US Security Camera Laws:
What Every Homeowner Needs to Know
Can you point a camera at your neighbor’s driveway? Do you need to post a sign? Is audio recording legal? Get plain-English answers to the most common US surveillance law questions — by state and situation.
This guide covers general US surveillance law principles for residential and small business use. Laws vary by state, county, city, and even HOA. They also change — this page was last reviewed in March 2026 but may not reflect recent legislative changes in your jurisdiction. For any specific legal situation, always consult a licensed attorney in your state.
Federal Surveillance Laws
At the federal level, security camera use by private US citizens is governed primarily by two laws:
The primary federal law governing surveillance by private parties. The ECPA prohibits the intentional interception of wire, oral, or electronic communications without consent. In plain English: video-only recording on your own property is generally legal under federal law. Audio recording, however, enters a more restricted area — recording conversations without at least one party’s consent may violate the wiretapping provisions of the ECPA.
A federal law that makes it a crime to capture images of a person’s intimate body parts without their consent in a location where they have a reasonable expectation of privacy — regardless of whether the person is on your property or not. This law applies directly to misuse of security cameras (e.g., pointing a camera into a bathroom or bedroom).
Beyond these two laws, security camera use by private US citizens is primarily regulated at the state level — not federally. This is why laws vary so dramatically between states.
Video Recording Rules — What’s Legal
Recording video on your own property — including the exterior of your home, driveway, front yard, back yard, and interior of your home — is legal in all 50 US states. You do not need permission from visitors or passersby who appear incidentally in footage captured on your own property.
The Public Visibility Rule
In the US, there is generally no expectation of privacy in areas that are visible from a public street, sidewalk, or shared space. This means your security camera may legally capture:
- Public sidewalks and streets adjacent to your property
- Your neighbor’s front yard and driveway (visible from the street)
- Vehicles parked on public streets
- People walking on public paths
- Your own property viewed from any angle
Areas That May Be Restricted
- Neighbor’s back yard or pool area — where they have a reasonable expectation of privacy, pointing a camera deliberately at these areas may be unlawful in many states
- Inside neighbor’s windows — capturing interior spaces of a neighbor’s home is generally prohibited
- Shared spaces in apartments/condos — hallways, elevators, and common areas typically require property management authorization, not individual tenant permission
- Bathrooms, changing rooms, bedrooms — placing cameras in any space where people have a reasonable expectation of privacy is illegal under federal and state law, even on your own property
Audio Recording & Wiretapping Laws
This is the most legally complex area of US surveillance law. Audio recording by security cameras is governed by a patchwork of federal and state wiretapping laws that vary significantly.
One-party consent states (the majority): Audio recording is legal as long as at least one person in the conversation consents — meaning you can record conversations you are participating in without informing the other party.
Two-party (all-party) consent states: Audio recording requires the consent of all parties in a conversation. Recording a conversation without all parties’ knowledge is a criminal offense in these states — regardless of whether it is your own property.
Two-Party / All-Party Consent States (2026)
The following states currently require all-party consent for audio recording. If you live in one of these states, disable audio on your security cameras or consult an attorney before enabling it:
All other states operate under one-party consent. Note: some states have nuanced interpretations — Nevada and Illinois interpretations have evolved through case law. Verify your state’s current law with an attorney before enabling audio recording.
Our recommendation for all US homeowners: disable audio recording on all outdoor cameras unless you have specifically verified it is legal in your state and municipality. The video footage alone is sufficient for most security purposes. The legal risk of accidental audio wiretapping far outweighs the benefit for typical residential use. Most camera apps allow audio to be disabled per-camera in settings.
Filming Your Neighbor — What’s Allowed
This is the most frequently asked surveillance law question. The answer depends on what area of your neighbor’s property your camera captures and whether it is deliberate or incidental.
