Yes, but only if the smart monitor can run the video-call app itself and supports that camera through its own operating system. If the monitor is only acting as a display, the webcam still needs a host device such as a PC, laptop, streaming box, or compatible smart-TV platform.
Is your meeting setup one cable short of working, with a webcam plugged into a smart screen but no camera option showing up in your calling app? The practical win is simple: with the right monitor, app, and camera support, you can start a call from the screen itself and avoid bringing a laptop into every meeting. Here is how to tell whether your smart monitor can do it, what hardware actually works, and when a webcam monitor is the better buy.
The Short Answer: The Monitor Must Be More Than a Screen
A webcam does not become usable just because a screen has a USB port. For video conferencing without a PC, the smart monitor needs three things working together: a built-in operating system, a compatible video conferencing app, and camera support for either a built-in camera, a dedicated accessory camera, or a supported USB webcam.
That distinction matters because most webcams are designed as USB peripherals. Common webcam setup guidance describes the usual flow as plugging a webcam into a USB port so the operating system can recognize it, then selecting it inside the calling app through camera settings and a plug-and-play setup. Without that host layer, the USB port on a display may only be for firmware, storage, service use, or hub passthrough.
In practice, a smart monitor can handle video calls without a PC when it behaves like a small all-in-one computing device. If it has native apps, Wi-Fi or Ethernet, microphone and speaker support, and camera compatibility, it can work. If it is only a monitor with smart streaming features but no supported meeting app or no camera input path, it will not.
Smart Monitor, Webcam Monitor, Smart TV: Know the Difference

A smart monitor is a display with built-in apps or a smart operating system. A webcam monitor is a display with integrated video conferencing hardware, usually a camera, microphones, speakers, and often USB-C docking. A smart TV can also run apps, but its webcam support depends heavily on the TV platform and app ecosystem.
The cleanest no-PC experience usually comes from a purpose-built webcam monitor. Conferencing monitor coverage highlights models that combine a display, camera, microphones, speakers, privacy controls, and USB-C docking, such as a 27-inch QHD monitor with a 4MP pop-up webcam and 90W USB-C power delivery among webcam monitors. That kind of setup is not just about video quality; it reduces cable clutter and removes the guesswork of whether an external webcam will be detected.
A smart TV-style setup is more variable. Smart TV webcam guidance frames compatibility around having a USB or HDMI webcam, a smart TV or HDMI-capable display, the right cable or adapter, stable internet, and a supported calling app for a smart TV or HDMI-capable display. That same logic applies to many smart monitors: the screen must support the camera and the app, not just the cable.
Setup Type |
Can It Call Without a PC? |
Best Use Case |
Main Risk |
Smart monitor with supported camera app |
Sometimes |
Casual calls, compact desk setups |
App or webcam compatibility limits |
Webcam monitor with built-in camera |
Often with a host, sometimes smart-dependent |
Reliable office conferencing |
Some models still require PC connection |
Smart TV plus compatible webcam |
Sometimes |
Living room or group calls |
Platform and app support vary |
Regular monitor plus USB webcam |
No |
PC-based video calls |
Needs a computer host |
Portable monitor plus webcam |
No by itself |
Travel productivity with laptop |
Portable display is usually not a computer |
How to Check Compatibility Before You Buy or Plug In

Start with the app, not the camera. If the smart monitor cannot run the video-call service you actually use, the webcam question is secondary. A camera feed is only useful if the conferencing app can access it.
Next, check whether the monitor supports external cameras or only a specific accessory. Some smart displays are designed around a dedicated camera module, while others may accept standard USB Video Class webcams. UVC is the common driverless webcam standard behind many plug-and-play cameras, but manufacturers do not always expose that support in every app or region. If the spec sheet only says “USB port” and never says “webcam support,” treat it as unconfirmed.
Some monitor support notes describe checking a dedicated camera through a PC connected by USB-C, then verifying the camera in the computer’s device list and camera app. That is useful for confirming PC recognition, but it also shows a key limitation for no-PC buyers: PC detection does not automatically prove the monitor’s smart apps can use the camera independently.
Finally, confirm audio. Video calls need a microphone and speaker path, not just a camera image. A webcam with a built-in mic may work in a PC workflow, but a smart monitor may route audio only through its own microphones, Bluetooth devices, or app-specific settings. For a small office, built-in speakers are acceptable; for a conference table, an external mic or speakerphone is usually the better performance move.
USB vs HDMI: Why the Cable Changes the Outcome

USB webcams are convenient when the host understands them. On a PC, that is usually easy because the operating system handles camera detection, permissions, and app selection. Before important calls, test the webcam and check camera permissions, app settings, USB ports, and drivers if it is not recognized.
On a smart monitor, USB is only easy if the monitor’s operating system and conferencing app know what to do with the webcam. If the camera does not appear in the app’s settings, switching USB ports may help, but it will not fix unsupported software.
HDMI is different. A camera with HDMI output, or a UVC-to-HDMI adapter, sends video more like a source device. HDMI is often more reliable for TV-style webcam setups, especially when USB webcam support is limited. The catch is that HDMI video input alone does not guarantee the conferencing app can use that feed as a camera. On many displays, HDMI is treated as a screen input, not a webcam input for apps.
For a simple real-world test, plug the webcam into the smart monitor, open the video-call app, and look for a camera selector. If the app offers the camera and shows live video, the setup works. If the monitor only switches to an HDMI input or shows no camera option, it is not functioning as a no-PC conferencing system.
What Makes a No-PC Setup Feel Professional

