Rove vs Dashline · Honest comparison

Looking for a Rove dash cam alternative?

The Rove R2-4K is one of the best-selling budget dash cams going — so this is a fair, spec-by-spec look at Rove vs Dashline: real prices, where each one wins, and the question everyone asks first — is Rove’s 4K actually 4K?

At a glance Rove Dashline
Genuine native-4K sensorInterpolated (IMX335)Yes — Sony IMX415
Newest low-light optionSTARVIS 2 (Dual Pro)IMX415 + F1.6 lens
Front + rear in one buyDual model onlyYes — built into tiers
Built-in screen + cardYesYes
Brand reach & US supportHuge / AmazonSmaller / EU

Both are subscription-free, and both have a built-in screen, GPS, parking mode and 512GB card support — so the real differences are the ones highlighted above.

The 20-second answer

Stick with Rove if you want a hugely-reviewed US brand with easy Amazon support — and if you go for the top R2-4K Dual Pro, you get genuine Sony STARVIS 2 sensors that are excellent in low light.

Choose Dashline if you want a genuinely native 4K sensor (the popular Rove R2-4K upscales to 4K from a 2K chip), a wider 170° view, front-and-rear built into one simple tier, and EU pricing from €85.95 with the card included.

Meet the two cameras.

Two subscription-free 4K dash cams with built-in screens — but Rove is really a whole range, and which model you pick changes everything.

Rove R2-4K (a range)

Best-selling US / Amazon brand

The famous R2-4K and R2-4K Pro use a 5MP Sony IMX335 — the same chip as 2K cams — so their "4K" is upscaled, not native. Step up to the R2-4K Dual Pro and you get real dual Sony STARVIS 2 sensors, a free 128GB card and fast WiFi 6. All have a 2.4–3" screen, GPS and a 150° lens.

Best for: US buyers who want a proven brand — and, in the Dual Pro, a genuine low-light powerhouse.

Dashline 4K

EU-focused · native 4K · 3 simple tiers

One camera in three setups, each with a built-in screen and your choice of 32–128GB card. A native Sony IMX415 8MP sensor captures true 4K, behind an F1.6 6-layer lens with a wider 170° view. Front-and-rear and 24h parking are built into the tiers — no separate model to hunt down.

Best for: European buyers who want native 4K and a simple range with the card included.

Spec by spec

Rove vs Dashline, line by line.

From each maker’s published specs, plus independent testing for the interpolation note. The Edge column is our honest read — and it points both ways.

Spec Rove Dashline 4K Edge
Front resolution4K — upscaled from a 5MP IMX335 (R2-4K / Pro)Native 4K 3840×2160 — Sony IMX415 (8MP)Dashline
Top model’s sensorDual Pro: Sony STARVIS 2 (IMX678+IMX675)Sony IMX415 + F1.6Rove
Rear cameraDual / Dual Pro models onlyBuilt into the Front+Rear tiersDashline
Lens / field of viewF1.5 · 150° wide angleF1.6 · 170° front · 140° rearDashline
ApertureF1.5 (marginally wider)F1.6Rove
Built-in screenYes — 2.4"–3" IPSYes — built-in screenTie
SD card includedOn some models (Dual: 128GB)Yes — choose 32 / 64 / 128GBTie
Max microSDUp to 512GBUp to 512GBTie
Wi-FiWiFi 6 / 5G (fast)Built-in Wi-Fi (Viidure app)Tie
GPSYesYes (external module)Tie
Parking mode24/7 · motion + G-sensor24h via battery / hardwire tierTie
SubscriptionNoneNoneTie
Brand & reviewsHuge US / Amazon baseSmaller, EU-basedRove
Shipping & returnsUS / Amazon-centricFree EU shipping · 30-day returnsDashline
Price (with card)~$120–170 (model-dependent)€85.95–€129.87Tie

"Upscaled" means the file is stretched to 4K from a ~2K sensor without adding real detail — which is why a native 8MP chip helps with reading plates at night. New to specs? Start with what actually matters in a dash cam.

Prices & packages

What each one costs.

Dashline comes in three setups and you pick the card size — every price already includes the SD card.