- Neighbor’s front yard visible from street
- Neighbor’s driveway visible from street
- Neighbor’s exterior walls and fence
- Vehicles on public street in front of neighbor’s home
- Footage where neighbor appears incidentally
- Deliberately pointed at neighbor’s backyard
- Capturing inside neighbor’s home through windows
- Pointed at neighbor’s pool or hot tub area
- Camera installed specifically to harass a neighbor
- Audio capturing neighbor’s private conversations
Even when a security camera is technically legal, neighbors who feel surveilled can file complaints with local authorities, pursue civil harassment claims, or create significant community conflict. Good fences make good neighbors — and so does a conversation before installing cameras. Consider talking to adjacent neighbors before installing cameras that capture their property, even incidentally.
Reasonable Expectation of Privacy
The legal concept of “reasonable expectation of privacy” is the cornerstone of US surveillance law. It determines whether a person in a given location has a protected right to not be recorded.
- No expectation of privacy: Public streets, sidewalks, parks, parking lots, your own front yard, any area visible from public space. Recording in these areas is generally unrestricted.
- Strong expectation of privacy: Bathrooms, bedrooms, changing rooms, hotel rooms, medical facilities. Recording in these areas without consent is a criminal offense under state and federal law.
- Contested areas: Fenced backyards, private pools, sunbathing areas, and similar spaces where the public cannot see. Court interpretations vary by state.
Courts apply a two-part test: (1) Did the person have a subjective expectation of privacy? (2) Is that expectation one that society recognizes as reasonable? Both must be true for privacy protection to apply. A person sunbathing in a fully fenced, enclosed backyard generally passes both parts — they expect privacy and society recognizes that expectation as reasonable.
Workplace & Employee Surveillance
US employers have broad rights to monitor employees in work settings, subject to certain restrictions:
- Permitted locations: Sales floors, warehouses, parking lots, entrances/exits, production areas, cash registers (for retail). Video surveillance in these areas is generally legal without notice in most states.
- Prohibited locations: Restrooms, locker rooms, changing areas, and any space designated for employee privacy. Camera placement in these areas exposes employers to significant criminal liability.
- Notice requirements: Several states require employers to notify employees of workplace video surveillance — including Connecticut, Delaware, and New York. Union workplaces may have additional contractual notification requirements.
- Audio in the workplace: Recording workplace conversations without employee consent is subject to the same state wiretapping laws that apply to residential audio recording.
Post a visible notice informing employees and visitors that video surveillance is in use — even where not legally required. This best practice protects you legally, sets clear expectations, and has been shown to deter theft more effectively than covert surveillance. Consult an employment attorney before recording audio in your workplace.
Renters & Landlord Surveillance Laws
Renters — Your Rights
- Inside your unit: You have the right to install cameras inside your rented unit in most US states. Your landlord generally cannot legally enter your unit to remove cameras you’ve installed, subject to your lease terms.
- Outside your unit: Installing cameras on exterior walls or in common areas typically requires landlord permission. Check your lease for specific language about exterior modifications.
- No-drill options: Battery-powered cameras with command-strip or gutter mounts are generally considered non-permanent and usually permitted without landlord approval. See our renter installation case study for details.
Landlords — What’s Permitted
- Common areas: Landlords may install cameras in hallways, parking lots, building entrances, laundry rooms, and other common areas — typically without individual tenant consent in most states.
- Inside rented units: Landlords generally cannot install cameras inside a tenant’s private living space. This would constitute an invasion of privacy and potentially violate the Video Voyeurism Prevention Act.
- Disclosure: Many states require landlords to disclose the presence of cameras in common areas — typically in the lease agreement or through posted signage.
Signage Requirements
- Residential outdoor cameras in most states
- Single-family homeowner cameras
- Indoor home cameras (no guests/employees)
- Businesses with employee surveillance
- If audio recording is enabled
- Apartment building common areas
- California (recommended for all)
Even when not legally required, we recommend posting “Video Surveillance in Use” signs at property entrances for any camera that captures areas beyond your immediate home. Signs serve as a deterrent, reduce liability questions, and demonstrate good faith if your footage is ever used in legal proceedings.
