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Outdoor Security Cameras

Outdoor security cameras are weatherproof-rated cameras specified for permanent external mounting — IP66 or IP67 sealed against rain and dust, operating-temperature rated for Australian sun and humidity, and built around longer-range infrared or full-colour night vision for the perimeter views that matter at night. The collection covers front-door and driveway monitoring on residential properties, perimeter and yard coverage on commercial sites, plate-capture installs on long driveways, and full-property surveillance on rural and industrial sites. The cameras vary across four axes: brand (Hikvision, HiLook, Axis, IDIS), resolution (4MP to 8MP 4K), form factor (turret for general perimeter, bullet for long-range, dome for outdoor-rated commercial), and camera technology (AcuSense AI, ColorVu full-colour night, Strobe & Siren active deterrence).

Security Cameras Australia stocks the full outdoor camera 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.

If you need outdoor monitoring without running cables (rental property, retrofit, holiday house), see the wireless cameras collection — modern wireless outdoor cameras are IP66-rated and a sensible alternative for single-camera DIY installs.

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Key features of outdoor security cameras

  • IP66/67 weatherproof rating — IP66 handles powerful jets of water (typical urban storms); IP67 handles temporary immersion (low-lying mounts, coastal exposure). Both block dust completely.
  • Operating-temperature rating — quality outdoor cameras run −30°C to +60°C, covering the full Australian range from highland winters to north Queensland summers and direct WA / NT sun.
  • Infrared night vision — typical 30 m on standard models, 50–80 m on long-range bullets, 100 m+ on specialised perimeter cameras.
  • ColorVu full-colour night vision on supported Hikvision and HiLook models — full-colour detail under low ambient light or supplementary spotlight, useful for vehicle colour and clothing identification at night.
  • AcuSense AI on Hikvision Pro Series — on-camera classification of people and vehicles versus everything else; cuts the false-alert noise from wind, rain and animals that floods outdoor systems.
  • Strobe & Siren active deterrence on selected models — light flash and audible siren on triggered detection.
  • IK10 vandal-resistance on selected models — handles 20-joule direct impact for street-facing or public-perimeter mounts.
  • PoE 802.3af/at single-cable power and data on professional models — runs through eaves, wall cavities, or surface-mounted conduit.

Why outdoor specifically — and where it earns its keep

Outdoor camera engineering is purpose-built for sustained external exposure: sealed glass, UV-stabilised housings, anti-condensation venting, corrosion-resistant fittings, and infrared arrays sized for outdoor distances. Indoor-rated cameras mounted outside will fail — sometimes within months in coastal humidity or direct WA sun, sometimes within a year or two everywhere else. The IP rating and the operating-temperature spec are what separate the two.

Practically, outdoor cameras earn their keep on:

  • Front door and driveway approach — turret cameras under eaves at 2.5–3 m AGL, aimed down 30–45°, covering 2 m forward to 8–10 m out.
  • Side gates and rear yard — typically 4MP–6MP turrets, AcuSense if false-alert filtering matters.
  • Long driveways and fence lines — bullet cameras with longer focal lengths (4–12 mm varifocal) and 50–80 m IR. Plate-capture installs use a dedicated camera at driver-eye height.
  • Commercial perimeter — warehouses, dealerships, yards, depots. Pole-mounted bullets and PTZ for active coverage.
  • Rural and industrial sites — specialised long-range bullets and thermal where night identification at 100 m+ matters.

How to choose between outdoor cameras

Four axes:

1. Form factor. Turret for general perimeter (the default, separated IR housing keeps the night image clean). Bullet for long-range outdoor with integrated sun shield. Outdoor-rated dome for vandal-prone commercial perimeter. PTZ for active wide-area monitoring.

2. Resolution. 4MP for short-range outdoor; 6MP for general residential perimeter (the most common right answer); 8MP 4K for plate capture or long viewing distances.

3. Brand. Hikvision for the broad outdoor range with AcuSense and ColorVu. HiLook for the value tier. Axis for professional / NDAA-compliant work. IDIS for Korean NDAA-compliant DirectIP. See the NDAA-compliant range for government and critical-infrastructure projects.

4. Camera technology. AcuSense for false-alert filtering (especially valuable outdoors where wind, rain and animals trigger standard cameras constantly). ColorVu for night-time colour identification. Strobe & Siren for active deterrence on problem zones.

