BeginnerLeestijd: 12 minuten

    Hoeveel camera's heb je nodig?

    Te weinig camera's zorgen voor gevaarlijke blinde vlekken. Te veel camera's zijn een verspilling van budget. Deze gids biedt een systematische, op data gebaseerde methode om precies te berekenen hoeveel CCTV-camera's uw pand nodig heeft.

    Waarom het aantal camera's ertoe doet

    Getting the camera count wrong is one of the most common and costly mistakes in CCTV system design. Undersizing your system creates blind spots that intruders, shoplifters, and bad actors will inevitably exploit. If a critical incident occurs outside a camera's field of view, the entire investment in surveillance becomes worthless for that event.

    On the other hand, oversizing the system wastes budget on hardware, installation labor, cabling, storage capacity, and ongoing maintenance. Every unnecessary camera adds cost not just at purchase, but for the entire lifetime of the system through increased NVR storage requirements, network bandwidth usage, and replacement cycles.

    A systematic approach based on actual coverage areas, property layout, and security priorities ensures you deploy the right number of cameras in the right locations. The goal is complete coverage of critical zones with no gaps, while keeping the total camera count as efficient as possible.

    Dekkingsgebied per camera

    The effective coverage area of a camera depends primarily on its lens focal length, sensor size, and mounting height. Shorter focal lengths provide wider fields of view but less detail at distance. Longer focal lengths narrow the field of view but reach further with usable image quality.

    The following table shows typical effective coverage areas for common camera and lens combinations, assuming standard mounting heights (3m indoor, 3-4m outdoor) and a minimum pixel density sufficient for observation-level detail:

    Camera TypeLensCoverage AreaBest For
    Indoor Dome2.8mm~15-25 m²Small rooms, doorways, corridors
    Indoor Dome3.6mm~25-40 m²Medium rooms, open offices, retail floors
    Outdoor Bullet2.8mm~30-50 m²Building entrances, patios, small yards
    Outdoor Bullet4mm~50-80 m²Driveways, loading areas, perimeter zones
    Outdoor Bullet6mm~80-150 m²Parking lots, large open areas, fences
    PTZ CameraVarifocalUp to ~300 m²Large areas requiring active monitoring

    Important note on PTZ cameras: While a PTZ can mechanically cover up to 300 m² or more by panning and tilting, it can only view one direction at a time. PTZ cameras should never be counted as a replacement for fixed cameras in areas requiring continuous coverage. They are best used as supplementary cameras for active tracking and investigation, always backed by fixed cameras that record everything.

    Methode per kamer

    The most reliable way to determine camera count is to work through your property systematically, prioritizing areas by security importance. This three-tier approach ensures critical zones get coverage first, and budget is allocated where it matters most.

    Priority 1: Critical Areas (Must Have)

    These areas require cameras regardless of budget constraints. They represent the highest security risk or the greatest potential for loss:

    • All entry and exit points -- minimum 1 camera per door, gate, or access point. Front and back doors, side entrances, garage doors, emergency exits. This is non-negotiable for any security system.
    • Cash registers and POS terminals -- each register needs its own dedicated camera with a clear overhead or angled view of the transaction area and cash drawer.
    • High-value storage areas -- server rooms, safes, inventory rooms, pharmaceutical storage, evidence rooms. These need dedicated cameras with no shared coverage from general-purpose cameras.

    Priority 2: Secondary Areas (Strongly Recommended)

    These areas are high-traffic or high-risk zones that significantly improve overall security coverage:

    • Hallways and corridors -- long, straight corridors can often be covered by a single camera at one end using a narrower lens (4-6mm). L-shaped corridors need a camera at each turn.
    • Parking areas -- vehicle entry/exit lanes need dedicated cameras for license plate capture. General parking coverage uses wide-angle cameras at elevated positions. Budget approximately 1 camera per 6-8 parking spaces for general surveillance.
    • Loading docks and receiving areas -- these are common theft points in commercial properties. Each dock door needs coverage, plus an overview camera for the staging area.

    Priority 3: General Coverage (Budget Permitting)

    These areas provide comprehensive surveillance but may be reduced if budget is limited:

    • Open floor areas -- retail sales floors, warehouse aisles, office open-plan areas. Use the coverage area table above to calculate the number of cameras based on total square meters.
    • Stairwells and elevators -- one camera per stairwell landing, one per elevator cabin.
    • Perimeter fencing -- long-range bullet cameras (6mm or longer) covering fence lines, typically one camera every 30-50 meters depending on required detail level.

