Pricing Guide

CCTV Installation Costs in South Africa

R7,000–R17,000 Typical total cost for a residential CCTV system including equipment and installation. · R2,500–R6,300 Installation labour cost, representing 30–40% of the total system price. · 4–8 cameras Typical camera count for a 3–4 bedroom South African home. · R50–R200/month Cloud storage cost per camera if you choose remote recording over local-only storage.

Use this guide to understand realistic CCTV pricing — cameras, recording equipment, installation labour, and ongoing costs — so you can budget accurately and avoid overpaying.

Start Here

What This Page Helps You Do

Get the decision clear first, then compare providers with the right questions in mind.

1

Budget for the full system

Cameras are only part of the cost. Recording equipment, cables, installation, and ongoing storage all add up.

2

Plan for load shedding

Without backup power, your cameras go dark during outages — exactly when security matters most.

3

Connect to armed response

CCTV integrated with monitoring gives your armed response provider visual verification, reducing false dispatches and speeding up real ones.

Get at least two professional quotes

Pricing varies significantly. Comparing quotes from different installers helps you spot inflated labour or equipment costs.

Placement beats resolution

A well-placed 2MP camera captures better evidence than a poorly placed 4K camera. Invest in site survey and positioning.

Connect everything to armed response

CCTV on its own records evidence. CCTV connected to armed response monitoring enables real-time response to threats.

Quick Answers

Key Points At A Glance

The shortest version first. This is the fast read for people who want clarity before they compare providers.

Residential

A typical home system costs R7,000–R17,000

R12,000 average

This includes 4–8 cameras, a DVR or NVR, cabling, and professional installation for a standard 3–4 bedroom property.

Commercial

Business systems start at R15,000

R15,000–R50,000+

Commercial installations are larger, use higher-resolution cameras, and often require more complex network infrastructure.

DIY savings

DIY can save R3,500+ on installation

Technical skill needed

A DIY 4-camera system can cost around R5,200 versus R12,500 professionally installed. But poor placement creates blind spots.

Running costs

Budget R50–R150 monthly for electricity

Plus storage

Add R50–R200 per camera for cloud storage, and 10–15% of the system cost annually for maintenance and hard drive replacement.

Process

How to Budget for CCTV Installation

Use these steps to plan a realistic budget that covers equipment, installation, and ongoing costs.

  1. 1

    Step 1

    Assess your property and identify camera positions

    Map all entry points, driveways, garden areas, and blind spots. A typical 3–4 bedroom home needs 4–8 cameras for adequate coverage.

  2. 2

    Step 2

    Choose your camera type and resolution

    Bullet cameras suit outdoor perimeters (from R700). Dome cameras work for indoor or covered areas. 2MP is adequate for identification; 4MP gives clearer detail at distance.

  3. 3

    Step 3

    Select recording equipment

    DVRs cost R800–R2,200 depending on channels (4, 8, or 16). NVRs for IP cameras run R5,000–R15,000. Local storage is a once-off cost; cloud adds R50–R200 monthly per camera.

  4. 4

    Step 4

    Get professional installation quotes

    Labour runs R2,500–R6,300 and represents 30–40% of the total cost. Get at least two quotes. Professional installation takes 4–8 hours for a standard home system.

  5. 5

    Step 5

    Add load shedding backup

    Micro UPS units designed for CCTV provide 4–5 hours of backup. Lithium-ion batteries handle 3,000+ charge cycles — far better than lead-acid for frequent SA load shedding.

  6. 6

    Step 6

    Integrate with your alarm and armed response

    Modern systems can connect cameras to your alarm panel and armed response monitoring. Visual verification helps your provider confirm threats before dispatching.

What To Compare

What Usually Changes The Decision

These are the factors that usually matter more than one marketing promise or one price number.

Bullet cameras (from R700)

Long-range outdoor surveillance. Visible deterrent. Best for perimeters, driveways, and garden walls. Available in 2MP to 4K resolution.

Dome cameras (from R800)

Discreet and vandal-resistant. Best for retail environments, indoor areas, and covered walkways. Wider viewing angle than bullet cameras.

PTZ cameras (R700–R10,000+)

Pan, tilt, and zoom for active monitoring. Best for large areas where a single camera needs to cover multiple zones. Higher cost but more versatile.

IP vs analogue systems

IP systems (R6,000–R12,000+) offer better resolution and network flexibility. Analogue systems (R3,000–R6,000) are cheaper but limited in expansion and quality.

Shortlist

Build A Better Shortlist

Keep the shortlist simple: decide what you are scoring, ask sharper questions, then compare providers with intent.

Must have

Professional site survey

Any reputable installer should survey the property before quoting. Quotes without a site visit often result in blind spots.

Must have

Load shedding backup

UPS or battery backup for cameras and recording equipment. Without it, the system fails when you need it most.

Must have

Night vision capability

Most incidents happen after dark. All outdoor cameras should have infrared or starlight capability.

High value

Armed response integration

Visual verification through connected monitoring reduces false alarms and gives armed response better information before dispatch.

Quote and pricing questions

Get clarity on the full cost.

Does the quote include cabling, mounting hardware, and a DVR/NVR?

Some quotes show camera prices only. Cables, brackets, and recording equipment add R1,000–R3,000.

What is the labour cost separately from equipment?

Labour should be 30–40% of the total. If it is higher, the markup on equipment may be inflated.

What warranty and support is included?

Professional installers should warrant both equipment and workmanship for at least 12 months.

Technical and integration questions

Ensure the system fits your security setup.

Can the cameras connect to my alarm system and armed response monitoring?

Integrated systems give armed response visual verification, which improves response quality.

What load shedding backup is included or recommended?

If backup is not included in the quote, add R1,000–R3,000 for a UPS unit.

What resolution are the cameras and is it adequate for identification?

2MP is minimum for identification. 4MP is better for larger areas. 4K is typically unnecessary for residential.

Common Mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Common misconceptions about CCTV costs and capability.

Myth

More cameras always means better security

Fact

Placement matters more than quantity. Four well-positioned cameras outperform eight poorly placed ones. A professional site survey identifies the optimal layout.

Myth

CCTV replaces the need for armed response

Fact

Cameras record evidence but do not respond to threats. The real security value comes when CCTV is connected to monitoring that can dispatch armed response.

Myth

DIY installation is always the cheaper option

Fact

DIY saves on labour but risks blind spots, poor cable management, and network security vulnerabilities. Professional installation costs R2,500–R6,300 but ensures proper coverage.

Myth

Cloud storage is always better than local

Fact

Cloud adds R50–R200 per camera monthly. Local storage on a DVR/NVR is a once-off cost of R2,500–R9,500. The best approach depends on your access needs and budget.

FAQ

Common Questions

Short answers for the questions most people ask before they start comparing.

Sources

Sources Used In This Guide

These are the official or contextual references used where the guide relies on evidence beyond our own provider data.

Next Step

Start Comparing Providers

Now that you have context, use the area pages, provider profiles, and comparison tools to make the actual decision.

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Pricing and coverage data is researched from public sources, not self-reported by providers

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