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Dome Security Cameras

A dome is a fixed-direction camera built into a low-profile housing with the lens behind a tinted or clear bubble of glass or polycarbonate. The bubble hides the lens direction (a deterrence and surveillance-ambiguity benefit), the housing sits close to the ceiling or wall (a clean-aesthetic mount), and the vandal-rated variants (IK10) tolerate impact in public spaces. Domes are the right form factor for indoor commercial — retail ceilings, office corridors, reception areas, school classrooms, hotel lobbies — and for any wall-flush install where aesthetics matter. The cameras in this collection vary across four axes: brand (Hikvision, HiLook, Axis, IDIS), resolution (2MP to 4K), camera technology (AcuSense AI, ColorVu where available), and connectivity (PoE wired, occasional Wi-Fi).

Security Cameras Australia stocks the full dome range. Every camera is genuine Australian stock with full manufacturer warranty, and you get pre-sale technical advice from people who configure these systems for a living.

Dome isn't always the right answer. For outdoor perimeter with night IR, see the turret collection — turrets sidestep the IR-reflection problem that domes have outdoors. For long, narrow viewing (driveways, fence lines, plate capture), see the bullet collection. For active wide-area monitoring, see the PTZ collection.

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Key features of dome cameras

  • Low-profile housing mounts close to the ceiling or wall — clean aesthetics for indoor commercial spaces where a visible camera barrel would look out of place.
  • Tinted or smoked bubble hides the lens direction — a real deterrence factor in retail, and an ambiguity benefit in public spaces (you can't tell which way it's pointing).
  • 360° lens adjustment within the housing — pan, tilt and roll the lens during install to aim wherever you need; the bubble stays put.
  • IK10 vandal-resistance on dedicated vandal-rated domes — polycarbonate dome construction tolerates impact in public spaces (transit, schools, retail).
  • 2MP to 4K resolution options across the range.
  • AcuSense AI on Hikvision Pro Series domes; ColorVu on selected indoor and outdoor models for full-colour low-light.
  • IP66/67 weatherproofing on outdoor-rated domes; indoor models are not weather-rated — check before mounting outside.
  • PoE 802.3af/at — single Cat6 cable for power and data.

Why dome specifically — and where it's the right call

The case for dome is aesthetic and structural. The flush ceiling mount looks deliberate in a commercial space where a visible camera barrel would look industrial. The polycarbonate or glass bubble protects the lens behind a smooth surface that's easy to clean (a real factor in retail and food-service environments). And the IK10-rated vandal domes take direct impact without dislodging — important in transit, public schools, and any site where a visible camera invites tampering.

Domes earn their keep on:

  • Retail ceilings — supermarkets, pharmacies, fashion, electronics stores. Discreet, clean, no obvious lens direction.
  • Office and corporate — corridors, lobbies, meeting rooms. Aesthetic fit matters and the low-profile mount looks intentional.
  • Schools and education — vandal-rated domes in classrooms, hallways and entry points.
  • Reception and hospitality — hotel lobbies, restaurant interiors, where a turret or bullet would look industrial.
  • Transit and public spaces — stations, terminals, public buildings. IK10 ratings earn their keep here.

The honest trade-off — domes outdoors

Domes have one chronic outdoor weakness worth naming: at night, the infrared LEDs sit behind the same bubble as the lens, so when a spider builds a web across the bubble, when dust settles, or when condensation forms on a humid Queensland morning, the IR reflects straight back into the sensor and the night image goes milky. Indoor domes with clean glass don't have this problem. Outdoor domes are designed around it (sealed gaskets, anti-condensation glass, water-shedding bubble shapes) but the issue can still surface in dusty or insect-rich Australian conditions.

If the install is outdoor and night-time identification matters, turrets sidestep the issue entirely (separated IR housing, no shared bubble). The dome's structural / aesthetic case is strongest indoors.

How to choose between cameras in the dome range

Four axes:

1. Brand. Hikvision has the broadest dome range with AcuSense and ColorVu options. HiLook is the value sub-brand. Axis for professional / NDAA-compliant work — Axis domes are widely specified in government and commercial tenders. IDIS for NDAA-compliant Korean engineering with DirectIP. Hikvision and HiLook are non-NDAA — see the NDAA-compliant range for government work.

2. Resolution. 4MP for short-range indoor monitoring; 6MP for general commercial; 8MP / 4K for large open spaces or long viewing distances. Indoor short-range scenarios rarely benefit from 4K — match to viewing distance.

3. Camera technology. AcuSense is useful on outdoor domes for false-alert filtering. Indoor scenarios with controlled lighting see less AcuSense benefit. ColorVu earns its keep where colour identification matters at low light.

