Video Conferencing Accessories Price Comparison
Compare 149 video conferencing accessories from Jabra, Logitech, AVer and more — find the best price across top UK retailers.
Video Conferencing Accessories price comparison UK
Setting up a reliable video conferencing room is rarely as simple as buying a camera and calling it done. The accessories — mounts, mic pods, remotes, cable covers — are what separate a polished, professional setup from a frustrating tangle of compromises. We've tracked 149 products across this category, and the price spread tells its own story: from 55 £ for a basic wall bracket up to 389 £ for specialist Vaddio and Cisco hardware designed for large boardrooms.
Jabra dominates the most-compared products, with their PanaCast 50 ecosystem generating the most merchant competition — which generally means better prices for buyers. Logitech sits close behind, offering a broader range of mounting kits and mic pod hubs that integrate tightly with their Rally system. If you're building around Microsoft Teams Rooms or Zoom Rooms, both brands have certified accessories that genuinely simplify deployment. Yealink and Cisco, meanwhile, skew towards enterprise IT buyers who need SOC 2 compliance and PoE connectivity — their average prices reflect that positioning.
One thing worth flagging: this category mixes very different product types. A telephone equipment accessory might look similar in a search result, but a Jabra PanaCast wall mount and a Logitech Rally Mic Pod Hub serve entirely different functions. Don't buy on price alone without checking compatibility with your existing conference system — an incompatible mount or hub is money wasted, full stop.
The sweet spot for most small-to-medium meeting rooms sits between 107 £ and 187 £. That range covers quality mounting solutions and peripheral add-ons from Logitech, Jabra, and POLY that work plug-and-play with the major platforms. Above 285 £, you're looking at Vaddio camera systems and Cisco infrastructure components — territory for IT managers, not individual buyers. If you're also evaluating wireless presentation system accessories for the same room, it's worth comparing the two categories side by side before committing.
Our advice: identify your conferencing platform first, then your room size, then your mounting constraints. In that order. Buying a 360° mic array for a three-person huddle room, or a basic screen clamp for a 20-seat boardroom, are equally common — and equally avoidable — mistakes. The data here, updated daily from retailers including Amazon, Currys, and specialist AV suppliers, gives you the clearest picture of where prices actually sit right now.
How to Choose the Right Video Conferencing Accessory
Most buyers come to this category already owning a conferencing system — the question is which accessory will extend or complete it without creating new headaches. With prices ranging from 55 £ to 389 £ and products spanning mounts, mic hubs, remotes, and cable management, the wrong choice is easy to make. Here's what actually matters.
Platform compatibility before anything else
This is non-negotiable. An accessory certified for Cisco Webex will not necessarily work seamlessly with Microsoft Teams Rooms or Zoom Rooms, even if it physically connects. Jabra's PanaCast 50 accessories are tightly integrated with their own ecosystem; Logitech's Rally components are similarly proprietary. Before comparing prices, confirm the accessory carries the certification badge for your platform — Teams, Zoom, Webex, or Google Meet. Buying without checking this is the single most common and most expensive mistake in this category.
Room size and audio/video coverage
A mic pod hub that covers 3 metres is fine for a huddle room; it's useless in a 12-person boardroom. Logitech's Rally Mic Pod Hub, for instance, is designed to extend coverage in larger rooms — but only if paired with the correct base system. Similarly, camera mounts need to position the lens at the right height and angle for the room's dimensions. Measure your room before you buy: length, width, and ceiling height all affect which accessories will actually perform.
Mounting type and installation constraints
Wall mounts, VESA mounts, screen clamps, and table stands are not interchangeable. A wall mount requires drilling and cable routing — fine for a permanent installation, but impractical for a flexible workspace. Screen clamps and display-mounted options (like the POLY Studio display clamp) are far easier to reposition. Check your wall material, display VESA pattern, and whether your IT team will need to be involved. Underestimating installation complexity is a reliable way to add unexpected cost to a seemingly cheap accessory.
Connectivity: USB, HDMI, or PoE?
USB (particularly USB-C) is the simplest option and works plug-and-play in most setups. HDMI connections offer higher bandwidth for 4K video feeds. PoE (Power over Ethernet) is the enterprise choice — it simplifies cable runs and is standard in Cisco and Yealink deployments, but requires a compatible PoE switch. If your meeting room doesn't have a PoE switch, factor that infrastructure cost in before opting for a PoE accessory that looks attractively priced on paper.
Build quality relative to usage intensity
A wall mount in a boardroom used five days a week needs to be more robust than one in a home office. Heckler Design products, for example, are built to a noticeably higher physical standard than generic plastic brackets — and their average price reflects that. For high-traffic corporate environments, aluminium or reinforced construction pays for itself in reduced replacement cycles. For occasional use, standard plastic construction is perfectly adequate.
Certifications for enterprise environments
If you're deploying in a regulated industry — healthcare, finance, legal — check for CE marking (mandatory in the UK), RoHS compliance, and where relevant, HIPAA or SOC 2 compatibility at the system level. Cisco and Yealink accessories are typically the safest choice here, though their pricing (average around £440 and £416 respectively) reflects the compliance overhead. For most SME buyers, CE and RoHS are sufficient.
- Entry-level mounts and brackets (From 55 £ to 107 £) : Basic wall mounts, screen mounts, and table stands from Jabra and AVer. Perfectly functional for straightforward installations where compatibility is already confirmed. Don't expect premium build quality or complex functionality at this level — these are mechanical accessories, not electronics.
