Why a camera mirror suits a Land Rover
Land Rovers are built tall, boxy and for serious loads, which makes them a textbook case for a Land Rover digital rear view mirror. A near-vertical tailgate, a high load floor, a full third row or a spare wheel on the back can all reduce the optical mirror to a view of the cabin. An external rear camera, mounted high at the back near the shark-fin antenna line, restores a wide, clear view that the body itself blocks.
Fitment across the Land Rover range
The range covers the rugged Defender, the flagship Range Rover and Range Rover Sport, and the family Discovery, plus the Velar and Evoque. Each shares the same tall-body visibility challenge, and the camera mirror keeps a clear view whether you are loaded for a trip, towing, or on a muddy track.
Pricing and fitment
The whole Land Rover brand uses premium fitment, so every model in the range — Defender, Range Rover, Sport, Discovery, Velar and Evoque — is priced on the premium matrix. The price shown on each model page is the one that applies.
Supported Land Rover models
Fitment is vehicle-specific, so the right starting point is your exact model rather than a one-size-fits-all unit. The bracket, the camera placement and the wiring route are matched to each car, which is what lets the mirror sit on the factory mount and keep the cabin looking standard. The models below are the most common upgrades in the range; open any one to confirm its fitment and see all four hardware variants.
Shared hardware, per-model fit
Whichever Land Rover you drive, the core is the same: an LVDS 60fps feed for smooth motion, a Sony IMX camera for low-light clarity, an IP69K external housing and 72 automotive-grade tests behind it, with a 3-year warranty. What changes per model is the bracket and the exact fit. The unit also keeps a HomeLink garage remote where the original mirror had one, so you are adding a clear rear view rather than giving up a feature.
Fitting and ownership
Because a TrueSight unit is an OEM-style replacement rather than a permanent modification, it suits owners who want to keep their Land Rover original. It seats on the factory mirror mount, wires in out of sight, and can be returned to the standard mirror if you sell the car or hand it on — there is no cutting and no adhesive pad left on the windscreen. The external camera is a compact unit at the rear, so the only visible change inside is a mirror that now shows a clear, wide view of the road behind you.
Most owners have the unit fitted by an installer, since it replaces the factory mirror and routes a camera feed through the vehicle, but it is designed to use the existing mount rather than alter the car. Each unit ships with a 3-year warranty and a US return policy, and support is on hand through the site if you need help confirming the right fitment before you order.
For the wider picture on how the technology works, the category guide and the OEM-style explainer go a level deeper, and the use-case guides cover the situations — loaded cargo, tinted glass, towing — where the camera earns its place.