4. Connectivity and IK rating. PoE for almost every professional install. For public-facing locations, choose an IK10-rated vandal dome — the polycarbonate housing tolerates impact.

Where to mount dome cameras

  • Ceiling flush mount — the classic dome mount. Drill the cable opening, mount the camera base, route power and data through the ceiling cavity. Suits suspended-ceiling tiles, plasterboard ceilings, and concrete ceilings with a stand-off bracket.
  • Wall flush mount on the higher third of an interior wall — looks clean in corridors, reception areas, hotel rooms.
  • Pendant mount for ceilings too high for direct flush (warehouse interiors, high atrium ceilings). Dedicated pendant brackets bring the dome down to a useful viewing height.
  • Corner mount with a corner-bracket adaptor — less common than for turrets but viable.
  • Outdoor wall mount on weather-rated models — check the IP rating before installing externally.

Is dome the right form factor for your install?

Dome is the right call when: the install is indoor with a ceiling-flush or wall-flush mount, aesthetics matter (retail, office, hospitality, reception), the site is a public-impact-prone location (vandal-rated IK10), or the lens-direction ambiguity is a deterrence factor.

Look at turret instead when: the install is outdoor perimeter, night IR is critical, or the site is dusty / insect-rich. Turrets have the separated IR housing that domes don't.

Look at bullet instead when: the view is long, narrow (driveways, fence lines, plate capture), or pole-mounted; bullets have longer focal lengths and longer IR range.

Look at PTZ instead when: the view is wide-area carpark or yard requiring active monitoring with motorised pan/tilt/zoom.

Why buy from Security Cameras Australia

  • Authorised Australian dealer — genuine dome cameras across every brand, full manufacturer warranty.
  • Expert support — pre- and post-purchase technical advice, including the indoor-vs-outdoor decision and IK rating selection for public-facing installs.
  • Price-match guarantee — competitive pricing across the range.
  • Free shipping — fast delivery across Australia.
  • 30-day returns — a satisfaction guarantee on every camera.

Shop the dome range

Browse the dome range below, or talk to us about specifying a system. For indoor commercial installs, dome is usually the right call — we'll help you choose between models. If the install is outdoor perimeter with night IR, we'll point you to the turret range instead.

Frequently Asked Questions about Dome Security Cameras

What makes a dome camera different from a turret?

A dome has the lens behind a tinted or clear bubble that hides the lens direction — useful for deterrence in retail and public spaces. A turret has the lens exposed on a ball-and-socket mount, with the infrared LEDs in a separate housing. The practical implication: at night outdoors, dome IR can reflect off the bubble (worse in dusty or insect-rich conditions); turret IR sidesteps the issue. For indoor or aesthetic-sensitive installs, dome wins on appearance. For outdoor perimeter, turret usually wins on night image quality.

Are dome cameras suitable for outdoor use?

Only outdoor-rated weatherproof dome models (IP66 or IP67) — standard indoor domes will fail in rain and sun exposure. Outdoor domes are designed around the IR-reflection problem (sealed gaskets, anti-condensation glass, water-shedding bubble shapes) but the issue can still surface in dusty or insect-rich Australian conditions. If outdoor night identification is critical, turrets are usually the better form factor; if outdoor with vandal-resistance is the priority, an outdoor IK10-rated dome works.

What does IK10 vandal-rating mean on a dome?

IK10 is the highest impact rating in the IEC 62262 standard — the camera tolerates a 20-joule impact (roughly equivalent to a 5 kg mass dropped from 40 cm) without losing function. The polycarbonate dome construction is the key element. IK10-rated domes are specified in transit, public schools, public buildings and retail-floor placements where the camera might be tampered with or hit deliberately.

How do I mount a dome camera on a ceiling?

Most dome cameras include a flush ceiling mount in the box. The base attaches with screws (or anchors for plasterboard); the cable opening passes power and data through the ceiling cavity. For suspended ceilings, a tile-bridge bracket distributes the weight across the grid; for high atrium or warehouse ceilings, a pendant bracket brings the dome down to a usable viewing height. Confirm the ceiling structure supports the camera weight before drilling.

What resolution and brand options are available in domes?

Domes are available across 2MP to 4K with all major brands offering the form factor. Hikvision is the broad range with AcuSense AI and ColorVu on Pro Series models. HiLook is the value option. Axis domes are widely specified in government and commercial tenders (and are NDAA-compliant); IDIS domes are the Korean professional NDAA-compliant option with DirectIP zero-configuration setup.

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