Front only

€85.95

from · 32GB · up to €97.95 (128GB)

  • +4K front camera
  • +Built-in screen
  • +32–128GB card included

Most popular

Front + Rear

€112.95

from · 32GB · up to €124.88 (128GB)

  • +Adds 1080p rear camera
  • +6-metre rear cable
  • +32–128GB card included

Front + Rear + 24h Parking

€121.55

from · 32GB · up to €129.87 (128GB)

  • +Adds 24h parking battery
  • +Live view from a parked car
  • +32–128GB card included

How Rove compares: the R2-4K runs roughly $120, the Pro about $160, and the Dual / Dual Pro higher again (the Dual Pro adds STARVIS 2 sensors, a 128GB card and a CPL filter). Prices shift often on Amazon — but a loaded Dual Pro costs noticeably more than a Dashline Full kit, while a base R2-4K lands near a Dashline front-only.

Round by round — who wins what.

Dashline edges the popular Rove models on paper — native 4K, an integrated rear and a wider lens — while Rove’s brand reach and its STARVIS 2 Dual Pro keep it firmly in the fight. Two ties keep it honest.

Round 1 · Dashline

Native front 4K

Rove: Upscaled from 2K (R2-4K)
Dashline: Native 4K IMX415

A real 8MP sensor resolves more true detail than a 5MP chip stretched to 4K.

Round 2 · Rove

Best low-light model

Rove: STARVIS 2 (Dual Pro)
Dashline: IMX415 + F1.6

Rove’s top Dual Pro uses newer dual sensors; Dashline answers with a fast F1.6 lens.

Round 3 · Dashline

Front + rear simplicity

Rove: Needs a Dual model
Dashline: Built into the tiers

With Dashline, rear and parking are tiers of one camera — no separate model to choose.

Round 4 · Dashline

Field of view

Rove: 150°
Dashline: 170° front

A wider lens captures more of the next lane and the kerb.

Round 5 · Tie

Screen, GPS & card

Rove: All included
Dashline: All included

Both give you an on-unit screen, GPS and an included card — genuine parity here.

Round 6 · Rove

Brand & support

Rove: Huge US review base
Dashline: Smaller, EU-based

Rove’s track record and Amazon support are hard to match, especially in the US.

Round 7 · Dashline

Buying in Europe

Rove: US / import
Dashline: Free EU ship + 2yr + returns

For EU drivers, local shipping, warranty and returns remove the friction.

Round 8 · Tie

Running cost

Rove: Subscription-free
Dashline: Subscription-free

Both store locally on microSD — no monthly fees either way.

Decide in one tap

Which is right for you?

Pick what matters most — we’ll point you to the better camera, even when that’s Rove.

Our honest pick

Dashline

You want genuine native 4K. The popular R2-4K upscales 4K from a 2K sensor; Dashline’s Sony IMX415 is a true 8MP 4K chip with a wider 170° lens. For sharp daytime detail and plates, that’s the honest pick.

Our honest pick

Rove R2-4K Dual Pro

You want the strongest low-light. Rove’s top Dual Pro uses newer dual Sony STARVIS 2 sensors and ships with a 128GB card and CPL filter. If night performance is your priority and budget is flexible, it’s excellent.

Our honest pick

Dashline

You’re buying in Europe. Pricing from €85.95 with the card included, a 2-year warranty and 30-day local returns beat importing from a US-centric brand. Front-and-rear and parking are built into the tiers.

Our honest pick

Rove

You want a proven US brand. Rove has one of the biggest review bases in dash cams and easy Amazon support and returns. If buying from a household name in the US matters most, Rove is the safe call.

Where each one genuinely wins.

No camera wins everything. Here’s the honest split — pick the column that sounds like you.

Where Rove wins

  • +One of the biggest review bases and easy US / Amazon support
  • +The Dual Pro’s dual Sony STARVIS 2 sensors are a real low-light step up
  • +A marginally wider F1.5 aperture on the lens
  • +Frequent discounts and a wide model range (single, dual, mirror)

Where Dashline wins

  • +A genuine native 4K sensor (Sony IMX415) — not upscaled from 2K
  • +A wider 170° front field of view
  • +Front, rear and 24h parking built into simple tiers
  • +Free EU shipping, 2-year warranty and pricing from €85.95 with the card included

Honestly, they’re not the only two.

If you’re shopping the budget-to-mid range, two more names come up a lot. VIOFO (A119 Mini 2 / A229) is the enthusiast pick for low-light with Sony STARVIS 2 sensors. Redtiger (F7N / F7NP) is another popular front-and-rear Amazon option — see our Redtiger alternative comparison. All of these are subscription-free.

