Nucleic acid amplification‐based techniques have gained acceptance by the scientific, and general, community as reference methodologies for many different applications. Since the development of the gold standard of these techniques, polymerase chain reaction (PCR), back in the 1980s many improvements have been made, and alternative techniques emerged reporting improvements over PCR. Among these, isothermal amplification approaches resulted of particular interest as could overcome the need of specialized equipment to accurately control temperature changes, but it was after year 2000 that these techniques have flourished in a huge number of novel alternatives with many different degrees of complexities and requirements. An added value is their possibility to be combined with many different naked‐eye detection strategies, simplifying the resources needed, allowing to reduce cost, and serving as the basis for novel developments of lab‐on‐chip systems, and miniaturized devices, for point‐of‐care testing. In this review, we will go over different types of naked‐eye detection strategies, combined with isothermal amplification. This will provide the readers up‐to‐date information for them to select the most appropriate strategies depending on the particular needs and resources for their experimental setup.