CCTV has become much more accessible in Canada, but pricing can still feel confusing because the final cost depends on more than the camera itself. A $70 Wi-Fi camera from a retail store and a professionally installed wired system are both technically “security cameras,” but they solve very different problems. One is a simple monitoring tool. The other is a more reliable surveillance setup designed for coverage, storage, durability, and long-term use.
For homeowners, landlords, and small businesses comparing home security systems, a basic CCTV installation in Canada may start around $600 to $1,000 for a small setup with one or two cameras. A more typical professionally installed system with three to five cameras often falls between $1,200 and $2,500. Larger homes, retail spaces, warehouses, restaurants, and offices can easily move beyond $3,000, especially when the job requires multiple outdoor cameras, long cable runs, higher-resolution recording, or integration with alarms and access control.
What You’re Paying For
The camera is only one part of the bill. A complete CCTV installation usually includes cameras, mounting hardware, cabling, connectors, a recorder, storage drives, setup labour, network configuration, and testing. Wired systems often cost more upfront than wireless systems because installers may need to run cable through walls, ceilings, soffits, basements, or commercial ceiling grids.
That extra work can be worthwhile. Wired IP camera systems tend to be more stable than Wi-Fi-only setups, especially in buildings with thick walls, busy wireless networks, or outdoor coverage needs. For a business, reliability matters because footage may be needed for theft investigations, liability claims, employee safety reviews, or after-hours monitoring.
Main Cost Factors
The number of cameras is the most obvious cost driver, but it is not the only one. Resolution matters too. A 1080p camera is usually cheaper than a 4K camera, but higher resolution may be useful for reading licence plates, identifying faces, or monitoring cash areas.
Storage is another major factor. Recording 24/7 requires more hard drive capacity than motion-triggered recording. Businesses that need 30, 60, or 90 days of retained footage should expect higher storage costs.
Installation complexity can also change the quote. A single-storey home with open basement access is usually easier than a finished multi-storey property. Commercial properties may require lifts, conduit, after-hours labour, or coordination with IT teams.
DIY vs Professional Installation
DIY CCTV can be cheaper if you only need one or two indoor cameras. But professional installation becomes more valuable when camera placement matters. A good installer thinks about blind spots, lighting, network load, weather exposure, cable protection, privacy, and future expansion.
Poor placement can make even expensive cameras underperform. For example, a camera pointed into glare, mounted too high, or aimed too wide may capture movement without capturing useful detail.
What’s a Realistic Budget?
For most Canadian homeowners, a practical budget is $1,000 to $2,500. For small businesses, $2,500 to $7,500 is more realistic, depending on the size of the site and the number of cameras required. Larger commercial systems can cost significantly more.
The smartest approach is to price the system around the outcome, not the camera count. A well-designed four-camera setup can outperform an eight-camera system that was installed without a clear coverage plan.





