Home Security Camera Laws in California (2026): Where You Actually Stand
Most people have no idea how strict California camera laws really are. Seriously. You might think your own property is fair game for any camera you want. But California is different.
The state takes privacy rights super seriously, and the rules can surprise you. Mess up, and you could face jail time plus hefty fines. Let’s break down what you need to know to stay safe and legal.
What Is California’s Privacy Protection for Cameras?

Here’s the thing about California. The state actually treats privacy like a constitutional right. It’s written right into the California Constitution.
California has two main laws that control security cameras. California Penal Code 647(j) covers video privacy. California Penal Code 632 covers audio recording. These laws are stricter than what you’ll find in most other states.
Think of it like this. You can film on your property. But there are serious boundaries you can’t cross. Not even on your own land.
The Big Rule: Reasonable Expectation of Privacy
Okay, stay with me here. This concept shows up in almost every California camera law.
A reasonable expectation of privacy means someone has the right to expect they won’t be filmed. Bathrooms? That’s private. Bedrooms? Definitely private. Changing rooms? Absolutely. Even parts of your neighbor’s property visible from your yard can have privacy expectations.
Here’s what confuses people. You might own the land. But you still can’t film places where someone reasonably expects privacy. Not legally.
The courts look at the specific situation. What can the camera actually see? Can someone be clearly identified? Can conversations be heard? These details matter in deciding what’s legal.
Where You Can Put Cameras (The Legal Zones)

Okay, good news. You definitely can install security cameras. Just in the right places.
Your Front Door and Entryways
Your front door? Perfect spot. Video doorbells are legal. Doorways are considered public-facing areas where there’s no reasonable expectation of privacy.
Nobody entering your property expects complete privacy at the entrance. This is honestly the safest place to film.
Your Driveway and Garage
Your driveway is your property. You can film it. Same goes for your garage entrance and the area around it.
Just make sure you’re not catching your neighbor’s private areas. If your driveway camera can see directly into their bedroom window, that’s illegal.
Your Patio, Yard, and Deck
Outdoor spaces on your property are generally okay to film. Your backyard patio. Your deck. Your front yard.
Again, the key is not pointing cameras at your neighbor’s private spaces. Keep them focused on your own property. This keeps you safe legally.
Common Areas in Apartments
If you’re in an apartment building, you can film hallways and common spaces. Landlords do this all the time.
But here’s where it gets strict. You cannot film inside someone’s apartment unit. Not even in a shared living space. Tenants have privacy rights, even in rental units.
Where You Absolutely Cannot Put Cameras (The No-Go Zones)
Not sure what counts as illegal? Let me break it down.
Private Rooms in Your Home
Bedrooms are completely off-limits. Even your own guest bedroom. Bathrooms? No cameras allowed. Changing rooms or closets? Nope.
Any room where someone reasonably expects privacy is protected. This applies even if you own the house and the camera is yours.
Neighbor’s Windows and Doors
Your neighbor’s bedroom window. Their bathroom. Their front door if it’s private to them. You cannot point cameras at these areas.
Even from your own property, filming into their private spaces is illegal invasion of privacy.
Any Area Where Someone Has Privacy Rights
This includes your neighbor’s backyard if it’s enclosed and private. A friend’s bedroom when they’re visiting. Any place where someone would reasonably believe they won’t be watched.
The law doesn’t care if you meant no harm. Intent doesn’t have to be sexual or creepy. If you film a private area intentionally, you’ve broken the law.
California’s Audio Recording Rule: This Is Strict

Honest? This part trips up a lot of people.
California is an all-party consent state for audio. That means everyone involved in a conversation must agree to being recorded. Every single person.
What This Means for Cameras with Audio
If your security camera has a built-in microphone, you need to be careful. Recording someone’s conversation without their knowledge is illegal. Even on your property.
Let’s say you have audio on your doorbell camera. When a guest arrives, they don’t know they’re being recorded. That’s illegal unless they agree to it.
What About Public Spaces?
Audio in truly public spaces might be okay. A recording device on a public street where traffic flows. That’s different from recording someone having a private conversation.
