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Do Hidden Camera Detectors Really Work — and What They Miss

Nearly half of all Americans (47%) have discovered a hidden camera in a vacation rental — almost double the figure from two years ago. Yet 64% still have no idea how to find one. This guide gives you every reliable detection method, an honest verdict on which detectors actually work (and what they miss), and…

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Published May 27, 2026 Updated June 3, 2026 · 30 min read

Nearly half of all Americans (47%) have discovered a hidden camera in a vacation rental — almost double the figure from two years ago. Yet 64% still have no idea how to find one. This guide gives you every reliable detection method, an honest verdict on which detectors actually work (and what they miss), and a ten-minute room sweep you can run on arrival at any hotel or rental, starting tonight.

⚠ Key fact

Nearly 2 in 3 Americans (64%) don’t know how to detect a hidden camera — even as reports of surveillance in vacation rentals have nearly doubled since 2023.

Source: IPX1031 2025 Vacation Rental Study on Hidden Cameras & Guest Privacy

Do hidden camera detectors actually work? The honest answer

Yes — but only for specific camera types, and never for all of them. Every guide that answers this question with a flat “yes” or links to a product without stating its limitations is leaving you exposed. Here is the accurate breakdown by detection type.

When RF detectors work — and when they completely fail

RF (radio frequency) detectors pick up the wireless signals emitted when a camera transmits footage — over Wi-Fi, a cellular connection, or a proprietary 2.4 GHz or 5.8 GHz protocol. They are genuinely useful against Wi-Fi IP cameras that are actively streaming at the moment you run the scan.

The critical limitation: a camera recording to a microSD card with no active network connection emits no RF signal whatsoever. It will not appear on any RF detector. It will not show up on any scanning app. It is invisible to every piece of wireless detection hardware on the market. Motion-activated SD-card cameras — one of the most commonly sold spy camera formats online — fall into exactly this category. They may sit in a room for days without recording a frame, then activate the instant you walk in. An RF detector gives you zero warning.

🔍 The blindspot most guides skip

Motion-activated cameras recording to an SD card emit no Wi-Fi signal, no RF transmission, and no IR light in daylight mode. They are completely undetectable by every scanning app on the market. Only a physical inspection and a flashlight sweep will find them.

When optical (lens) detectors work

Optical detectors work on a different principle entirely: they detect the physical glass lens by shining a light at it and picking up the characteristic reflection of coated optics. Because this method targets the hardware rather than any wireless signal, it works regardless of whether the camera is powered on, connected to a network, or recording at all. A camera sitting switched off in a smoke detector will still reflect an optical detector’s beam.

This makes optical detection uniquely valuable — and it is also the working principle behind the free flashlight method covered below. The difference between a dedicated optical detector and a torch from your phone is primarily one of convenience and false-positive filtering: a dedicated device highlights reflections more clearly. The underlying physics is the same.

Accuracy comparison by price tier

News On 6’s Lori Fullbright tested four detectors in real conditions across a range of prices. The results expose a meaningful quality gap between tiers — but also confirm that no device in any tier catches everything.

Hidden camera detector comparison — tested models
Model Price Detection modes Misses Best for
Jaxtin G66 Pro $118.99 RF + optical lens Offline/SD cameras (RF); requires user technique (optical) Frequent travellers who want best coverage
K18 Detector $49.99 RF + lens Offline cameras; some false positives Best mid-range value
Jaxtin G9 Pro $69.99 RF + lens + bug Offline cameras; sensitivity needs calibration in Wi-Fi-heavy environments Mid-range with bug detection added
Aroeally $19.99 RF only Offline cameras entirely; weaker sensitivity; more false positives Casual use only — not a primary tool

The Aroeally’s $19.99 price point is tempting. In testing, it produced the least reliable results — high false-positive rates and significant gaps in sensitivity. If you are going to carry one device, the K18 at $49.99 is the minimum price point where performance becomes consistent enough to be practically useful.

