Your package says DELIVERED.
You walk outside 20 minutes later… and it’s gone.
Now comes the second punch in the face: customer support asks for proof, the carrier says “check around,” and the retailer may or may not refund you. If you’ve ever had to argue your way into a replacement, you already know: theft is bad — but the refund battle is worse.
As a network engineer, I don’t rely on hope. I rely on monitoring + alerts + evidence.
You can apply the same logic to your front porch. You don’t need a full security system. You just need a closed-loop delivery setup that (1) tells you instantly, (2) records what happened, and (3) makes thieves choose an easier house.
The 4% Rule (Why Evidence Matters)
This article (link) shows concerns graphs and numbers:

According to the 2025 Package Theft Report by SafeWise, porch piracy remains widespread across the U.S.—with billions in losses and repeat victimization. Here are a few numbers that explain why prevention matters more than “hoping for a refund.”
SafeWise’s 2025 report lists the top 10 worst states by total financial toll as: California, New York, Texas, Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Ohio, Georgia, Illinois, and North Carolina.

When a package is stolen, recovery is rare. SafeWise reports that only 4% of victims actually recover the stolen item—while 27% received a replacement and 19% got a refund from the seller.

Transparency Note: This article contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you. This helps support the blog.
The Problem: Why “A Doorbell Camera” Isn’t Enough
Most people buy a doorbell camera and assume the problem is solved.
But porch theft usually happens because of one (or more) of these:
- You didn’t notice the delivery. Notifications get buried.
- Wi-Fi is weak at the front door. The camera misses motion or uploads late.
- No useful footage. Without a plan/subscription, many cameras don’t save video history.
- The thief moves fast. They can grab and leave before you even open an app.
A camera helps… but a camera alone isn’t a system.
The Solution: Build a “Closed-Loop Delivery Zone”
Think like an engineer. You want a simple system with 3 layers:
Layer 1 — Instant Awareness (so the box doesn’t sit outside)
- Loud phone alert
- Optional: voice announcement inside the house (“Package detected!”)
Layer 2 — Evidence (so you’re not begging for a refund)
- Video clip saved automatically
- Time-stamped event history
Layer 3 — Deterrence (so your porch looks annoying to steal from)
- Bright light turns on
- Camera is visible
- Optional: siren / chime indoors
This is the key idea:
Thieves steal what’s easy and invisible. Your goal is to remove both.
1) The Best Ecosystem (Easy Mode): Ring “All-in-One Delivery Defense”
If your goal is simple + reliable + one app, this is the smoothest experience for non-tech people.
What to buy:

- Ring Video Doorbell
- Ring Protect plan (inside app)

Ring Alarm Contact Sensor (put it inside a delivery box or on a porch storage bin lid)

Ring Smart Lighting / Motion light (or a smart bulb on the porch light)
Why this works:
- Doorbell event = video evidence
- Contact sensor = confirms the package bin opened/closed
- Light automation = “this porch is not worth it”
Pro tip (super effective):
Use a lockable delivery box (even a basic deck box) and put the contact sensor inside. Now your system doesn’t just see motion — it knows the box was opened.
Downsides: Ring’s best features often depend on a subscription for video storage/history.
2) Best Cost/Benefit (Lowest Ongoing Cost): Blink + Sync Module 2 “Local NVR”
This is what I have for years. If you want solid coverage with minimal monthly fees, Blink is hard to beat because you can record clips locally using the Sync Module 2 + a USB flash drive.
Some advanced features may require a subscription, but basic recording to local storage is the key win for cost control.
What to buy:

Blink doorbell with sync module 2

Recommended accessories for physical support and local storage
Why this is a strong cost/benefit setup:
- Local clip storage: when a clip is created, it can be saved directly to the USB drive via the Sync Module 2 (no subscription required for basic local recording).
- Great “Joe-friendly” experience: one app, simple notifications, quick setup.
Pro tip:
If Wi-Fi at the door is weak, fix that first (mesh node closer to the porch). Cameras don’t “solve” weak signal, they expose it. Check this article to fix as a PRO: Stop Buying Wi-Fi Extenders: Why Mesh is the Only Real Fix (Engineer’s Verdict)
3) The “Nuclear” Option (Best Real-World Results): Camera + Delivery Box + Smart Padlock
The fastest way to reduce porch theft is simple:
Stop leaving packages exposed. Put them in a locked drop box.
This “nuclear” setup is just your Option #1 or #2 above plus:
Add these two items:

A weatherproof package delivery box (large enough for typical Amazon/UPS packages)

A strong cost/benefit option is the eLinkSmart Heavy Duty Smart Outdoor Padlock, because it’s designed for outdoor use and supports app-based access sharing plus backup entry methods.
Why this works (engineering logic)
- The camera provides evidence
- The drop box removes opportunity
- The padlock makes your porch high-friction to steal from
Pro tip: put a simple sign on the box lid:
“DELIVERIES: place packages inside and close lid”
That alone improves compliance.
Critical Engineering Dependency: Internet + Power (Yes, This Matters)
Here’s the uncomfortable truth:
If your internet drops, your smart alerts may fail.
If power drops, your Wi-Fi may die (and cameras can miss the moment).
At minimum, protect these:
- Modem
- Router
- Camera hub / NVR (if you use one)
The fix is cheap: run your network gear on a mini UPS battery so your system stays online during short outages. The $60 Device That Saves Your Internet During Storms (Router UPS Guide)
The best routers you can have: Stop Buying Wi-Fi Extenders: Why Mesh is the Only Real Fix (Engineer’s Verdict)
Check it out the security cameras that can be an add-on: Best Cheap Security Cameras for 2026 (That Don’t Force a Monthly Fee)
Where to Place Things (So It Actually Works)
Don’t just mount a doorbell and pray. Do this:
- Doorbell Camera Angle
- You want to see faces AND hands
- Avoid pointing directly at the street (headlights can blow out night video)
- The “Drop Zone”
- Define a delivery spot: left corner, behind a pillar, inside a bin
- Add a big house number visible from the street (helps delivery accuracy)
- A Lockable Bin (Game-Changer)
- Even a basic porch storage box reduces grab-and-go theft
- Add a contact sensor inside so you get an “opened” event
- Lighting
- Motion lighting is a thief’s enemy
- Bright + instant > fancy colors
The “30% Rule” (Why Evidence Matters)
Here’s the mindset shift:
Even if a retailer often refunds stolen packages, a large chunk of victims don’t get made whole (or they get partial outcomes like store credit, denial, or endless back-and-forth).
That’s why your smart home goal isn’t “catch the thief.”
It’s this:
Create undeniable proof + respond fast enough that the package doesn’t sit outside.
Because when support asks, “Do you have evidence?” — your answer becomes:
- Video clip
- Timestamp
- Motion event
- Bin opened event
- Light triggered event
That’s not a story. That’s a log.
Conclusion
Porch pirates are a crime of opportunity.
The fix is not complicated:
- Detect
- Record
- Light it up
- Get the package inside fast
Start with one thing today:
a doorbell camera with real video history (local storage or subscription)
Then add a lockable delivery bin + sensor when you’re ready.
Your future self will thank you the next time “DELIVERED” doesn’t mean delivered.
Concerned about privacy? Read: Is Your Security Camera Spying on You? (The “Zero Trust” Guide)