BudgetFlyer88 avatar
BudgetFlyer88

What are the best FPV goggles under $100?

I'm just getting into FPV flying and I can't afford $120-150 goggles yet. Are there any decent FPV goggles under $100? I know they won't be the best but I just need something to get started with. What should I look for?

fpv goggles budget analog

6 Answers

Best Answer
GearReviewer_Tom avatar
GearReviewer_Tom

Yes, there are usable FPV goggles under $100, but understand the trade-offs. Best option in this range: Eachine EV800D ($55-70) — box-style analog goggles with a built-in DVR recorder, 5-inch screen, 48-channel receiver, and adjustable IPD. Not pretty, but they work for learning.

What you sacrifice vs $120-150 goggles: smaller field of view (FOV), lower resolution display, no head tracker support, and box style has light bleed around the nose. The Skyzone Cobra X V4 Lite (~$90) is a step up — slim goggle form factor, better FOV, and receiver diversity (two antennas, picks the stronger signal).

At under $100, only analog is available — digital FPV (DJI, Walksnail, HDZero) starts at $200 minimum. For a BetaFPV Cetus X beginner setup, the Eachine EV800D keeps your total budget manageable.

Check Eachine EV800D on Amazon
RacingDroneKid avatar
RacingDroneKid

The Eachine EV800D was my first goggle. The image quality isn't sharp, but it's more than sufficient for learning. The built-in DVR is genuinely useful — record every flight, review your lines, see what the quad was doing when you crashed. Most pricier goggles don't include DVR and you'd pay $30-40 extra for it separately.

The EV800D covers all major 5.8GHz channels and works with virtually every analog FPV quad. It's not glamorous but it's a legitimate learning tool. I flew on mine for 8 months before upgrading, and I don't regret starting there.

FPVFreestyler avatar
FPVFreestyler

Honest opinion: if you can stretch to $120-150, the Fat Shark Recon HD V3 or Skyzone SKY02O is noticeably better in every way — clearer image, wider FOV, better receiver sensitivity.

The jump from $70 to $130 goggles is much more noticeable than the jump from $130 to $250. If $70 is genuinely your absolute limit, the EV800D works and you can learn on it. But if you can save for another month and hit $130, do it — you'll stay on those goggles longer and won't be shopping for an upgrade in 6 months. Buying the right tool once beats buying a stepping stone and then buying the right tool anyway.

HobbyistHank avatar
HobbyistHank

One thing the sub-$100 box goggles get right: glasses compatibility. The box form factor has enough depth for most eyeglass frames, which slim goggles at $120+ often don't accommodate without custom prescription inserts.

If you wear glasses and don't want to fly blind, the EV800D box style is actually a practical advantage over pricier slim goggles. Always check the eye relief spec before buying any goggle — it should be listed in the product specs. Box goggles typically have 20-30mm eye relief vs 8-15mm for slim goggles.

TechDroner avatar
TechDroner

Antenna matters more than most beginners realize. The stock antennas that ship with budget goggles are usually linear polarized dipoles — acceptable in open areas but poor in tight spaces with obstacles. A $15-20 upgrade to a cloverleaf or RHCP (right-hand circular polarized) mushroom antenna dramatically reduces signal dropouts and multipathing.

Do this upgrade on day one regardless of which goggle you buy. A good antenna on mediocre goggles beats a bad antenna on good goggles. The SMA or RP-SMA connector is standard on virtually all analog goggle receivers, so the antenna upgrade is plug-and-play. Just match SMA to SMA or RP-SMA to RP-SMA (they're different, check before ordering).

AerialMike_TX avatar
AerialMike_TX

If you want to eventually move up to digital FPV but can't afford it now, consider the BetaFPV Cetus X kit — it comes with its own included goggles in the kit version. They're basic but integrated, and flying a complete kit system lets you start learning without spending on goggles separately at all.

Then when you're ready for a 5-inch build, save up for a proper digital goggle setup. For the full comparison of goggles in the $120-200 range that you might be targeting next, see our guide on the best FPV goggles under $200.