One thing every detector misses — and why the sensitivity dial matters

Every hardware detector on the market includes a sensitivity dial. Most guides list this as a specification. None of them explain why it matters in real environments: at maximum sensitivity, an RF detector will flag your own phone, the property’s Wi-Fi router, a microwave oven, and Bluetooth speakers — generating false positives continuously. This does not mean the device is broken. It means you need to lower sensitivity until the baseline noise from legitimate electronics disappears, then sweep methodically. An alarm triggered next to a smoke detector or an alarm clock that has no business broadcasting RF is the signal you are looking for. An alarm triggered the moment you turn the device on, pointing at your own pocket, is not.

What does a hidden camera look like?

Nothing like a camera. Modern spy cameras are engineered to disappear inside objects you already expect to see in a room. The lens — typically 1–5 mm in diameter — is the only physical giveaway, and it only reveals itself under specific conditions. Everything else is designed to be invisible.

“The problem with spy cameras today is that the hardware is cheap, miniaturised and completely indistinguishable from legitimate household objects. A pinhole lens smaller than the tip of a ballpoint pen is all that separates your private space from someone else’s recording.”

Jake Moore, Global Cybersecurity Advisor at ESET and former 14-year digital forensics officer, Dorset Police (UK)

Pinhole modules vs. miniature spy cameras: they hide differently

Most guides treat all hidden cameras as a single category. They are not — and the distinction changes what you are looking for.

Pinhole camera modules are bare circuit boards approximately 8 × 8 mm — roughly the size of a pencil eraser. They have no casing. They are designed to be embedded inside another object: pressed behind a small hole drilled in a wall, tucked into the body of a clock radio, or hidden inside a smoke detector housing. The lens aperture is 1–3 mm — smaller than the diameter of a ballpoint pen tip. There is no visible housing. What you are looking for is a hole that should not be there.

Standard miniature cameras are self-contained units, sold disguised as household objects. The lens is slightly bigger (3–5 mm) and is often surrounded by a ring of small infrared LEDs for night vision. Under a smartphone’s front camera in a dark room, these LEDs glow white or purple-pink — a useful tell. The disguise — the smoke detector, clock, or USB adapter they are built into — is what hides them from a casual glance.

The practical implication: you are looking for two different things. For pinhole modules, look for a small hole in an object or wall with no legitimate function. For miniature cameras, look for an object that looks normal but has a lens-shaped reflective dot where no reflective dot should be.

The six most common disguises — and exactly where the lens is hidden

  • Smoke detectors — ceiling-mounted, wide field of view, almost never inspected by guests. The lens is placed at the face centre or near the edge, offset from the indicator LED and test button. A smoke detector mounted at an angle that points its face toward the bed rather than straight down has been repositioned for a reason.
  • USB wall chargers and power adapters — permanently powered, sitting on a bedside table facing the bed. Look for a dark circular hole on the face that does not correspond to any port, or a slightly raised bump between the plug pins.
  • Digital alarm clocks — virtually universal in hotel rooms, positioned directly toward the bed. The lens is commonly behind the clock face itself or in a slot at the 12 o’clock position on the bezel. Compare the clock’s angle to the listing photographs — if it has been rotated, note it.
  • Wi-Fi routers and smart speakers — guests expect them and rarely examine them closely. Look for a pinhole on the front face that does not correspond to a speaker grille opening or a legitimate microphone port.
  • Air purifiers, desk fans, and similar appliances — vent slots and grilles provide natural cover for a lens aperture. Any mains-powered device that faces the room and runs continuously provides both a line of sight and a persistent power source.
  • Picture frames and decorative objects — particularly frames hung opposite the bed. A camera behind a frame needs either a hole through the frame or a gap at the lower edge. Tilt wall-mounted frames forward and inspect the back.

📷 Recommended image

Side-by-side comparison: six pairs of objects — standard smoke detector vs. spy-camera version, standard USB charger vs. spy-camera version, standard alarm clock vs. spy-camera version. Each spy-camera version has a small red circle marking the typical lens pinhole location. Neutral grey background. Caption: “Common household objects used to conceal hidden cameras. Red circles mark the typical lens position.”