But honestly? It’s safer to just inform people. Post a sign. Tell guests. It takes two seconds and prevents legal trouble.
Penalties: What Happens If You Break These Laws
Okay, pause. Read this carefully.
Breaking California camera laws isn’t a slap on the wrist. The state takes this seriously.
First-Time Offense
You could face up to six months in jail. You could pay a fine of up to $1,000. For a first offense.
That’s not nothing. That’s real jail time and real money.
Second or Later Offense
Repeat the violation? Now you’re looking at up to one year in jail. Your fine goes up to $2,000.
The penalties increase. This shows you how seriously California treats this.
Audio Recording Violations
Illegal audio recording? That’s even worse. A violation can mean up to $2,500 in fines. You could spend a year in jail.
For repeat violations of audio recording, fines can reach $10,000. Yep, ten thousand dollars.
Distributing Private Recordings
Share a recording you shouldn’t have made? California has “revenge porn” laws. You face additional charges beyond the initial invasion of privacy crime.
This gets serious fast.
Civil Lawsuits
The criminal penalties are one thing. But your neighbor can also sue you in civil court for damages.
Meaning they can take money from you directly, separate from criminal penalties. Now you’re paying twice.
Apartment Renters: Your Special Rules
Living in an apartment? You have different restrictions than homeowners.
Your landlord can install cameras in common areas. Hallways. Lobbies. Parking lots. That’s legal.
But landlords cannot put cameras inside your unit without your permission. Not in shared spaces. Not even in a bedroom you’re subletting.
What If Your Landlord Violates This?
You can sue them. You can break your lease. In some cases, you can report them to local housing authorities.
Don’t just accept it. This is your legal right.
Wondering if your landlord’s cameras are actually legal? If they’re inside your private space, they probably aren’t.
Neighbor Disputes: Can You Get in Trouble?
Real quick scenario. Your neighbor’s camera points straight at your bedroom window.
You have a legal right to sue them. You can also call local law enforcement. This violates your privacy rights under California law.
But here’s something many people miss. Just because a camera faces your property doesn’t mean it’s illegal. If it can’t see inside a private area, it might be okay.
The court case involving comedian Kathy Griffin actually set an interesting precedent. She recorded her neighbors without their consent. The court said that because the camera couldn’t clearly see into private areas or hear conversations, it wasn’t necessarily illegal.
This doesn’t mean you’re safe. It means context matters.
Using Cameras on Neighbors’ Property: Don’t Do This
Here’s a temptation some people face. Pointing your camera slightly onto your neighbor’s property to catch doorbell thieves or trespassers.
Legally risky. Very risky.
You can only film your own property. If your camera captures your neighbor’s private areas—even accidentally—you’re on shaky legal ground.
Keep cameras pointed straight at your own spaces. Use your driveway, not theirs. Use your entryway, not the street in front of their house.
This keeps you legally safe and keeps neighbors happy.
Do You Have to Post Signs About Your Cameras?
Here’s the thing. California doesn’t legally require you to post signs about your security cameras. Not on your own property where there’s no reasonable expectation of privacy.
But here’s why you should anyway. Posting a sign creates clear notice. It eliminates the “reasonable expectation of privacy” argument completely. People know they’re being filmed.
Signs also act as a deterrent for criminals. Plus, they keep the peace with visitors and neighbors.
Honestly? It’s the smart move even though it’s not required.
Doorbell Cameras in California: Are They Legal?
Video doorbell cameras are legal in California. Ring cameras, Nest doorbells, all the popular ones.
You can film people at your front door. This is an area where there’s no reasonable expectation of privacy.
But the Audio Part Matters
If your doorbell camera records audio, you need to be careful. When someone walks up to your door, they don’t know they’re being recorded.
In a strict legal sense, you need consent from all parties to record audio. So telling someone? Getting their consent? That’s the safest approach.
The practical reality is that most doorbell camera use goes unchallenged. But legally speaking, audio is the risky part.
Hidden Cameras and Phones: Always Illegal
A hidden camera is pretty much always illegal in California.
Hidden means the person doesn’t know it’s there. If it’s capturing anyone in a private situation without their knowledge, it’s breaking the law.