Where Dashline fits is specific: a European buyer who wants a true native-4K sensor and a wider lens, in a simple range with the card included and local support. If that’s you, it’s worth a serious look. If you’re in the US chasing the best low-light for the money, a Rove Dual Pro or a VIOFO may suit you better — and that’s a fine answer.

Rove vs Dashline: common questions.

Straight answers, including the ones that point to Rove.

Is the Rove R2-4K real 4K?

Not on the popular models. The R2-4K and R2-4K Pro use a 5MP Sony IMX335 — the same sensor found in 2K cams — so their 4K is interpolated (upscaled), not native. Independent testers note this. Dashline uses a native 8MP Sony IMX415 that captures true 4K. Rove’s newer R2-4K Dual Pro does step up to genuine Sony STARVIS 2 sensors.

Is Rove a good dash cam brand?

Yes. Rove is one of the best-selling dash cam brands, with a huge review base and good US/Amazon support. The R2-4K is a strong budget pick and the Dual Pro is genuinely high-end. This page is about which one fits you, not whether Rove is good.

Do Rove and Dashline need a subscription?

Neither. Both record locally to a microSD card with no monthly fees, no cloud account and no paywalled features. You pay once for the hardware, and on the key models a memory card is included.

Does the Dashline come with a memory card and a screen?

Yes to both. Every Dashline package includes a microSD card and you pick the size — 32GB, 64GB or 128GB — and the camera has a built-in screen for aiming and playback. Rove also has a 2.4–3 inch screen, and includes a card on models like the Dual, so neither has the edge there.

Which has better night video?

It depends on the Rove model. The base R2-4K’s upscaled 4K is average at night; Dashline’s native sensor and F1.6 lens do better in any reasonable light. But Rove’s top Dual Pro, with newer Sony STARVIS 2 sensors, is a genuine low-light leader and can beat both in the dark.

How do the prices compare?

Dashline runs from €85.95 (front only) to €129.87 (front, rear and 24-hour parking), with the SD card included. Rove ranges from roughly $120 for the R2-4K to about $160 for the Pro and higher for the Dual Pro. A loaded Dual Pro costs more than a Dashline Full kit; a base R2-4K is close to a Dashline front-only.

Can I buy Dashline on Amazon?

Dashline sells directly from its own EU store with free European shipping, a 2-year warranty and 30-day returns, rather than through Amazon. Rove is mainly an Amazon brand, which is part of its appeal if you prefer Amazon’s returns and support.

So who is the Dashline 4K actually for?

A European driver who wants a genuine native-4K sensor and a wider 170° lens, with front-and-rear and parking built into a simple range, the card included, and local warranty and returns. If you want a big US brand or Rove’s STARVIS 2 Dual Pro for night driving, Rove is the better fit — and the matcher above will say so.

Dashline 4K dash cam mounted behind a car's rear-view mirror

If Dashline fits

The Dashline 4K, in brief.

+Native 4K Sony IMX415 sensor (3840×2160), not upscaled

+F1.6 6-layer glass lens · 170° front · 140° rear

+Built-in screen · GPS · Wi-Fi · Viidure app

+microSD card included — pick 32, 64 or 128GB

+Free EU shipping · 2-year warranty · 30-day returns

Choose your setup

One camera. Three levels of protection.

Front-only from €85.95, front + rear from €112.95, or full 24/7 parking from €121.55 — each with the SD card included.

Standard package — front camera, cable and mount

Standard

From €85.95 · card included

  • Front camera
  • Car connection cable
  • Magnetic sticker
Full Protection package — front, rear and 24H parking hardware

Full Protection

From €121.55 · card included

  • Everything in Dual Cameras
  • 24h-compatible battery
  • Live view from parked car

Free Shipping

5–10 days across Europe

Secure Payment

Apple Pay · PayPal · Stripe

2-Year Warranty

Full hardware coverage

30-Day Return

No questions asked

Dark SUV on a snowy mountain road

Decide on the merits

If native 4K and EU value win it for you.

That’s the honest case for Dashline — native 4K, a wider lens, from €85.95 with the card included. If you want a big US brand or Rove’s STARVIS 2 Dual Pro for night driving, Rove is a fair choice. Either way, you’re buying with the full picture.

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