What a hidden camera lens looks like under a light

Camera lenses are made of coated optical glass. When a direct light source hits one at the right angle, it reflects back a small, precise, bright circle — distinctly different from the diffuse shine of a painted surface, the flat glint of a screw head, or the smear of a fingerprint on plastic. The reflection is typically blue, green, or white. Crucially, it often appears and disappears as you sweep the beam across it — it flashes rather than glowing steadily, which is one of the more reliable identifiers.

Infrared LEDs — the ring of small emitters on many night-vision cameras — are invisible to the naked eye but produce a bright white or purple-pink glow through a smartphone’s front-facing camera in a darkened room. A single LED cluster is typically visible from 3–4 metres. This costs nothing and takes under two minutes.

How small can a hidden camera be?

The smallest commercially available spy camera modules are approximately 8 × 8 mm. Many record 1080p video, support infrared night vision, and run for 6–12 hours on an internal battery. Higher-end versions record at 4K and use motion-activation — which means a camera may be in a room for days without recording a single second, then activate the moment you walk in.

Hidden camera types — key specifications
Camera type Typical size Resolution Power source How to detect
Bare pinhole module ~8 × 8 mm Up to 1080p Internal battery, 6–12 hrs Flashlight sweep
Object-disguised (clock, charger, smoke detector) Object-sized Up to 4K Mains-powered Physical inspection + IR sweep
Motion-activated, SD card only Varies Up to 1080p Battery, days–weeks Flashlight only
Wi-Fi IP camera Varies Up to 4K Mains-powered Network scan + IR sweep

Free methods vs. paid detectors: what each actually catches

Before spending anything on hardware, it is worth being clear about what the free methods can and cannot do — because most competing guides treat paid detectors as a step up from free methods when the reality is more nuanced. The flashlight sweep, which costs nothing, detects cameras that a $120 RF detector will completely miss.

Method Wi-Fi cameras Offline / SD cameras Camera powered off Cost
Network scan (browser / app) ✓ Yes ✗ No ✗ No Free
Physical inspection ✓ Yes ✓ Yes ✓ Yes Free
Smartphone IR camera ✓ Yes (if IR active) ✓ Yes (if IR active) ✗ No Free
Flashlight lens sweep ✓ Yes ✓ Yes ✓ Yes Free
RF detector (hardware) ✓ Yes (if transmitting) ✗ No ✗ No $20–$200
Two-way mirror test Mirrors only Mirrors only ✓ Yes Free

The practical upshot: run all four free methods every time. The flashlight sweep and physical inspection cover offline cameras — the type every app misses. The network scan and IR test cover the majority of actively transmitting devices. Together they address the full realistic threat range without spending a penny. Hardware detectors add convenience and sensitivity, not fundamentally different coverage.

Who should buy which type — a decision framework

  • Occasional traveller (1–3 trips per year): Skip the hardware. Learn the flashlight sweep and smartphone IR method — two techniques, zero cost, ten minutes. They cover the realistic risk range for infrequent stays in mainstream Airbnbs and hotel chains.
  • Regular traveller (monthly travel for work or leisure): The K18 at $49.99 is the minimum price point where performance justifies the purchase. Pair it with the free methods — hardware alone is not sufficient.
  • Frequent international traveller or high-privacy-risk contexts: A multi-function detector in the $70–$120 range (G9 Pro or G66 Pro tier) makes sense as a travel tool. Still supplement with the free methods for offline cameras.
  • Anyone relying solely on a smartphone app claiming EMF or magnetometer detection: Stop. These apps register interference from every nearby electronic device and cannot distinguish a camera from a toaster. They are not detection tools.

How to detect hidden cameras: 7 proven methods

Use these in the order given. The first four require no equipment, cost nothing, and together take under five minutes. They catch the overwhelming majority of consumer-grade spy cameras in active use. The later methods add coverage for less common scenarios.

“Most people have no idea how much information a tiny, inexpensive camera can collect about them. The assumption that a hotel or rental space is private is often wrong — and the countermeasures are far simpler than people think.”

