TL;DR
- Most home security starts with the wrong question — what camera should I buy? The right question is: what am I protecting, from whom, and what would it really cost me if the worst happened?
- A locked deadbolt, a well-lit entrance, a neighbour who notices things, and the lights on a timer when you're away stop more break-ins than a €3,000 camera system that nobody monitors.
- Cameras outside your home can deter and document. Cameras inside your home can also harm — the cost to trust and privacy is real, and footage from inside-the-home cameras gets leaked, hacked, and abused.
- Every internet-connected camera, doorbell, or lock is also a potential way into your home — through someone else's screen. Treat each one like a small computer that lives by your front door.
- The law on home cameras varies enormously by country and even by region. Recording your neighbour's garden may be illegal where you live, even when the camera is on your own wall. Check before you point it.
What it is
Home physical security is the layer of security that protects the people and things inside the four walls where you live. Locks, doors, windows, lighting, alarms, cameras, smart locks, motion sensors, the keys you carry, the people you let in — and the habits of everyone who lives with you.
This is the topic where the security industry sells you the most stuff and tells you the most stories. Before you spend anything, stop and think.
The first questions are not about brands. They are:
- What am I actually trying to protect? Lives, belongings, peace of mind, a workshop full of tools, a small business, a family member with specific needs?
- From whom? Opportunistic burglary, organised theft, a stalker, a former partner, vandalism, an angry neighbour, your own forgetfulness?
- How much would it really cost me if the worst happened? In money, in trauma, in time?
For most ordinary households, the threat is opportunistic burglary — someone walking past who sees an unlocked door, a dark house, an open window, a key under the mat, mail piled up. They are not casing your home for weeks. They are looking for the easiest target on the street. The defence is making your home look like more trouble than the next one. Lighting, a visible alarm sticker, a locked door, a neighbour who notices, mail collected daily, parcels handled.
If you have specific reasons to expect targeted threats — a high-profile job, a recent stalking incident, a custody dispute, a particular threat against you — the calculation changes. Get professional advice from a personal-protection or domestic-abuse specialist; consumer cameras are not the right tool for targeted threats.
How to think before you buy
Walk around your home twice — once in daylight, once after dark — pretending to be the person you don't want to meet.
- Where are the dark spots? Most burglars want to be unseen. A street-lit front and a moonlit back are not the same neighbourhood at 3 AM.
- Which windows are out of view? The side of the house no one walks past is the side a thief tries first.
- Which door looks weakest? A wooden frame, a single lock, a thin glass panel next to the handle — these are the entry points. Most break-ins go through the front door or a ground-floor window, not Hollywood's roof skylight.
- What's in the garage and the garden shed? Tools and ladders are often used to break in to the house itself — by way of the back garden.
- Where do parcels arrive? If a courier leaves boxes visible from the street, you have advertised when you weren't home.
- Who can see your keys? A key left in the front-door lock at night is the second-most-common burglary route, after an unlocked door.
Then — and only then — think about devices.
Where each device helps (and where it hurts)
Cameras outside
They help when:
- Pointed at your door, driveway, or garden.
- Combined with motion-activated lighting (deterrence + evidence).
- Recording locally to a device you control (a network recorder, an SD card, a small hard drive), not only to the manufacturer's cloud.
- Mounted high enough that they can't be quickly torn down or covered.
- Of good enough quality that the recorded faces and number plates are actually identifiable — a blurry recording proves nothing.
They hurt when:
- Pointed at neighbours' windows, gardens, the street, or shared corridors. In many countries this is illegal under data-protection law (EU GDPR, UK Data Protection Act, similar in CH, NO, IS, and elsewhere). You may need to register a CCTV system with your local data-protection authority, or limit recording angles by law.
- They are no-name brands with no firmware updates. These devices end up on botnets, watched by strangers, and used in attacks against other people.
- You set it up once, never check that the firmware is updated, and the default password is still in place years later.
- They become a substitute for actually locking the door. A camera doesn't stop a break-in. It only records one.
Cameras inside the home
This is the contested one. Be honest about why you want it.
They can help when:
- An elderly parent or vulnerable adult lives alone, and they have consented to being monitored, ideally with a device they can also see.
- You want to check on pets, deliveries, or contractors you've let in.
- A child is briefly home alone and you both feel safer with one.
They can hurt when:
- They turn your home into a place where children, partners, or guests can no longer relax. That cost is invisible until something fractures.
- The footage leaks. A compromised indoor camera ends up on a stranger's screen — sometimes on entire websites built around stolen indoor footage. This has happened thousands of times with cheap consumer brands.
- They become a habit of surveilling the family from work — which slowly corrodes trust faster than it builds safety.
- You forget they are on while doing something private. People do.
Rule of thumb: if a motion sensor or a smart plug could answer the question, you don't need a camera. "Is someone home?" doesn't require filming anyone.
Alarms
The single highest-leverage purchase for most households. A loud audible alarm — sticker visible from the street, panel near the door — stops most opportunistic break-ins because the intruder leaves the moment the siren sounds. A professionally monitored alarm (a third party who calls the police if the alarm triggers) is useful for higher-risk situations; for most homes, the value-for-money sweet spot is a self-monitored system with a loud siren and a phone notification.
Bring this into the routine: arm it every night and every time you leave for more than half an hour. The number of alarm systems that exist but are never armed is enormous.
Smart locks
Useful, with two cautions.
- Always pick a model that still works as a normal key-operated lock when the electronics fail. Batteries die. Wi-Fi fails. The hub firmware updates badly. You will, at some point, be standing outside your own door at 2 AM. A physical key fallback turns this from an emergency into an inconvenience.
