Logitech MX Brio 705 for Business 4K Webcam
The enterprise-managed sibling of the MX Brio — same 4K Sony sensor, but with secure boot, IT-pushed firmware, and Teams/Zoom/Meet certifications.
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What we like
- Sony STARVIS sensor delivers genuinely clean 4K, especially in low light
- Dual beamforming mics are good enough to skip a dedicated podcast mic for calls
- Physical privacy shutter built into the lens ring — no plastic clip
- Secure boot and IT fleet management for organizations that need it
- Aluminum housing feels premium and the mount is rock-solid
Could be better
- Same hardware as the cheaper consumer MX Brio — you're paying for certifications
- Logi Tune software is required to unlock AI enhancement and Show Mode
- 4K at 30fps only; drops to 1080p for 60fps
- USB-C cable is permanently attached
Full Review
The MX Brio 705 for Business is what happens when Logitech takes their best consumer webcam and bolts on the enterprise stack IT departments actually care about. The hardware is identical to the standard MX Brio — same Sony STARVIS sensor, same aluminum housing, same dual beamforming mics — but you get certified compatibility with the major UC platforms and the ability for IT to manage firmware and policies centrally.
Image Quality
The Sony STARVIS sensor is the headline. In a well-lit room, 4K output is sharp without the over-sharpened, plasticky look that plagues most webcams. The real test is dim lighting, and this is where it pulls ahead of the Brio 500 and most $100-class cameras. Faces stay clean instead of degrading into noise the moment the sun goes down. The AI image enhancement in Logi Tune adds a subtle but noticeable lift to contrast and color — leave it on.
Audio and Show Mode
The dual beamforming mics are genuinely useful. They reject keyboard clatter and HVAC hum well enough that you can take a call without reaching for a headset or a Shure MV7. Show Mode is the other party trick: tilt the camera down and it flips and crops the image to display whatever’s on your desk — sketches, hardware, paperwork. It’s a small thing that’s surprisingly handy on collaborative calls.
The “For Business” Question
The hardware match with the consumer MX Brio means the only reason to pay the premium is if you (or your IT team) care about secure boot, signed firmware, and Logitech Sync for fleet management. Solo operators and freelancers should look hard at the standard MX Brio at a lower price — the picture is identical. If you’re a small business buying a handful of cameras for staff and want centralized control, the 705 earns its keep.
Who Should Buy This
Buy the MX Brio 705 for Business if you’re an IT-managed deployment, a prosumer who wants certified Teams/Zoom/Meet status for client calls, or a small business owner standardizing on Logitech’s enterprise ecosystem. If you just want the best webcam Logitech makes for personal use, save the money and get the regular MX Brio — the image and audio are the same. If you want something cheaper with similar AI framing, the Logitech Brio 500 is the obvious step down.