Joseph Steinberg, cybersecurity expert witness and Lecturer on Cybersecurity, Columbia University (NYC); author of Cybersecurity For Dummies

Method 1: network scan — do this before you unpack

Connect to the property’s Wi-Fi immediately on arrival and run a network scan. A free browser-based scanner or the Fing app (iOS/Android) lists every device on the network. You are looking for device names containing “IPCamera”, “Vstarcam”, “Hikvision”, “HiSilicon”, “NVR”, “DVR”, or any unknown manufacturer presenting from a Shenzhen IP in a short-term rental. A legitimate single-room Airbnb typically shows a router, occasionally a smart thermostat, and nothing else. More than five or six unaccounted devices warrants investigation.

Critical limitation: any camera recording to an SD card without an active network connection will not appear in any scan. This is why the remaining methods are not optional extras — they are essential coverage for the most commonly overlooked camera type.

Method 2: smartphone IR detection — fastest active camera check

Most hidden cameras operating in low-light conditions use infrared LEDs invisible to the naked eye but detectable by most smartphone cameras. The front-facing (selfie) camera is the one to use — it typically lacks the IR-cut filter found on rear cameras.

  1. Open the Camera app, switch to the front-facing camera.
  2. Turn off all room lights. Close blinds if ambient outdoor light is strong.
  3. Sweep the camera slowly around the room, watching the screen rather than the room.
  4. IR LEDs appear as a bright white or purple-white glow — typically visible from 3–4 metres across a room.

On Android: use the default camera app and follow the same steps. If the front camera shows nothing, try the rear — some manufacturers do not apply IR filters to either lens.

Limitation: cameras in daylight mode, cameras with IR off, and SD-card-only cameras produce no detectable glow. This test rules out active night-vision cameras quickly; it does not clear the room. Always follow with the flashlight sweep.

Method 3: flashlight lens sweep — the single most reliable free method

Camera lenses are coated glass. They reflect a direct light source back even when the camera is powered off, disconnected, or recording to a local SD card with no transmission of any kind. This is the only free technique that works regardless of camera state.

  1. Use your smartphone torch — the brightest portable light you have.
  2. Hold it at eye level, angled approximately 30–45° to the surface you are checking.
  3. Sweep slowly across walls, objects, shelves, vents, and ceiling fixtures. Slightly squint to reduce ambient glare.
  4. A lens returns a small, precise, round reflection — brighter and more defined than painted walls or plastic. It may flash briefly as the beam crosses it.

Common false positives: screw heads (round but dull), reflective warning stickers (bright but flat and rectangular), decorative glass (large and diffuse). A camera lens reflection is small, circular, and appears and disappears with a slight shift in beam angle.

Method 4: physical inspection — the systematic room walkthrough

Stand at the doorway. Move clockwise. Keep your eyes at roughly 1–1.5 m from the floor (typical camera height) and at ceiling level. You are looking for three specific things:

  1. Pinholes or unexpected holes in walls, ceilings, objects, or furniture. A hole the diameter of a ballpoint pen tip is sufficient for a camera to capture an entire room.
  2. Misaligned or oddly positioned objects — a smoke detector off-centre on the ceiling, a clock facing the bed at an angle that serves no practical purpose, decorative items with gaps facing the room.
  3. Wires that terminate without a clear function — a USB cable attached to an adapter with no visible device on the other end, or wires taped along skirting boards toward a vent.

Method 5: Wi-Fi network scanning for unknown devices

This expands on Method 1 if the initial scan raised flags. The Fing app provides the most detailed device list, including manufacturer, MAC address, and open ports — useful for identifying a device presenting as a “smart plug” that is actually streaming video. Cross-reference any unrecognised device with what is physically visible in the room. A device on the network with no corresponding visible hardware is a serious red flag.