    Minimum aantal camera's per type pand

    While every property is unique, the following table provides industry-standard minimum camera counts based on property type and size. These numbers assume standard security requirements and should be adjusted upward for high-security applications:

    Property TypeSizeCamera CountTypical Focus
    Small Home2-3 bedrooms4-6Entry points, driveway, backyard
    Large Home4+ bedrooms6-10Full perimeter, garage, garden, pool area
    Small RetailUp to 200 m²6-12Entrance, POS, aisles, stockroom
    Medium Retail200-500 m²12-20All aisles, multiple POS, back-of-house
    Small OfficeUp to 300 m²8-14Entrance, reception, server room, corridors
    Warehouse1,000 m²+16-30+Aisles, loading docks, entry, high-value zones
    Parking Lot~50 spaces8-12Entry/exit lanes, rows, pedestrian paths

    These counts represent starting points for standard security. High-risk environments such as jewelry stores, banks, cannabis dispensaries, or data centers will require significantly higher camera density, often doubling or tripling the general retail or office figures.

    De 15-20% overlapregel

    Adjacent camera fields of view should overlap by 15-20% at their edges. This is a fundamental principle of professional CCTV system design that ensures continuous, gap-free coverage across your entire monitored area.

    Without overlap, the theoretical edges of each camera's field of view create thin strips of uncovered space. In practice, image quality degrades significantly at the outer edges of a lens's field of view due to barrel distortion and reduced pixel density. Objects or people passing through these edge zones may be unrecognizable or entirely missed.

    Why 15-20% Specifically?

    • Less than 15% overlap -- gaps are likely in real-world conditions. Camera mounting angles shift slightly over time due to wind, vibration, or accidental bumps. Even a 2-3 degree shift can create a blind spot if overlap is too thin.
    • 15-20% overlap -- the sweet spot. Provides reliable coverage continuity while keeping camera count efficient. Accounts for real-world installation tolerances and minor alignment drift.
    • More than 20% overlap -- diminishing returns. You are paying for redundant coverage that adds cost without meaningful security improvement, unless the application specifically requires multi-angle recording (e.g., casinos).

    When calculating total camera count, factor in this overlap. If your raw calculation based on coverage area divided by total area gives you 10 cameras, the overlap requirement will typically push the actual count to 11-12 cameras. It is always better to have slight overlap than any gap in coverage.

    Omgevingsfactoren

    Environmental conditions directly affect how many cameras you need and which types to deploy. Failing to account for these factors leads to cameras that technically cover an area but produce unusable footage.

    Lighting Conditions

    Areas with poor or no lighting require cameras with infrared (IR) illumination. Standard IR cameras typically provide clear footage up to 30-50 meters in complete darkness. Beyond that range, you either need cameras with extended IR (up to 80-100m) or supplementary IR illuminators. Dark areas may also need additional cameras at closer intervals because IR range limits the effective coverage distance compared to well-lit environments.

    Weather Exposure

    Outdoor cameras must have an IP67 or higher ingress protection rating to withstand rain, snow, dust, and humidity. Cameras in coastal areas or near swimming pools need additional corrosion-resistant housings. Extreme temperature ranges (-40°C to +60°C) require cameras with built-in heaters and fans. Weather exposure does not directly change camera count, but choosing the wrong camera for the environment results in frequent failures, effectively reducing your active camera count over time.

    Mounting Height

    Camera mounting height significantly affects the field of view footprint. A camera mounted at 3 meters covers a wider floor area than the same camera at 2.5 meters, but the increased distance reduces pixel density on subjects. The optimal indoor mounting height for most applications is 2.8-3.2 meters. Outdoor cameras are typically mounted at 3-4 meters for vandal resistance, with adjustments to lens focal length to compensate. Higher mounting positions require more cameras to maintain the same pixel density.

    Vandal-Proof Housings

    In publicly accessible areas such as retail stores, schools, parking garages, and public buildings, cameras should have vandal-resistant (IK10-rated) housings. Dome cameras are preferred in these environments because the dome conceals the lens direction, making it harder for individuals to determine exactly where the camera is pointing. In areas with a high vandalism risk, consider adding redundant cameras covering the same zone from different angles to ensure coverage is maintained even if one camera is damaged or obscured.

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