Security Cameras for Shops: What Actually Works in Melbourne Retail
A shop without cameras is an easy target. Not because criminals plan elaborate heists — most retail theft is opportunistic, and the first thing a shoplifter checks is whether anyone’s watching. The right security camera system for a shop changes that calculation before anything gets stolen.
This guide covers what actually matters when choosing security cameras for shops: camera types, placement, features worth paying for, and rough costs — based on what we install across Melbourne retail sites week to week.
Why Shop Owners Install CCTV
It’s not just about catching thieves after the fact. A working shop security camera system does four jobs at once:
- Deterrence — visible cameras stop a meaningful share of theft before it starts;
- Evidence — footage that holds up for insurance claims and police reports;
- Staff accountability — till discrepancies, stock handling, opening/closing routines;
- Remote oversight — checking the shop floor from home or between sites, without being physically present.
If you’re only solving for one of these, you’ll end up under-speccing the system and regretting it later.
Types of Cameras Used in Shop CCTV Setups
Not every camera suits every part of a shop. Here’s how the main types stack up for retail use.
| Camera Type | Best For | Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dome camera | Ceiling-mounted, sales floor | Discreet, hard to tell viewing angle, vandal-resistant housings available | Shorter optimal range than bullet cameras |
| Bullet camera | Entrances, tills, stockroom doors | Long-range clarity, visible deterrent | Fixed angle, less subtle |
| PTZ (pan-tilt-zoom) | Large floor areas, warehouses attached to shops | Active monitoring, one camera covers a wide zone | Higher cost, needs someone to operate or preset tours |
| Turret camera | Corners, aisle ends | Wide field of view, minimal glare issues | Less common in budget kits |
| Covert/mini camera | Till area, high-risk internal zones | Unobtrusive, useful for internal theft cases | Limited storage and resolution options |
Most functional shop security camera systems combine two or three of these — domes on the sales floor, bullets at entry points, maybe a PTZ if the layout includes a large open area or loading zone.
Where to Position Cameras in a Retail Space
Camera placement decides whether footage is actually useful. A camera pointed at the wrong angle is a wasted device. Priority zones for a shop:
- front entrance and exit — face height, wide enough to capture the full doorway;
- till and counter area — covers both the transaction and the person behind it;
- high-value stock shelving — electronics, cosmetics, alcohol, anything frequently targeted;
- blind corners and aisle ends — anywhere a customer can duck out of a staff member’s sightline;
- stockroom and staff-only doors — internal shrinkage is often higher than shoplifting;
- rear delivery entrance — a common access point outside trading hours;
- car park or laneway access, if applicable to the site.
A shop under roughly 100m² usually needs 4–6 cameras to cover these zones properly. Larger stores or multi-room layouts need more, and a site assessment is the only reliable way to confirm the count.
Features Worth Paying For
Not every spec on a camera’s box matters for a retail install. Some genuinely change day-to-day usefulness; others are marketing.
| Feature | Why It Matters for Shops | Worth Prioritising? |
|---|---|---|
| 4MP–8MP resolution | Enough detail to identify faces and read till screens on playback | Yes |
| Wide dynamic range (WDR) | Handles bright shopfronts against darker interiors without washing out faces | Yes |
| Night vision / IR | Covers after-hours break-in attempts | Yes |
| Motion-triggered alerts | Push notifications when someone enters after closing | Yes |
| AI person/vehicle detection | Cuts down false alerts from shadows, insects, passing traffic | Yes, if the budget allows |
| Local + cloud backup | Protects footage if the recorder is stolen or damaged | Strongly recommended |
| Remote app viewing | Check the shop from anywhere, live or recorded | Yes |
| 4K resolution | Sharper footage, but demands more storage and bandwidth | Only for high-value or large-format retail |
| Facial recognition | Useful for repeat-offender flagging in some jurisdictions | Case-by-case, check compliance first |
Choosing a Shop Security Camera System: What to Compare
When comparing shop camera CCTV options, the brand name matters less than how the system is put together. Check these before deciding:
- Storage window — most shops need 14–30 days of retained footage, not the 3–7 days some budget kits default to;
- Recorder type — NVR (network-based) setups scale more easily than older DVR systems if you plan to add cameras later;
- Power backup — a battery backup keeps recording through a short outage; this matters more for shops that trade into the evening;
- Network resilience — a 4G/SIM backup avoids blackouts if the NBN or in-store Wi-Fi drops out;
- Integration with alarms — video verification alongside an alarm system speeds up police response and reduces false-alarm callouts;
- Warranty and local support — a five-year camera warranty is worth little if nobody local services the recorder when it fails.
Popular Brands for Shop CCTV in Melbourne
| Brand | Typical Use Case | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Hikvision | Mid-size shops, mixed budgets | Broad range, well-supported, strong AI features on newer models |
| Dahua | Similar tier to Hikvision | Reliable image quality, good night performance |
| Uniview (UNV) | Shops wanting simpler licensing/software | Straightforward NVR software, solid mid-range option |
| Ajax | Shops combining alarm + camera in one app | Wireless, fast to install, pairs alarm sensors with camera verification |
| Reolink | Small shops, tighter budgets | DIY-friendly, decent image quality, fewer advanced integrations |
None of these are universally “best” — the right pick depends on shop size, budget, and whether cameras need to talk to an existing alarm system.
What a Shop Security Camera System Costs
Costs vary by camera count, resolution, cabling complexity and whether monitoring is included. As a rough guide for Melbourne installs:
| Setup Size | Camera Count | Typical Range (AUD) |
|---|---|---|
| Small shop | 4 cameras | $1,500 – $2,800 |
| Medium shop | 6–8 cameras | $2,800 – $5,000 |
| Large retail / multi-room | 10+ cameras | $5,000+ |
These figures cover cameras, recorder, cabling, mounting and configuration — not ongoing monitoring, which is usually a separate monthly fee if you opt for 24/7 alarm-linked response.
Installation: What to Expect
A proper install isn’t just screwing cameras to a wall. The process that actually delivers usable footage looks like this:
- Site assessment — checking entry points, lighting, blind spots and cable routes;
- Camera and recorder selection — matched to the shop’s layout and risk areas, not a generic kit;
- Mounting and cabling — clean runs, correctly angled housings, tamper-resistant fixings where needed;
- Configuration — motion zones, alert rules, recording schedule, remote access setup;
- Handover — a walkthrough of the app and system controls before the installer leaves;
- Ongoing support — servicing, camera adjustments and troubleshooting as the shop’s needs change.
Common Mistakes Shop Owners Make with CCTV
A camera on the wall doesn’t guarantee useful footage. The issues we see most often on existing shop installs:
- cameras aimed too high — mounted for a wide view but too far from face height to identify anyone;
- backlit entrances — a camera facing straight into daylight from the front window, leaving customers as silhouettes;
- storage set too short — a break-in discovered on a Monday with footage that only goes back to Saturday;
- no coverage of the till drawer itself — wide shots of the counter that miss the actual point of loss;
- recorder left in an accessible spot — an unsecured NVR in a back room is easy to grab along with the stock;
- never testing after install — cameras that were working on day one but have since drifted out of focus or been knocked out of angle.
Most of these get caught during a proper site assessment, which is why a generic off-the-shelf kit rarely performs as well as a system planned around the specific floor plan.
Need a shop security camera system that’s actually built around your floor plan? SIPKO Security assesses Melbourne shops on-site and specs the camera count, placement and recorder setup around the risks that matter for your store — not a generic package. Go to contacts