Method 6: RF detector (hardware)

A handheld RF detector picks up radio signals from cameras transmitting wirelessly. Entry-level models ($20–40) cover 1.2 GHz, 2.4 GHz, and 5.8 GHz. Professional units ($80–200) identify device types and direction. Set sensitivity to maximum, then lower it until your own phone and the room’s router stop triggering it. Then sweep slowly, holding the detector close to objects. A sustained strong signal from a smoke detector, alarm clock, or USB charger — devices with no reason to broadcast RF — is a meaningful red flag.

⚠ RF detector apps: do not use them

Apps claiming to detect hidden cameras via your phone’s magnetometer or EMF sensor are not functional detection tools. They register interference from every nearby device — your own phone, the Wi-Fi router, the TV — and generate false positives continuously. They cannot distinguish a camera from a toaster.

Method 7: two-way mirror test

A standard mirror has the reflective coating on the back of the glass. A two-way mirror has it on the front, allowing a camera behind it to record through unimpeded. Two tests:

The fingernail test: touch your fingertip to the mirror surface. On a genuine mirror there is a visible gap between your finger and its reflection. On a two-way mirror the reflection meets your fingertip with no gap.

The flashlight test: cup both hands around your eyes to block ambient light, press them against the mirror, and shine a torch through. If there is a wall directly behind it, you see nothing. If it is a two-way mirror with space behind it, you see through. Run this on any large bathroom or bedroom mirror mounted against a wall that could have space behind it.

Your 10-minute zone-by-zone room sweep

Every guide lists detection techniques. None of them tell you how to apply those techniques to an actual room in a structured way. Below is a complete sweep sequence, zone by zone, that takes ten minutes and covers every documented hiding location.

Room sweep sequence — quick reference

1
Network scan on phone (60 seconds) — connect to Wi-Fi, run a network scanner before unpacking.
→ Unknown camera device found? Document, do not touch, report.
2
IR sweep with smartphone — front-facing camera, lights off, sweep the room slowly.
→ White or purple glow on screen? Locate, document, do not touch.
3
Flashlight lens sweep — clockwise from the door, eye level then ceiling, 30–45° angle.
→ Small bright round reflection from an unexpected surface? Document, report.
4
Physical inspection — pinholes, misaligned objects, cables connecting to nothing.
→ Anomaly found? Photograph in place, do not remove, report.
5
Mirror test — fingernail and flashlight check on every large mirror mounted against a wall.
→ No gap in reflection? Space visible behind glass? Document, report.

Step 1 — Network scan before you unpack (60 seconds)

Connect to the property’s Wi-Fi the moment you arrive and run the scan while you bring in your bags. It requires no active attention. Any device flagged as a camera or unknown streaming device should be noted before you proceed. Do this first because it requires no movement and provides immediate early warning of the most obvious threat category.

Step 2 — Bedroom: the highest-risk zone (4 minutes)

Stand at the doorway and count every electronic device visible. Anything not present in the listing photographs warrants closer inspection. Move clockwise:

  • Ceiling: Shine your torch at the smoke detector. Look for a pinhole offset from the centre that does not correspond to the test button or indicator LED. A detector that sits unevenly against the ceiling — opened and resealed to accommodate a camera — often has a slight misalignment at the mounting plate.
  • Bedside table: Turn the alarm clock away from the bed or place it face-down for the duration of your stay. Run the IR sweep from the bed position — you are checking the field of view a camera in this room would have. Check USB charging hubs for a pinhole on the face not corresponding to any charging port.
  • Shelves and picture frames: Pull shelves slightly from walls. Check the rear for anything tucked behind. Look for gaps in book spines facing the room. Tilt frames — a camera behind a frame needs either a hole through it or a gap at the lower edge.
  • Air vents and wall outlets: Shine your torch into any decorative vent. For any device plugged into a wall outlet you cannot identify: unplug it and inspect the face for a pinhole.

Step 3 — Bathroom: high stakes, small space (3 minutes)

The bathroom is the second most common location for hidden cameras in short-term rentals, and legally the most serious — covert recording in a bathroom is a felony-level criminal offence in most US states and carries equivalent penalties throughout the UK and EU. Do not treat this as lower priority because it is smaller.

