Security Cameras Australia
Hikvision 6MP AcuSense 4-Camera Turret Kit | BYO HDD
In stock (128 units)Sale price $1,46295 AUD Regular price $1,53995Unit price- $86.00 off
Security Cameras Australia
Hikvision 8MP AcuSense 4-Camera Turret Kit | BYO HDD
In stock (727 units)Sale price $1,63395 AUD Regular price $1,71995Unit price Security Cameras Australia
Hikvision 6MP ColorVu 3.0 4-Camera Turret Kit | BYO HDD
In stock (957 units)Sale price $2,23815 AUD Regular price $2,35595Unit priceSecurity Cameras Australia
Hikvision 8MP ColorVu 3.0 4-Camera Turret Kit | BYO HDD
In stock (2050 units)Sale price $2,44335 AUD Regular price $2,57195Unit priceSecurity Cameras Australia
Hikvision 8MP AcuSense 8-Camera Turret Kit | BYO HDD
In stock (363 units)Sale price $2,65991 AUD Regular price $2,79991Unit price- $225.20 off
Security Cameras Australia
Hikvision 8MP ColorVu 3.0 8-Camera Turret Kit | BYO HDD
In stock (1067 units)Sale price $4,27871 AUD Regular price $4,50391Unit price IDIS
IDIS Lite 5MP Outdoor Turret, 2.8MM, IR, IP67, IK10, NDAA
In stock (2115 units)Regular price $27499 AUDUnit priceIDIS
IDIS Lite 5MP Outdoor Dome, 2.7-13.5MM MZ, IR, IP67, IK10, NDAA
In stock (123 units)Regular price $41199 AUDUnit priceHikvision
Hikvision DeepinView 2CD7A45G2 4MP ANPR Bullet Camera, Super Long Lens 4.7-118MM, IR 50M,
In stock (15 units)Regular price $2,14899 AUDUnit priceTRUVISION
TruVision 8MP, H.265/H.264, IP VF Dome Camera, 2.8-12MM Motorized, White
Very low stock (2 units)Regular price $99699 AUDUnit priceHikvision
Hikvision Turbo HD DS-2CE78U7T-IT3F 8.3 Megapixel HD Surveillance Camera - Turret
In stock (17 units)Regular price $19699 AUDUnit priceHikvision
Hikvision Turbo HD DS-2CE79H8T-AIT3ZF 5 Megapixel HD Surveillance Camera - Turret
In stock (80 units)Regular price $26899 AUDUnit priceHikvision
Hikvision HeatPro DS-2TD1228-3/QA Network Camera - Colour - Turret
Low stock (4 units)Regular price $1,23299 AUDUnit priceHikvision
Hikvision HeatPro DS-2TD1228-7/QA Network Camera - Colour - Turret
In stock (31 units)Regular price $1,23299 AUDUnit priceHikvision
Hikvision HeatPro DS-2TD2628-10/QA Network Camera - Colour - Bullet
Low stock (3 units)Regular price $1,33199 AUDUnit priceHikvision
HIKVISION HEAT PRO 2TD4228T-10-S2 2MP BI-SPECTRUM,PTZ 10MM,4.8-153MM, IR 100M, -20 C-550
In stock (16 units)Regular price $5,58799 AUDUnit priceHikvision
HIKVISION HIKCENTRIAL SERVER R360, 2TB, 300XCAMERAS, 3YR
Very low stock (2 units)Regular price $36,28499 AUDUnit priceHikvision
Hikvision AcuSense DS-2CD2566G2-IS 6 Megapixel Network Camera - Colour - Mini Dome
In stock (173 units)Regular price $45399 AUDUnit priceHikvision
HiLook Value IPC-B261H-MU 2.8mm 6 Megapixel Network Camera - Colour - Bullet
In stock (183 units)Sale price $12399 AUD Regular price $15400Unit price- $50.01 off
Hikvision
HiLook Value IPC-D281H-MU 2.8mm 8 Megapixel 4K Network Camera - Colour - Dome
In stock (303 units)Sale price $16999 AUD Regular price $22000Unit price Hikvision
Hikvision AcuSense DS-2CD2566G2-IS 6 Megapixel Network Camera - Colour - Mini Dome
In stock (27 units)Regular price $43599 AUDUnit priceHikvision
Hikvision AcuSense DS-2CD2566G2-IS 6 Megapixel Network Camera - Colour - Mini Dome - Black
In stock (72 units)Regular price $45999 AUDUnit priceHikvision
Hikvision AcuSense DS-2CD2766G2T-IZS-BNC 6 Megapixel Network Camera - Colour - Dome
In stock (19 units)Regular price $58499 AUDUnit priceHikvision
HiLook Value IPC-T240H-MU 2.8mm 4 Megapixel 2K Network Camera - Colour - Turret
In stock (21 units)Sale price $8499 AUD Regular price $10340Unit price
Key features of wired security cameras
- PoE single-cable architecture — one Cat6 cable per camera carries both power (up to 100 W on PoE++) and network data, eliminating separate power supplies at the camera and the AC outlet planning that goes with them.
- Three PoE power tiers: 802.3af (15 W, standard fixed cameras), 802.3at / PoE+ (25 W, PoE+ cameras and entry PTZ), 802.3bt / PoE++ (60–100 W, long-range PTZ with built-in heaters and high-power IR). Match the camera spec to the NVR or switch you're powering it from.
