
Main Entrances and Security Screening Areas
Monitor public entrances, screening points, lobby activity, and visitor movement into and out of the building.
Courthouse Security Cameras
Camera Security Now helps courts, counties, municipalities, and public-sector buyers evaluate security camera systems for courthouse entrances, public waiting areas, corridors, court-adjacent spaces, exterior approaches, parking areas, and controlled government spaces.
Courthouses often combine public-facing spaces, controlled areas, staff-only rooms, exterior approaches, parking areas, and high-traffic corridors. A useful surveillance system should account for each of those environments.
Security cameras can help court facilities review incidents, monitor entrances, improve visibility in public waiting areas, support staff awareness, and document activity in spaces where accountability matters.
Camera Security Now helps public-sector buyers evaluate courthouse surveillance systems that fit the building layout, access needs, camera placement goals, and long-term review requirements.

Court facilities often need surveillance systems that support public-area visibility, controlled access awareness, and incident review.
Monitor visitor entrances, public counters, lobby areas, screening zones, and other high-traffic court access points.
Improve visibility in hallways, waiting rooms, stairwells, elevators, and shared public areas.
Support review of exterior approaches, parking areas, sidewalks, staff entrances, and public gathering areas near the courthouse.
A courthouse surveillance system should reflect the building layout, public traffic patterns, and access control requirements.

Monitor public entrances, screening points, lobby activity, and visitor movement into and out of the building.

Improve visibility in waiting rooms, hallways, elevator areas, stairwells, and other shared court facility spaces.

Support visibility around restricted doors, staff corridors, office areas, records spaces, and controlled access points.

Monitor parking areas, sidewalks, exterior doors, public approaches, and other outdoor areas around the court building.
Planning Considerations
Courthouse surveillance requires thoughtful planning around both public access and restricted areas.
Court buildings often serve many audiences at once: visitors, attorneys, staff, law enforcement, vendors, and the general public. Camera placement should support visibility without creating unnecessary blind spots in the areas most likely to require review.
Camera Security Now helps courthouse buyers evaluate security camera placement, remote viewing, recording needs, exterior coverage, and access control coordination for public-sector environments.

Court facilities may need a mix of public-area, staff-area, and exterior coverage.
Security cameras can support visibility where visitors enter, wait, move through the building, or gather.
Cameras can help monitor staff-only doors, restricted corridors, records areas, and other controlled access points.
Recorded footage can support incident review, activity verification, and public-sector accountability.
Parking lots, sidewalks, service doors, and exterior approaches are often important parts of courthouse camera planning.
Courthouse surveillance often overlaps with police, correctional, dispatch, and broader public-sector security needs.
Courthouse security camera systems help public-sector teams improve visibility across public, controlled, and exterior areas.
Courthouses often include public entrances, waiting areas, corridors, court-adjacent spaces, staff-only areas, controlled access points, parking lots, and exterior approaches. A practical surveillance system should support visibility in the areas where incidents may need to be reviewed.
Camera planning for court facilities should consider building layout, visitor traffic, restricted areas, recording needs, image clarity, and how authorized personnel will access footage after an event.
Camera Security Now helps counties, municipalities, and court facility buyers evaluate security camera systems for courthouses, court buildings, public spaces, staff areas, and exterior facility zones.
Get answers to common questions about this security camera solution.
Common locations include main entrances, lobbies, public waiting areas, corridors, elevators, stairwells, staff-only doors, exterior approaches, and parking lots.
Yes. Cameras can help monitor controlled doors, staff entrances, restricted corridors, and other access points when paired with access control planning.
Many courthouse projects include exterior coverage for parking lots, sidewalks, public approaches, service doors, and staff entrances.
Yes. Recorded video can help authorized staff review incidents, verify activity, and better understand events that occurred in or around the facility.
Tell us about your courthouse layout, public access areas, controlled spaces, and review needs. We’ll help you evaluate a practical surveillance system.