  • Showerhead and shower area: Examine the showerhead for a pinhole at the base or face. Check any wall-mounted toiletry dispensers — these are sometimes replaced with camera-containing versions that are visually identical to originals.
  • Towel hooks: The hook-style hidden camera is among the most widely sold spy camera formats available online. Face the hook directly and look for a pinhole in the centre of the hook body.
  • Smoke detectors and extractor fans: Extractor fan grilles with a pinhole near one edge — not at the motor position in the centre — are a specific warning sign.
  • Electrical outlets: An outlet housing a camera is often slightly lighter and less rigid than a wired outlet. Look for a pinhole on the face that does not correspond to a socket hole.

Step 4 — Living area and entrance (2 minutes)

Lower risk for voyeurism, but worth a pass. Check any bookshelf or media unit facing the sofa. In hotel rooms specifically: check the door peephole. Standard peepholes are one-directional. Cheap reversible models — available for under £10 online — can be unscrewed and flipped so someone in the corridor can see into your room. If your peephole looks smudged, slightly misaligned, or loose in its housing, cover it with a folded piece of card for the duration of your stay. Almost no published guide covers this particular vulnerability.

Step 5 — Mirror check (1 minute)

Run the fingernail test on every large mirror: bathroom, wardrobe, any full-length mirror. Then do the flashlight test on any mirror mounted against a wall that could have space behind it. Priority: bathroom mirrors and bedroom mirrors positioned to face the bed.

Where are hidden cameras most commonly placed?

Airbnbs and short-term vacation rentals

A 2025 survey of over 1,000 Americans by IPX1031 found that 47% reported discovering a camera in a rental property. Among those who found one, 1 in 5 found it in a bedroom or bathroom — the two spaces where guests have the highest expectation of privacy. The highest-risk zones, in order of frequency from publicly reported cases:

  1. Bedroom — positioned to capture the bed. Smoke detectors, alarm clocks, air purifiers, and decorative shelves are the most common placements.
  2. Bathroom — showerhead fixtures, towel hooks, and wall-mounted outlets. Any unexplained hole in a bathroom wall near the shower or toilet should be treated as suspicious.
  3. Living area — TV units and bookshelves facing the sofa. Less common than bedroom placement, but documented.
  4. Entrance and hallway — often legitimate (doorbells and entry monitors are permitted and must be disclosed). If undisclosed, these are still a violation regardless of the camera’s field of view.

Airbnb’s policy, updated in April 2024, now bans all indoor cameras without exception — not just cameras in bedrooms and bathrooms. Despite this ban, a 2025 IPX1031 survey found that 55% of Airbnb hosts admit to still using indoor cameras. If you find any indoor camera in an Airbnb, it is a policy violation regardless of its placement or any claimed disclosure.

Hotel rooms: a different risk profile

Hotels present a different structure. Staff have ongoing room access, and objects like alarm clocks are property-provided rather than host-supplied. Focus your sweep on: the alarm clock (turn it face-down immediately), any small black box near or behind the TV, picture frames on walls facing the bed, and — as noted above — the door peephole.

Can a hidden camera work without Wi-Fi?

Yes — and this is the most consequential fact in this guide. A significant portion of consumer spy cameras sold today are entirely offline by design. They record to a microSD card, and the person who placed them retrieves the card physically between stays or during a maintenance visit. Many are motion-activated, meaning they may be present in a room for days without recording a single second until you walk in.

These cameras emit no Wi-Fi signal, no Bluetooth signal, no RF transmission, and no infrared light in daylight mode. No app on any platform can detect them remotely. The flashlight sweep and physical inspection are the only methods that reliably find them.

One further implication for longer stays: if someone has access to your room — a cleaning visit, a “routine check-in,” a maintenance call — do a second sweep on your return. Offline cameras can be placed mid-stay.

Is it legal to install hidden cameras? Know your rights

The legal position is clear and broadly consistent: covert recording in a private space — a bedroom, bathroom, changing room, or anywhere a person has a reasonable expectation of not being observed — is a criminal offence. It does not matter who owns the property. A landlord, hotel owner, or Airbnb host placing a camera in a guest’s bathroom is committing a crime regardless of their property rights.