- 100 m PoE cable run from the NVR / switch to the camera is the standard limit on Cat6 — past 100 m, use a PoE extender or a secondary switch.
- NVR-centric recording — the recorder is the local source of truth. No cloud dependency, no monthly subscription required for basic recording, and footage survives internet outages.
- Scaling — add cameras up to the NVR channel count without per-camera bandwidth concerns. A 16-channel NVR + a PoE switch handles 16 cameras over Cat6.
- No batteries — every camera runs continuously off the wired power, no replacement cycle, no battery degradation.
- Lower total system cost at scale — over 4+ cameras, wired typically beats wireless on hardware cost, and avoids the recurring battery and subscription costs of wireless systems.
Why wired specifically — and where it's the right call
The case for wired is straightforward: the cables carry guaranteed power and bandwidth, so the system behaves predictably. Every camera reports continuously to the NVR. There's no Wi-Fi interference, no battery low-charge alerts, no cloud-subscription dependency, and no per-camera bandwidth limit to worry about across the install. For sites where you actually need to trust the system 24/7 — commercial premises with insurance requirements, multi-camera installations, government and critical-infrastructure work — wired is the default.
Practically, wired earns its keep on:
- New builds and renovations — cable runs are part of the rough-in. Including PoE Cat6 to every planned camera position during construction costs almost nothing extra and locks in wired infrastructure for the building's life.
- Multi-camera systems (4+ cameras) — wired cost-effectiveness scales; wireless gets expensive fast on per-camera hardware plus subscriptions.
- Commercial and industrial sites — insurance, audit, and operational requirements typically mandate continuous reliable recording that wireless can't guarantee.
- Sites with poor Wi-Fi — large rural properties, dense urban Wi-Fi contention, EMI-noisy industrial environments. Wired sidesteps the problem.
- Permanent residential installs — where the property is your long-term home and the install can include eaves cabling.
The honest wired trade-off
Wired demands cable runs. That's the real cost — not the hardware, the install labour. Running Cat6 from where the NVR sits to every camera position is half-a-day-per-camera DIY work for someone confident with eaves access and wall cavity routing, or a day's licensed-installer time for a 4-camera system. It commits you to NVR-centric architecture (the NVR is the recording hub; cameras don't record independently). And once cable is in the walls, moving a camera means new cable. None of this is a problem for the right install — it's just the cost of the reliability.
The dismissive framing of "wireless is unreliable" isn't quite right either: modern Wi-Fi cameras with battery backup work fine for the right scenarios, and forcing wired on a 1-camera rental install is the wrong answer just as much as recommending wireless for a 16-camera commercial site.
How to choose between cameras in the wired range
Five axes — because the wired range spans every other taxonomy:
1. Brand. Hikvision has the broad range with AcuSense / ColorVu. HiLook is the value sub-brand. Axis for professional / NDAA-compliant work. IDIS for Korean NDAA-compliant DirectIP architecture. (Hikvision and HiLook are non-NDAA — see the NDAA-compliant range.)
2. Resolution. 4MP entry; 6MP mid-range sweet spot; 8MP / 4K for long-range or large-display work. See the 4MP, 6MP, and 8MP 4K collections for the resolution-specific decision.
3. Form factor. Turret (general perimeter, the default), bullet (long-range, sun shield), dome (indoor / ceiling), PTZ (active wide-area), panoramic (one-mount wide view). See the form-factor collections for the decision.
4. Camera technology. Standard for "see what happened"; AcuSense AI for false-alert filtering; ColorVu for night colour; Strobe & Siren for active deterrence.
5. NVR sizing. The wired choice locks you into NVR-centric architecture — size the NVR to fit current + planned camera count, with PoE+ or PoE++ ports if you'll run PTZ or specialised long-range bullets.
Is wired right for your install?
Wired is the right call when: the property is a new build or renovation (cable runs in the rough-in), it's a multi-camera system (4+), it's commercial or industrial, Wi-Fi is genuinely flaky at the site, the install can include cabling, or reliability and continuous recording matter more than install flexibility.
Use wireless instead when: the property is a rental and you can't run cables, the install is a single camera or two (typical small residential), the site is a holiday house or temporary install, you need install flexibility (cameras might move), or the use case is mostly indoor with reliable home Wi-Fi.
Why buy from Security Cameras Australia
- Authorised Australian dealer — genuine wired cameras across every brand, full manufacturer warranty.
- Expert support — pre- and post-purchase technical advice, including PoE power tier sizing, NVR channel selection, and cable-run planning.
- 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 wired range
Browse the wired range below, or talk to us about specifying a system — tell us the property, the camera count, and the install constraints, and we'll size the NVR, the PoE switch (where needed), and the camera mix.
Frequently Asked Questions about Wired Security Cameras
What does PoE mean in wired cameras, and which tier do I need?
What does PoE mean in wired cameras, and which tier do I need?
Wired vs wireless — which should I pick?
Wired vs wireless — which should I pick?
How far can a PoE cable run from the NVR?
How far can a PoE cable run from the NVR?
Will wired cameras keep recording if my internet goes down?
Will wired cameras keep recording if my internet goes down?
How many wired cameras can one NVR support, and what about cabling at scale?
How many wired cameras can one NVR support, and what about cabling at scale?