Here’s how to hide an outdoor security camera.
Follow these six tips to perfectly conceal your outdoor security system, and transform your outdoor cameras into hidden spy cameras.
1. Disguise your camera as an outdoor item.
The first tip is straightforward: Make your outdoor camera not look like an outdoor camera. It’s the same principle applied to nanny cams, only outdoors. Just like hiding a spare key, disguise your camera by placing it inside everyday outdoor items like fake rocks, birdhouses, mailboxes, and potted plants. Remember Peppy, your garden gnome? He could work, too.
For this, you don’t strictly have to choose a mini camera with low resolution;. Options like the Arlo Essential Outdoor Wireless Security Camera are small enough to be easily disguised as well while providing clear video footage
You can find fake rocks and other disguises online, or you can choose the DIY approach and make your own. Just ensure that the disguise isn’t too obvious.
2. Mount your camera in a PVC pipe.
You can take a PVC pipe, paint it the color you prefer, and create a hole for the camera lens. Place the camera inside the pipe and secure it to the ground. The height of the pipe is up to you. You can make it short to resemble a sprinkler or taller to blend in with water drains, trees, and branches.
The advantage of choosing this method is that your cameras remain easily accessible. You can take them down and recharge them whenever needed. However, with long-lasting battery cameras that won’t be necessary very often.Options like the Arlo Essential XL Wireless Security Camera offer four times more battery life. This model also comes with an Arlo Secure Plan free trial, giving you additional benefits like 30-day cloud storage for your video recordings.
3. Install it behind a glass window.
There’s something to be said about those, ahem, curious neighbors who spend their days peeking out of their windows. They seem to notice everything, and it’s really hard to spot them.
You can apply a similar approach when hiding an outdoor camera. Place it inside your home, facing outward through a window, capturing the view outside your house. This way, you’ll have a perfect perspective, and absolutely nobody will be able to tamper with it.
The only drawback to this is that it might cause problems with motion detection. In some cases, the glass could cause interference with the camera’s motion sensors. To make sure this is not your case, try out this method before fixing your camera to a window.
4. Camouflage with bushes and trees.
Your yard is brimming with plants, trees, and bushes. Why not use them to conceal your outdoor security cameras? Place the cameras at the junctions of branches, use leaves for camouflage, or tuck them discreetly at the tops of bushes.Want to take this approach a step further? Consider a Mossy Oak Housing to help the camera blend seamlessly with its surroundings. And while you’re at it, add a Solar Panel Charger to the mix. At this point, your camera only needs to grow some roots to be considered half-plant.
5. Choose the right color for your camera.
Most Arlo Security Cameras are available in either black and/or white. Keep this in mind when choosing yours. Depending on your house’s appearance, picking the right color can help the camera blend in more effectively.
For instance, a white camera may camouflage better with gutters, drains, fences, and garden decorations. A black camera could blend better with rocks, leaves, and roof tiles.
When choosing the camera color, it’s not only up to personal preference. The right color can be a critical factor to effectively concealing a camera.
6. Use a video doorbell.
Criminals might be cautious of traditional security cameras, but they tend to be less wary of video doorbells. Modern video doorbell cameras are able to capture High Resolution video, while being small and inconspicuous. Options like the Arlo Video Doorbells boast a wide 180° field of view, 2K or HD video capture, and motion detection.