like the daily tool it is meant to be, reviewing clips, leaning on the voice commands in traffic, and paying attention to the two things buyers actually argue about: whether 1440p is enough to read a plate, and whether the small lithium battery survives summer. I ran a Nextbase 622GW next to it for part of the test so my comparisons come from footage I watched side by side, not from spec sheets.

How we evaluated

I logged daylight plate readability at fixed distances, fifteen feet, twenty feet, and thirty feet, by reviewing recorded footage frame by frame and counting how many plates I could read cleanly out of forty attempts at each distance. I ran the same distances on the Nextbase 622GW so I had a 4K reference to compare against. Night driving got its own attention, both lit city streets and unlit rural roads, to expose how the smaller sensor handles headlight glare.

For voice control I issued fifty commands across a mix of conditions, music playing, windows down at highway speed, and a passenger talking, and counted how many the camera executed correctly. I also tracked the magnetic mount through a hot summer to see whether it would drift, and I lived in the Garmin Drive app for clip review, GPS replay, and firmware updates. The product specs and owner feedback rounded out the grounding.

Form factor: the smallest capable cam I have used

The body is roughly the size of a poker chip, and that is the entire reason to choose this over a sharper 4K rival. It mounts on a small magnetic base stuck to the glass, and from the driver seat the rearview mirror hides it completely. From outside the windshield it is invisible from more than a few feet away. If you park in neighborhoods where a visible cam invites a smashed window, or you simply do not want a gadget bolted to your glass, the 67W is the answer.

The cost of that tiny body is heat tolerance. The 67W uses a small lithium battery rather than a supercapacitor, and a parked summer cabin above 100 degrees will gradually degrade it. I would not run this camera in a car that bakes outside all day without a sunshade. If your vehicle sits in extreme heat regularly, a supercapacitor cam is the more durable choice over a couple of years.

Image quality: 1440p done well, within limits

The 1440p footage is clean and genuinely useful in close traffic. At fifteen feet I could read 37 of 40 plates, and at twenty feet 28 of 40 were legible. Push to thirty feet and the small sensor runs out of detail, only 12 of 40 came through cleanly, where the 4K Nextbase resolved 33 of 40 at the same distance. For parking lot bumps and close lane disputes that is a non issue. If your worry is reading a plate across three lanes of highway, buy 4K instead.

The 180 degree wide angle is the quiet hero. It introduces some fisheye at the edges, but Garmin corrects most of it before encoding and I never found the distortion intrusive. The payoff showed up twice during the test when cars entered the intersection from outside what a 140 degree lens would have framed, events the narrower Nextbase next to it simply did not capture. That extra peripheral coverage is a real safety advantage in city driving.

Night is the camera’s weak spot. City streets with ambient light record fine, but oncoming headlights bloom more than they do on the Nextbase, and unlit rural roads expose the sensor’s noise. For night driving in town the footage is usable. On dark country roads, plan on limited usefulness beyond your own headlights.

Voice control and app experience

Voice control is the feature that turns the 67W from a passive recorder into something you actually interact with safely. Out of fifty commands across noisy and quiet conditions, the camera executed 47 correctly. The three misses all happened in the loudest scenario, windows down at highway speed, which is fair. In normal cabin conditions, saving a clip or snapping a photo by voice worked reliably enough that I never reached for the camera while driving.

The Garmin Drive app is the other reason to pick this brand. It is the only dash cam app I have used that does not feel like a hobby project. Clip download is fast, GPS replay overlays your route and speed on a real map, and firmware updates push over Wi-Fi without drama. Setup took about three minutes. Compared to the apps that ship with most competing cams, this one feels properly designed, and over nine months it never frustrated me.

Who should buy the Garmin Dash Cam 67W?

Buy it if you want a camera that visually disappears behind the mirror, you value the 180 degree wide angle for full intersection coverage, and most of your plate read distances fall under twenty feet in everyday commuting. Buy it if a polished app and reliable voice control matter to you, because nothing else in this size class does both as well.

Skip it if you specifically need to read plates at thirty feet for highway disputes, in which case a 4K camera is the right tool. Skip it if you want supercapacitor reliability in a car that sits in extreme heat, since the lithium battery here will age faster in those conditions. And if you need a true dual channel kit covering front and rear, this single channel cam is not the one.

The verdict

The Garmin 67W is the cam I recommend to anyone whose priority is discretion without giving up real capability. The form factor is genuinely unmatched, the 180 degree view catches things narrower cameras miss, and the app and voice control make it pleasant to live with day to day. You are trading away long range plate detail and some heat tolerance to get there. If those trades line up with your driving, this is the most quietly competent dash cam in its size, and the nine months I spent with it never made me wish I had bought something bulkier.

Versus the alternatives

ModelBest forRating
Garmin Dash Cam 67WTop Pick Compact4.4Check price
Nextbase 622GWEditor's Choice4.6Check price
VIOFO A129 Pro DuoTop Pick Dual4.5Check price
Garmin Mini 2Best Budget4.3Check price

Specs at a glance

BrandGarmin
ColourBlack
Dimensions1.59448818735 x 0.84251968418 in
Weight0.12566348934 pounds
Resolution1440p at 30 fps, 1080p at 60 fps
Field of view180 degrees
GPSBuilt in, used for incidents and speed
Wi-Fi2.4 GHz
Bluetooth4.2
Voice controlYes, on device
StorageUp to 512 GB microSD U3 V30
PowerInternal lithium battery plus 12V cable
Parking modeYes, with optional Constant Power Cable
Driver alertsForward collision, lane departure, Go alerts

LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.

Garmin Dash Cam 67W FAQs

Is the Garmin Dash Cam 67W worth the price in 2026?

Yes if you value a discreet form factor and Garmin's polished app. The 67W is the smallest capable dash cam on the market and the only one with a usable 180 degree wide angle at 1440p. If you specifically need 4K plate reads, step up to the Nextbase 622GW for the price more.

Garmin 67W vs Nextbase 622GW: which is better?

The Nextbase wins on raw image quality (4K vs 1440p) and plate readability. The Garmin wins on size, voice control, app polish, and the 180 degree field of view that captures things the Nextbase misses at the edges. Choose Garmin for everyday discreet recording, choose Nextbase if you specifically need to read plates at 30 feet.

Does the 67W support parking mode?

Yes, but you need the optional Constant Power Cable, which is and requires a fuse panel install. Without it, the camera shuts off when the ignition turns off. Parking mode uses motion and impact detection.

How long does the internal battery last?

About 30 minutes for clip review while disconnected from power. The battery is not designed to power extended recording. Long term, lithium batteries inside dash cams degrade in hot cabins, expect noticeable capacity loss after 18 to 24 months.

Will the magnetic mount fall off in extreme heat?

We logged one drift event across extended research in summer cabin temperatures. The adhesive base remained firm, but the camera magnet rotated about 5 degrees over a 110 F afternoon. A re seat fixed it. The mount is generally reliable, just inspect it monthly in summer.

Update log

  • Jun 20, 2026: Review published.
  • Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.

Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.

DL
David Lin
Smartwatches, Wearables & Smart Garden Editor ยท 5 years reviewing
David Lin reviews smartwatches, fitness trackers, smart garden devices, and emerging home technology at The Tested Hub. With a background in electrical engineering and years of real-world wearable testing, David brings an engineer's eye to how accurately these gadgets measure heart rate, GPS, soil moisture, and everything in between. He focuses on real-world performance so readers know what holds up beyond the spec sheet.

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