HOA Rules & Restrictions
Homeowners Association rules (CC&Rs — Covenants, Conditions & Restrictions) may restrict security camera installation on your property even when state law fully permits it. HOA rules vary enormously — some prohibit visible cameras entirely, while others require approval of camera placement, color, or type.
- Check your CC&Rs first — before purchasing or installing any camera system, review your HOA’s governing documents for “surveillance,” “cameras,” “security systems,” or “exterior modifications”
- Common HOA restrictions: No cameras visible from the street, cameras must match home exterior color, approval required for specific placement locations, prohibition on cameras capturing common areas
- HOA cannot override state law: An HOA cannot legally prohibit you from installing interior cameras inside your own home, and cannot require you to allow security cameras that would invade your privacy rights
- Request variance if needed: If your HOA restricts camera placement in a way that compromises your security, you can formally request a variance — especially if you have documented security concerns
If your HOA denies a security camera request and you have documented security concerns (theft, vandalism, previous incidents), document your request and the HOA’s response in writing. Depending on your state, HOAs may have a duty to accommodate reasonable security measures. Consult a real estate attorney familiar with HOA law in your state.
US Security Camera Laws by State
The following covers the most-searched US states. Laws are summarized for residential use — business installations may have additional requirements. Always verify current law with a licensed attorney in your state.
We’re building individual state pages for all 50 states. In the meantime, the general rules on this page apply to most US states not listed above. For your specific state, search for “[Your State] surveillance camera law” or “[Your State] wiretapping consent law” — or consult a local attorney. We’ll notify newsletter subscribers as each state page is added. Contact us if you’d like to request a specific state page.
Using Security Camera Footage as Legal Evidence
Security camera footage is widely accepted in US courts — both civil and criminal — subject to proper handling:
- Preserve immediately: Download the original video file directly from the camera or NVR immediately after an incident. Do not rely on the manufacturer’s cloud storage to preserve it — cloud footage retention periods are typically 30–60 days on subscription plans and may be shorter on free tiers.
- Maintain original files: Courts require original unedited footage. Keep the original file untouched and make working copies for review. Do not record your phone screen showing the footage — save the actual video file.
- Document timestamp accuracy: Verify your camera’s clock is synchronized correctly (most cameras sync via NTP). Courts may ask whether the timestamp is accurate — be prepared to confirm.
- Chain of custody: Note who has accessed the footage and where it has been stored. For significant incidents, consider having law enforcement copy the footage from the original device.
- Audio admissibility: Footage recorded in violation of state wiretapping laws may be inadmissible and could expose you to counter-claims. Video-only footage avoids this risk entirely.
For serious incidents (theft, assault, vandalism over a certain dollar threshold), call law enforcement before reviewing or downloading footage. Allowing officers to document the footage directly from the original device establishes the strongest chain of custody and maximizes the footage’s evidentiary value in criminal proceedings.
The NDAA Chinese Camera Ban — What It Actually Means for You
The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) Section 889 is widely misunderstood by US consumers. Here is exactly what it does and does not prohibit:
- Federal government agencies purchasing Hikvision, Dahua, Huawei, ZTE, or Hytera equipment
- Federal contractors using this equipment on government projects
- Recipients of federal grants or loans using this equipment
- Private US homeowners buying or using these cameras
- Private businesses (non-government contractors) using these cameras
- Resellers selling these cameras to non-government buyers
Bottom line: If you are a private US homeowner or small business owner not working on federal contracts, the NDAA does not restrict your purchase or use of Hikvision or Dahua cameras. They remain legal for private use.
That said, cybersecurity best practices still apply regardless of brand. See our VLAN isolation guide for how to securely deploy any IP camera system.
Legal Installation Checklist — Before You Mount
Work through this checklist before installing any security camera system. It covers the key legal questions for US homeowners.
Find the Right Camera for Your Property
Now that you know what’s legal in your state, find the best camera for your specific situation — with expert recommendations for every budget.