IP ratings: the most important spec for outdoor cameras
The IP (Ingress Protection) rating tells you how well a camera is protected against dust and water. For outdoor use, you need a minimum of IP65.
| IP Rating | Water protection | Suitable for |
|---|---|---|
| IP44 | Splashing water | Covered porch only |
| IP65 | Water jets from any direction | Outdoor minimum standard |
| IP66 | Powerful water jets | Exposed outdoor locations |
| IP67 | Immersion up to 1 metre | Very exposed, near water |
Even under a porch roof, moisture and temperature fluctuations will destroy an indoor camera's electronics within weeks or months. Always check for IP65+ before outdoor installation.
Night vision: infrared vs colour
Traditional night vision. The camera illuminates the scene with invisible infrared light. Image is black and white. Works in complete darkness. Used in most budget cameras.
Uses a bright white LED spotlight to illuminate the scene in colour. Much more useful for identifying people. More expensive. May be visible at night (can deter intruders).
Placement tips
- Height: 2.5โ3 metres is ideal โ high enough to avoid tampering, low enough for facial recognition.
- Angle: aim slightly downward. Faces are easier to identify from above than head-on.
- Avoid backlighting: don't aim cameras directly at bright light sources or windows.
- Detection zones: configure in the app to avoid trees, roads and areas that cause false alerts.