Logitech C920x 1080p webcam

The webcam that's been on more desks than any other — a 1080p workhorse that just plugs in and works on any computer, no shutter and no frills.

Logitech C920x

Logitech

6.4/10high confidenceLast checked

The rock-bottom reliable pick — dependable 1080p in good light for the price of a nice dinner, as long as you accept its age and skip the privacy cover.

The C920 has sat on more desks than arguably any other webcam, and the C920x is its straightforward, plug-and-play version: glass Carl Zeiss lens, dependable 1080p30, reliable autofocus, and it simply works the moment you plug it into Windows, macOS, Linux, or ChromeOS. For around $70, it remains the safe answer to "I just want to look better than my laptop camera without thinking about it." Just go in clear-eyed about its age. It caps at 1080p30 — no 4K, no 60fps — the small, older sensor turns grainy in dim rooms, and the stereo mics are forgettable. The most common gotcha: the C920x does not include a privacy shutter; that's the separate C920S you may be thinking of. Logitech has also moved on from its old Capture app to G Hub. None of that changes the core value proposition. If you want maximum reliability for minimum money and don't need 4K or a built-in cover, this is the budget workhorse to buy.

$69.99

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Last reviewed Jun 18, 2026

What we like

  • Proven, dependable 1080p30 with a glass Carl Zeiss lens
  • True plug-and-play across Windows, macOS, Linux, and ChromeOS
  • One of the best-value real webcams at around $70
  • Autofocus and a tripod thread included

Trade-offs

  • No privacy shutter (only the C920S includes one)
  • 1080p caps at 30fps; no 4K or 60fps
  • Aging 2012-era design and a small sensor that struggles in low light
  • Mediocre mics; Logitech retired its Capture app (now G Hub)

Best for

anyone who just wants a dependable, dirt-cheap 1080p upgrade that works on any computer right out of the box

Avoid if

you want 4K, 60fps, dependable low-light performance, or a built-in privacy shutter

Score breakdown

  • value9.0/10
  • image quality6.5/10
  • autofocus framing6.5/10
  • software controls5.5/10
  • low light5.0/10
  • microphone5.0/10

Specs

lens
Glass, Carl Zeiss
sensor
5 MP
launched
2012 design
software
Logitech G Hub (Capture retired)
autofocus
true
connection
USB-A
microphone
Stereo (mediocre)
resolution
1080p 30fps
compatibility
Windows / macOS / Linux / ChromeOS — plug-and-play
field of view
78°
tripod thread
true
lower res modes
720p30
privacy shutter
None (only the C920S has one)
light correction
HD light correction (RightLight 2)

How we know

High confidenceLast checked

More than a decade after launch, reviewers still recommend the C920 family as the safe budget default, and the C920x is the plug-and-play, software-light variant of that workhorse. The enduring strengths are consistency and value: a glass Carl Zeiss lens, solid 1080p30 in good light, dependable autofocus, and true cross-platform plug-and-play across Windows, macOS, Linux, and ChromeOS for around $70. The limitations are equally well understood and entirely age-related: it tops out at 1080p30 with no 4K or 60fps, the small older sensor gets noisy in dim rooms, the stereo mics are unremarkable, and — a point of frequent confusion — the C920x has no privacy shutter (that's the separate C920S). Logitech has also retired its Capture software in favor of G Hub. Reviewers' bottom line: not exciting, but a reliable, no-drama upgrade over a laptop camera and one of the best-value webcams you can still buy.

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  • YouTubeLogitech C920 / C920x review

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