Posted by Sami Dimitrov 🥉
21 days ago

Why does this baby monitor keep losing signal?

Right and this baby monitor I got from Amazon drops the signal every night, right when I need it most. Any tips to fix this annoying problem?

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9 Answers

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Carl Anderson avatar
Carl Anderson 39 rep
18 days ago
Top Answer

Hey and that sounds frustrating with your baby monitor dropping signal every night. It could be due to WiFi interference from other devices in your home, or maybe weak battery life causing connectivity issues when you need it most. These things happen a lot with WiFi-based monitors, especially in busy households.

A good fix might be switching to a non-WiFi option to avoid those drops altogether. I'd recommend the HelloBaby baby monitor because it uses a direct secure transmission that skips WiFi entirely, giving you a reliable 1000-foot range without interruptions. Plus, its 30-hour battery keeps it going strong through the night.

One minor thing is it doesn't connect to smart home systems like some fancier ones do, but overall, it's a solid, straightforward choice that should give you peace of mind without the hassle.

Josephine Evans avatar
21 days ago

Nighttime dropouts are often interference from kitchen gear or a neighbor's WiFi, so move the monitor away from other electronics and try a higher or different spot. Update the firmware, start the night with a full charge, and lighten your network load.

Beau Tran avatar
Beau Tran 🥉 100 rep
20 days ago

Hmm, tbh Figure out whether yours connects through WiFi or its own radio link. For WiFi, pick a fixed channel with low congestion, turn off heavy downloads or backups overnight, and move the router so the nursery and your bedroom both have strong signal, 5 GHz will be cleaner through short distances but 2.4 GHz goes through walls better. For a dedicated radio monitor and change the channel, keep both antennas vertical, and get some height on both ends because bodies and furniture absorb signal but then watch for troublemakers like mirrors, foil backed insulation, and HVAC ducts near the path between the rooms. Sometimes a small rotation of the camera or a two foot nudge clears it up.

Emily Perry avatar
Emily Perry 32 rep
20 days ago

Nighttime drops usually mean interference, so raise and reposition the camera and parent unit away from metal, mirrors, and other electronics... If it uses WiFi pick a quieter channel or switch to 5 GHz and turn off power saving on the parent unit, and use an outlet that stays on.

Mila Santos avatar
Mila Santos 3 rep
20 days ago

Frustrating when it cuts out every night. Probably WiFi congestion building up as everyone streams or whatever. Mine did that too & drove me nuts. Try restarting your router before bed, clears the junk. Or move the that model unit closer to your receiver. Yeah. And check for loose connections; sometimes it's that dumb. Worked great after I fiddled with it a couple times.

Indie Rogers avatar
Indie Rogers 0 rep
20 days ago

We had the same headache in a 1940s place with plaster over metal lath and the monitor would drop the moment we closed the door. What helped was moving the parent unit to the doorway shelf instead of the nightstand, cracking the door an inch, and shifting the camera a couple feet to avoid a big mirror that was bouncing the signal. I also turned off Bluetooth on my phone when the monitor was nearby and stopped wireless charging right next to it. One more gotcha is voice activation or eco modes that let the screen sleep which can look like a disconnect, bumping the sensitivity up made it wake faster. Not pretty but it worked.

Reese Reed avatar
Reese Reed 98 rep
19 days ago

Do a quick isolation test with both pieces in the same room then walk the parent unit toward where you sleep and note exactly where it cuts out and that maps your weak spots.

Update firmware on both ends if that is an option and pair them again to clear any flaky link settings. If it is on WiFi give it a reserved address in the router and disable any aggressive power saving on the monitor so the connection does not stall, then try 5 GHz near line of sight or 2.4 GHz if there are many walls which and yeah... check what else happens at night such as streaming on a TV, game downloads, or a big cloud backup and pause those during overnight hours. Quick sanity check too make sure the battery is charging to full. Small changes add up.

Ella Begum avatar
Ella Begum 92 rep
18 days ago

Signal losses like that often stem from environmental factors, such as electromagnetic interference from household appliances or even cordless phones operating on similar frequencies.

In my experience as a tech guy, evenings see more device usage, which ramps up the interference.

To troubleshoot, start by isolating the monitor from other gadgets - unplug nearby routers or smart devices temporarily and observe if the signal stabilizes.

Additionally, consider the monitor's placement; optimal positioning can mitigate drops significantly.

If it's a WiFi model,, switching channels on your router might resolve conflicts.

I once dealt with this for a friend, and changing the channel did the trick.

Persistence pays off.

Evelyn Stewart avatar
Evelyn Stewart 🥉 134 rep
19 days ago

Right and that nightly signal drop is the worst, isn't it? Right when you're trying to catch some sleep. Could be the distance between the units stretching the signal thin, or perhaps walls and furniture blocking it.

I suggest testing it in an open area first to see if that's the case, and if so, maybe add a signal booster if your model supports it. Or just ensure nothing's obstructing the path. Fixed mine that way, simple as that.

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