- Smart locks are network-connected. Treat them like any other internet device: strong unique password on the manufacturer account, two-factor authentication on, firmware updates on, separate the device onto an IoT network if your router supports it.
Doorbells with cameras
A small camera. The benefits of any outdoor camera, plus the convenience of seeing a delivery person from your phone. The same risks as any cloud camera. The same legal limits on what the camera may record — including the street and your neighbour's path in many jurisdictions.
Voice assistants and smart-home hubs
Convenient. Also constantly listening for their wake word and, depending on the brand, sometimes recording a few seconds of audio when triggered by mistake. Set them up on a separate Wi-Fi network for IoT devices if your router supports one; check what is recorded in the manufacturer's privacy settings; consider whether you really want them in bedrooms or bathrooms.
Window and door sensors
Cheap, low-power, and surprisingly effective. A small magnet that triggers an alert when a window is opened gives an alarm panel — or your phone — early warning. The most underrated layer of home security for the price.
What NOT to do
- Don't post your new security setup on social media. "Look at our new cameras!" is also "look at our weak points; here's a map." Save it for the family group chat.
- Don't film your neighbours. Beyond the legal risk, you will discover their lives and they will discover yours, and the relationship will never quite recover. Aim cameras at your property.
- Don't film the public street. Most countries restrict private CCTV of public space; the rules vary, but the safe default is to crop the image, not the law.
- Don't trust the cloud to be there forever. Manufacturers go out of business. Subscriptions get cancelled or doubled in price. The footage you may one day need for evidence may not exist when you need it. Local storage matters — even if only as a backup.
- Don't make security a substitute for talking to your neighbours. Cameras are a poor replacement for a community. A neighbour who knows your routine spots what no algorithm can.
- Don't post live-location updates while away from an empty home. Real estate of "family in Bali" is "empty house in Switzerland."
- Don't go paranoid. Living inside a fortress is a different kind of damage. The goal is calm and prepared, not anxious and over-equipped.
Use AI to help you
Risk and priority audit:
"I live in [country / type of housing — flat, terraced house, detached house, rural / urban — neighbourhood description]. Based on common burglary patterns and home-security best practice for this type of housing, what are the three most cost-effective improvements I should make first? Avoid recommending specific brands — give me categories of devices and what features to look for."
Camera placement:
"I want to install outdoor cameras at my home. Please outline (a) where they should typically point, (b) what they should never point at for legal and ethical reasons, (c) what local laws in [country / region] generally say about home CCTV — flag if I should verify with a current source, (d) what technical features I should look for to protect the footage from being accessed by anyone else, and (e) what mounting height and angle is recommended."
A reminder: AI can be confidently wrong on local law — especially in federal countries where rules vary by canton, state, or land. Verify legal claims with your country's data-protection authority before installing anything that records.
Who to call
Find the latest contacts for your country with AI:
"I'm in [your country], living in [type of housing — flat, terraced, detached, rural, urban]. List the official and reputable sources I should consult before installing or buying home-security equipment — the national or regional police home-security prevention service, the consumer-protection or independent testing organisation that compares cameras / alarms / locks, the data-protection authority (for the legal rules on private CCTV), the relevant insurance industry body (some insurers discount premiums for certified equipment), and a directory of certified locksmiths or registered security installers. For each, give the official website, public phone number, and what they can specifically help with. Cite each official source. Flag anything that may be outdated, and note any country-specific permit requirements for outdoor CCTV."
- Your country's national police-prevention service. Most national police forces publish free home-security checklists tailored to local conditions and local building stock. Search "[your country] police home security guide" — the official ones are usually free PDFs.
- Independent consumer organisations for camera, alarm, and lock comparisons. UK — Which? US — Consumer Reports. Germany — Stiftung Warentest. Belgium — Test-Achats. Italy — Altroconsumo. France — Que Choisir. Switzerland — FRC and K-Tipp. National associations have local focus and tested methodologies.
- A certified locksmith or security installer for a one-time consultation — many offer a free survey. Ask about credentials and references first.
- Your insurer. Many home insurance policies offer discounts for certified alarms or locks meeting national standards. Worth ten minutes on the phone.
When to escalate beyond chat
- A break-in is in progress or just happened. Local emergency number (112 in Europe, 911 in North America, 000 in Australia, 999 in UK and many others). Do not enter the property if you suspect someone is still inside.
- You have specific reasons to expect a targeted threat — stalking, recent domestic abuse, a custody dispute, a workplace threat. Speak to local police victim-support and to a professional personal-safety advisor. Consumer cameras are not the right tool here.
- A neighbour is filming you, your children, or your home. This is a data-protection issue in most jurisdictions. Document, then contact your national data-protection authority and, if necessary, a lawyer.
- A smart device in your home has been compromised — strangers receiving notifications, voices through the speakers, recordings disappearing or appearing. Disconnect the device immediately, change all linked passwords, then file a report with local police and the manufacturer. See "I've Been Hacked".
Related topics
- Smart-Home & IoT Security — the cybersecurity side of all these devices once they're online.
- Child Online Safety — where indoor cameras and children intersect (consent, age, trust).
- "Your Data Was Leaked" — what to do when the manufacturer of your camera or alarm gets breached.
Sources & references (internal — not rendered to the live page):
- Europol — annual organised property-crime reports
- UK Office for National Statistics — burglary mode-of-entry data
- EU GDPR — Article 6, lawful basis for private CCTV
- National police-prevention services — published home-security guides
- Stiftung Warentest / Consumer Reports / Que Choisir — camera and alarm comparisons