- The practical sweet spot (From 107 £ to 187 £) : Where most buyers should be looking. Jabra PanaCast remotes, POLY display clamps, and AVer camera mounts sit here. Good build quality, platform-certified options available, and enough merchant competition to find a genuinely good price. Logitech and Jabra dominate this band.
- Professional-grade add-ons (From 187 £ to 285 £) : Logitech Rally mounting kits, Logitech Tap wall mounts, and POLY VESA mounts. Designed for permanent, managed installations in medium-to-large meeting rooms. Expect proper cable management, robust fixings, and tighter platform integration. Worth the premium if the room will be used daily.
- Enterprise and specialist hardware (Over 285 £) : Vaddio, Cisco, and high-end Yealink territory. These are components for IT-managed deployments, often requiring professional installation. The Cisco cable cover at this price point is a good example of how enterprise pricing works — you're paying for certification, support contracts, and supply chain reliability, not just the object itself. Not for individual buyers.
Top products
- Jabra PanaCast 50 Screen Mount (Jabra) : The most-compared product in the category for good reason — clean design, straightforward installation, and the best merchant competition keeping prices honest. Only buy this if you own a PanaCast 50; it fits nothing else.
- Logitech Rally Mic Pod Hub (Logitech) : Genuinely useful for medium-to-large rooms running the Rally system — extends audio coverage where the built-in mic falls short. Pricey for what is essentially a hub, but there's no real alternative if you're in the Logitech ecosystem.
- Jabra PanaCast 50 Remote - Black (Jabra) : A well-built remote that adds genuine convenience to PanaCast 50 room management. The price feels steep for a remote control, but it's the only way to get full in-room control without a touch panel. Grey version available cheaper if colour doesn't matter.
- Jabra PanaCast 50 Wall Mount - Black (Jabra) : Solid, no-nonsense wall mount with good cable management built in. Competes directly with the screen mount — choose this if your display position isn't ideal for top-mounting. Three merchants means you can shop around meaningfully.
- Logitech Rally Mounting Kit (Logitech) : The right buy for permanent Rally installations where cable tidiness matters. Not cheap, but it turns a messy conference room setup into something that looks professionally installed. Overkill for temporary or flexible deployments.
Related categories
Frequently Asked Questions
Will a Jabra PanaCast accessory work with my Logitech conference camera?
No — Jabra PanaCast accessories are designed exclusively for the PanaCast ecosystem and are not cross-compatible with Logitech hardware. Mounts, remotes, and stands from Jabra are physically and electronically matched to their own devices. If you're running a Logitech Rally system, you need Logitech Rally accessories. Mixing brands in this category almost never works, even when connectors look identical.
What's the difference between a wall mount and a VESA mount for video conferencing?
A wall mount fixes directly to the wall surface and is typically used for cameras or displays in permanent installations. A VESA mount attaches to the back of a monitor or display using the standardised VESA hole pattern (75x75mm or 100x100mm being most common). VESA mounts are more flexible — you can reposition them when you change displays — while wall mounts offer a cleaner, more permanent finish. Check your display's VESA pattern before ordering any VESA-compatible accessory.
Do I need a mic pod hub if my conference camera already has a built-in microphone?
For rooms larger than roughly 5–6 metres, yes. Built-in microphones on conference cameras are designed for small rooms; they struggle to pick up voices clearly at the far end of a long table. A mic pod hub like the Logitech Rally Mic Pod Hub extends audio coverage by allowing additional microphone pods to be daisy-chained across the table. If your current setup leaves remote participants complaining they can't hear clearly, a mic hub is almost always the fix.
Are expensive Cisco accessories worth it, or is it just brand premium?
It depends entirely on your environment. In a managed enterprise deployment where Cisco TAC support, firmware compatibility guarantees, and procurement compliance matter, the premium is justified. For an SME buying a cable cover or mount for a single meeting room, paying over 285 £ for a Cisco accessory is very hard to justify — a Jabra or Logitech equivalent will do the same job at a fraction of the price. The Cisco premium is real, but it's a premium for enterprise support infrastructure, not for the physical object.
What should I check before buying a video conferencing mount online?
Three things: compatibility with your specific device model (not just the brand), the mounting surface or VESA pattern required, and whether installation requires tools or professional fitting. Many returns in this category happen because buyers assume a 'Jabra mount' fits all Jabra devices — it doesn't. The PanaCast 50 wall mount, for example, is not compatible with the original PanaCast. Always cross-reference the exact model number before purchasing.
Is it worth waiting for Black Friday deals on video conferencing accessories?
For Logitech and Jabra accessories, yes — both brands regularly discount through Amazon and Currys during Black Friday and the January sales, and price drops of 15–25% are realistic. For Cisco and Vaddio hardware, discounting is rare through consumer channels; enterprise pricing is typically negotiated through resellers regardless of the time of year. If you're buying for a business, check whether your IT reseller can beat the retail price before waiting for a seasonal sale.
Can I use video conferencing accessories with both Teams and Zoom, or do I need separate hardware?
Some accessories — particularly passive ones like mounts and stands — are platform-agnostic. Active accessories (mic hubs, smart remotes, touch controllers) are often certified for one platform and may have limited or no functionality on another. Logitech's Tap controller, for instance, behaves differently depending on whether it's configured for Teams Rooms or Zoom Rooms. If your organisation uses both platforms, look specifically for 'mode-switchable' or 'dual-certified' devices, or stick to passive mounting accessories that have no software dependency.



