Free Bank CCTV Layout CCTV Design Tool

    Banks live and die on evidence quality. This layout puts overhead high-resolution cameras at every teller, IR domes at the ATM line, and a dedicated vault camera with dual redundant storage — designed to satisfy regulator and insurer alike.

    16-32

    Typical cameras

    500-2,000 sqm

    Typical area

    Compliance: regulator and insurer requirements

    challenge

    Recommended camera zones

    ZoneCamera typeQtyNotes
    Vault and cash storageDome / Pinhole2-6Dual cameras — one overhead, one wall-mount — covering vault door and cash-in-transit handover. WORM storage.
    Teller lineDome / High-Res4-8Overhead 4 MP dome per teller — face-readable, transaction-readable.
    ATM line (interior)Dome / IR2-4IR dome above each ATM covering customer face and card slot. Face-recognition optional but increasingly common.
    Branch lobby and entranceBullet2-4Bullet capturing arrivals, dome inside the lobby for face capture before counter approach.
    Parking and ATM (exterior)Bullet / LPR4-8ANPR at the entry, IR bullets covering ATM-line approach and any after-hours zones.

    Key challenges for

    Compliance: regulator and insurer requirements

    PCI DSS, FFIEC (US), EBA (EU) and local banking regulators all specify camera coverage and retention. Walk every plan with the compliance officer before installation.

    Face-readable detail at every teller

    Tellers handle high-stakes events; you need a face you can identify in court. Overhead 4 MP+ at 2.8 mm with 2.8–3.2 m mount height delivers consistent face capture.

    ATM access and skimmer detection

    ATMs need a camera covering both the customer face AND the keypad/card slot. Skimmer detection wants overhead detail of the card-slot area, not just user identification.

    Redundant storage and chain-of-custody

    Single NVR failure during an incident is a regulatory nightmare. Use dual NVRs in separate rooms, RAID storage, and write-once-read-many (WORM) for vault footage.

    Pro tips for

    Validate every camera placement with the compliance officer — regulators have specific framing requirements.

    Run dual NVR / dual storage — single-storage failure during a heist investigation is a career-ending event.

    Set retention to 90 days minimum for vault and teller, 180 days for ATM (skimmer cases surface late).

    Use cameras with WORM (write-once) storage for vault — preserves forensic chain of custody.

    Test every camera quarterly — a dead vault camera discovered after an incident is a disaster.

    Frequently asked questions

    How many cameras for a typical retail bank branch?

    Typically 16–28: 1–2 vault, 4–8 teller line (2 per teller is common), 2–4 ATM (interior), 2–4 lobby, 2–4 entrance, 4–8 parking/exterior. Larger branches with safety-deposit-box rooms add 4–8 more.

    What retention does the regulator require?

    Varies by jurisdiction — PCI DSS requires 90 days minimum, FFIEC allows 30–365 depending on risk profile, EU regulators commonly mandate 90 days. Some insurers demand 365 for vault footage. Check local rules.

    Do bank ATMs need their own dedicated NVR?

    Best practice yes — ATM events need to be recoverable independently of the branch system. Some regulators require physical separation; others accept logical isolation. Compliance officer is the source of truth.

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