Some people think if they’re recording their own babysitter or nanny, it’s fine. Actually? It depends on where the camera is.
Put it in the living room. That’s probably okay if they know it’s there. Put it in a bedroom or bathroom? That’s a felony offense even in your own home.
The intent doesn’t have to be sexual. The law doesn’t care if you had good reasons. If you’re secretly recording someone in a private setting, you’ve committed a crime.
Recent Changes in 2025
California made camera laws stricter in 2025.
The California Location Privacy Act (AB 1355) now restricts how you can use location data captured by security cameras. If your system records beyond your property boundaries, you have additional legal responsibilities.
Law enforcement agencies face new restrictions too. They need a warrant before using facial recognition technology with surveillance footage.
These changes push California even further toward privacy protection. The trend is clear. California values privacy rights more, not less.
Quick Tips to Stay Compliant
Okay. Here’s what you actually need to do.
Document Where Your Cameras Point
Know exactly what each camera films. Keep a diagram. This helps if you ever face a legal challenge.
Test Your Audio Recording
If you have audio, test it. Do the microphones pick up conversations? If yes, inform people and get permission.
Post Visible Signage
Even though it’s not legally required, do it anyway. Put up signs that say “Video Surveillance in Progress” or something similar.
Focus on Your Property Only
Keep cameras aimed at your own spaces. Not your neighbor’s house. Not the public street. Your property.
If You Rent, Ask First
If you’re a renter, get written permission from your landlord before installing any cameras.
Keep Footage Secure
Store your recordings safely. Know who has access to them. Don’t share them without reason.
Get Consent When You Can
Tell guests about cameras. Tell employees. This eliminates legal ambiguity.
When to Call a Lawyer
Not sure if your camera setup is legal? Call a lawyer. Seriously.
If your neighbor complains about your cameras, talk to a lawyer before responding. If law enforcement contacts you about a camera, get legal representation immediately.
A lawyer can review your specific situation. What looks illegal in one scenario might be fine in another. The details matter.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I film my babysitter or nanny without telling them?
Not legally. If you put a camera in common areas and they know about it, that’s one thing. Hidden cameras in private spaces are illegal. Even in your own home. You need their knowledge and consent.
Is it legal to have a camera in my bedroom for security?
No. Bedrooms have a high expectation of privacy. Cameras don’t belong there. Period. Find another way to secure your home.
What if my neighbor’s camera looks into my bedroom window?
You have legal grounds to take action. Send them a cease and desist letter. Contact local law enforcement. You can sue them for invasion of privacy.
Do I need permission to film in my own home?
If someone lives there or is a guest with an expectation of privacy in certain rooms, yes. You need consent for private spaces. The answer depends on the situation.
Can I record audio at my front door without telling people?
Legally, you should inform people and get consent. Does everyone prosecute? No. But the law technically requires it. Playing it safe means getting consent.
Final Thoughts
Now you know the basics. California takes camera privacy laws seriously. Really seriously.
The key is simple. Film areas where there’s no reasonable expectation of privacy. Get consent for audio. Keep cameras off private spaces. Inform people when possible.
When in doubt, ask a lawyer. It costs less than legal trouble later.
Stay informed, stay safe, and respect your neighbors’ privacy. You’ll be fine.
References
- California Penal Code Section 647(j) – Invasion of Privacy Statute https://codes.findlaw.com/ca/penal-code/pen-sect-647/
- California Penal Code Section 632 – Audio Recording (Eavesdropping) Law https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=PEN§ionNum=632
- California Constitution Article I, Section 1 – Privacy Rights https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displayText.xhtml?lawCode=CONS&division=&title=&part=&chapter=&article=I§ion=1
- California Location Privacy Act (AB 1355) – 2025 Update https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml
- The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press – California Recording Laws https://www.rcfp.org/reporters-recording-guide/california/
- Safe and Sound Security – California Security Camera Laws 2025 https://getsafeandsound.com/blog/security-camera-laws-in-california/
- LegalClarity – California Security Camera Laws Guide https://legalclarity.org/what-are-the-security-camera-laws-in-california/