IP rating, mounting and Australian conditions

For mainland Australian residential perimeter — sealed eaves, away from direct rain runoff — IP66 is sufficient and is what most current Hikvision and HiLook outdoor turrets are rated to. For coastal humidity, low-lying mounts, or sites with direct rain exposure, step up to IP67. Pure submersion (IP68) is rarely needed and the cameras stocked at that rating are specialist.

Operating temperature matters too: confirm the lower end of the spec covers your site (typical residential cameras run −30°C to +60°C; some budget cameras are −10°C to +50°C, which can fail in highland or industrial cold). Direct sun mounting on east or west walls in WA and NT benefits from the integrated sun shield on bullet cameras rather than turrets.

Is outdoor the right call for your install?

Outdoor is the right call when: the mount is genuinely exterior (eaves, walls, poles, yards), the camera will be exposed to weather, or you need the longer IR ranges that outdoor designs deliver.

Use indoor cameras instead when: the mount is interior with controlled climate. Indoor cameras are cheaper and don't waste the IP rating premium on weatherproofing you won't need.

Use wireless cameras instead when: the property is a rental, the install is single-camera DIY, you can't run cables to the mount location, or it's a holiday house / temporary install. Modern wireless outdoor cameras are IP66-rated and a sensible alternative for those scenarios.

Why buy from Security Cameras Australia

  • Authorised Australian dealer — genuine outdoor cameras across every brand, full manufacturer warranty.
  • Expert support — pre- and post-purchase technical advice on IP rating selection, lens focal length, mounting height and angle.
  • 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 outdoor security camera range

Browse the outdoor security camera range below, or talk to us about specifying a system — tell us the mounting locations and the viewing distances, and we'll point you to the right camera and form factor for each position.

Frequently Asked Questions about Outdoor Security Cameras

What weatherproofing rating do outdoor security cameras need in Australia?

IP66 is sufficient for most mainland Australian residential perimeter — sealed eaves, away from direct rain runoff. IP67 is the safer specification for coastal humidity, low-lying mounts, or sites with direct rain exposure. Both ratings block dust completely; the difference is water — IP66 handles powerful jets, IP67 handles temporary immersion. Pure submersion (IP68) is rarely needed and the cameras at that rating are specialist. Also confirm the operating-temperature spec covers your site — most quality cameras run −30°C to +60°C.

Do outdoor cameras need additional lighting at night?

No, infrared night vision works in complete darkness — typical 30 m range on standard models, 50–80 m on long-range bullets, 100 m+ on specialised perimeter cameras. For colour identification at night (vehicle colour, clothing) rather than monochrome IR, choose a ColorVu camera with a wider aperture and integrated low-light optics. Strobe & Siren models add a triggered spotlight that doubles as both illumination and active deterrence.

What's the right height to mount an outdoor camera?

For general residential perimeter (turret cameras under eaves), 2.5–3 metres above ground level aimed downward 30–45° is the standard — covers from about 2 m forward of the camera out to 8–10 m, captures faces and number plates within identification range. Too low and the camera is reachable; too high and identification becomes top-of-head footage. For plate capture specifically, mount the bullet at driver-eye height (around 1.5 m) at the right distance to put the plate centred in the frame — this is often a dedicated camera separate from the general perimeter.

Can outdoor cameras handle direct Australian sun?

Yes if you specify correctly. Bullet cameras have an integrated sun shield built into the barrel design, which makes them the right choice for east- and west-facing mounts in WA, NT and Queensland direct sun. Turrets and domes don't have the integrated shield — for those, mount under eaves or with some natural shade. All quality outdoor cameras are operating-temperature rated to +60°C and use UV-stabilised housings, but extended direct exposure does shorten lifespan vs sheltered mounting.

Outdoor wired or outdoor wireless — which should I pick?

Wired (PoE) is the right call for multi-camera permanent installs, commercial sites, and any property where you can run Cat6 cable to the mount positions. The reliability and continuous-recording benefits outweigh the install effort at scale. Wireless is the right call for single-camera DIY installs, rentals where you can't drill cable runs, holiday houses, or retrofit jobs where cabling is impractical. Modern outdoor wireless cameras are IP66-rated and work well for the right scenarios. See the wireless cameras collection for the full wireless range.

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