The camera connection is only the baseline. Video presence depends more on positioning, lighting, and audio than most spec sheets admit. The best practical setup puts the camera at or slightly above eye level, keeps your face and shoulders centered, and lights your face from the front instead of from the ceiling behind you.
That is why a monitor-mounted webcam often beats a laptop camera. A low laptop angle makes you look like you are leaning over the viewer, while a camera on top of a monitor creates a more natural line of sight. A cheap external webcam can still look strong in compressed video calls when paired with good lighting and stable framing.
Screen size also matters for productivity during calls. Business monitor testing emphasizes matching the display to the workflow, with conferencing users prioritizing camera, microphone, speaker, and docking features, while multitaskers benefit from larger or ultrawide screens. A 24- to 27-inch display is a practical desk range for seeing faces, chat, and shared documents without overwhelming a smaller workspace. Larger ultrawide displays make sense when you routinely keep slides, notes, dashboards, and meeting windows open at once.
For a living room or small huddle space, sit about 4 to 8 ft from the screen, keep the camera near eye height, and use front-facing light. For a desk, the better calculation is simpler: if your eyes are roughly level with the top third of the screen, a top-mounted webcam is usually close enough for natural framing.
Pros and Cons of Connecting a Webcam Directly to a Smart Monitor
The biggest advantage is independence. A working no-PC smart monitor setup removes the laptop from the meeting chain, reduces desk clutter, and can make a kitchen counter, small office, or shared room usable for quick calls.
It also improves ergonomics when the monitor has height adjustment, tilt, and enough screen space for meeting controls. Built-in webcam monitors go further by integrating privacy shutters, pop-up cameras, microphones, speakers, Ethernet, and USB-C docking. That is why they are often the stronger business purchase when reliability matters more than experimentation.
The downside is compatibility. Smart monitor platforms do not behave like desktop operating systems, and app support can vary by model, country, firmware version, and service. A webcam that works perfectly on a laptop may not appear on a smart display. Another tradeoff is upgrade flexibility: with a built-in webcam monitor, the camera is convenient, but you may prefer a better external camera later for recording, streaming, or a wider conference room view.
Portable displays are a separate category. Portable monitor testing describes them as lightweight second screens for laptop productivity, commonly 15.6-inch 1080p panels, with brightness and color quality varying meaningfully by model among portable monitors. They are excellent for travel workflows, but they generally do not replace the laptop or host device needed for webcam conferencing.
Buying Advice: Choose the Setup Around the Meeting

If your goal is reliable daily video conferencing, buy a monitor with integrated conferencing hardware rather than gambling on a random USB webcam. Look for a top-positioned camera, at least 1080p video, usable microphones, built-in speakers, a physical privacy shutter, USB-C connectivity, and an adjustable stand. A 27-inch QHD panel is a strong sweet spot because it keeps text sharper than 27-inch 1080p while giving enough room for calls and work windows.
If you already own a smart monitor, verify app support first, then camera support, then audio routing. Do not assume a USB port equals webcam compatibility. Also check whether the manufacturer lists a dedicated camera accessory or a specific camera model. If the monitor requires its own camera, using a third-party webcam may be unreliable or unsupported.
If you want a no-PC setup for a meeting room, consider a smart TV or display platform with a known compatible camera, or use an external conferencing device that handles camera, mic, speaker, and app support as one system. For group calls, prioritize a wider field of view, auto-framing, and an external microphone over raw camera resolution.
FAQ
Can I plug any USB webcam into a smart monitor?
No. A USB webcam must be supported by the smart monitor’s operating system and the video-call app. If the app does not show the camera as a selectable video source, the monitor is not treating it as a usable webcam.
Does a smart monitor with a camera always work without a PC?
Not always. Some monitor cameras are designed for use when the monitor is connected to a computer. Others may work inside native smart apps. The model’s app support and camera support determine the answer.
Is a built-in webcam monitor better than an external webcam?
For everyday meetings, it is often better because it reduces cables, setup time, and compatibility checks. For specialized recording, streaming, or large-room calls, an external camera with better optics, wider framing, or dedicated tracking can be the stronger choice.
What should I test before an important call?
Open the exact video-call app you plan to use, confirm the camera appears, check microphone input, play speaker audio, and verify your framing and lighting. A two-minute test prevents most meeting-day failures.
A smart monitor can replace the PC for video conferencing only when it has the right app, camera support, audio path, and network connection. For dependable performance, buy the meeting experience as a system, not as a pile of ports and hopeful adapters.