Jurisdiction Applicable law Maximum criminal penalty
United States 18 U.S.C. § 2511 + state voyeurism statutes 1–5 years imprisonment (state-dependent); civil damages available separately
United Kingdom Voyeurism (Offences) Act 2019 Up to 2 years imprisonment + sex offenders register
European Union GDPR Art. 9 + member-state criminal codes Up to €20M or 4% global annual turnover (GDPR) + member-state criminal penalties

Timeline: hidden camera policy and legal changes

2019 — UK Voyeurism (Offences) Act enacted; covert recording of private acts becomes a specific criminal offence carrying up to 2 years imprisonment and placement on the sex offenders register.
2022 — Consumer Reports and BBC investigations document a rising volume of hidden camera discoveries in short-term rentals globally.
2023 — Airbnb updates policy requiring hosts to disclose all cameras; cameras prohibited in bedrooms and bathrooms.
April 2024 — Airbnb bans all indoor cameras without exception — the most comprehensive platform-level restriction to date.
2025 — IPX1031 survey finds 55% of Airbnb hosts admit to still using indoor cameras despite the April 2024 ban.

How to reduce your risk before you arrive

Detection is the last line of defence. It is better to reduce the probability of ending up in a compromised property in the first place. None of the top-ranking competing guides cover this — they treat the threat as beginning at check-in. It begins at the search results page.

  • Search recent reviews for the words “camera”, “surveillance”, and “privacy”. On Airbnb, reviews cannot be deleted by the host. Filter for reviews from the last 12 months. A single privacy concern in a review is a meaningful data point — not paranoia.
  • Verify camera disclosure explicitly. If a listing mentions no cameras, ask the host directly before booking if the disclosure is vague. Airbnb bans all indoor cameras as of April 2024. Any listing that mentions one is already in violation.
  • Prefer larger chain hotels for high-privacy stays. Not because chains have better ethics — but because they have compliance departments, extensive legal exposure, and staff turnover that makes sustained covert surveillance far harder to maintain undetected.
  • Avoid brand-new listings with no reviews. A listing fewer than six months old with under five reviews and an attractive price matches a profile that appears repeatedly in documented hidden camera cases.
  • Cross-reference listing photos against what is actually in the room. The host’s own photographs are a baseline inventory. Discrepancies — a USB hub, an air purifier, an alarm clock not present in the photos — are a reason to sweep those objects first.

What to do if you find a hidden camera

Most competing guides offer one line here: “call the police.” The sequence matters — what you do in the first five minutes affects your evidence, your legal options, and the likelihood that other guests are protected.

  1. Do not touch or move the camera. Touching it may destroy forensic evidence and could constitute tampering with evidence. Hands off the device from the moment of discovery.
  2. Photograph it in place from multiple distances and angles. Include surrounding landmarks — an outlet, a window frame, a door — that place it in spatial context. Capture the field of view the camera would have had. These photographs are your evidence for police, the platform, and any civil action.
  3. Leave the room and the property if you feel unsafe. You have no obligation to remain.
  4. Contact the platform before contacting the host. Airbnb’s safety line is +1-855-635-7754 (24/7). Vrbo and Booking.com have equivalent safety reporting channels. Contacting the host first gives them the opportunity to remove the device and deny its existence. Report to the platform first.
  5. File a police report in the country where the offence occurred. Even if you are travelling and will not be present for any subsequent investigation, a filed report creates an official record. Police in the US, UK, and throughout the EU treat covert recording in private spaces as a criminal matter — not a dispute to be mediated.
  6. Preserve all evidence. Do not delete photographs. Record the time of discovery, the exact location of the device, and what was visible in the camera’s field of view — this becomes relevant in any civil damages claim.
  7. Request a full refund and alternative accommodation from the platform. Both Airbnb and Booking.com have written policies entitling guests to a full refund and rebooking assistance when a safety violation is confirmed. Pursue this simultaneously with your safety report.

Frequently asked questions

Yes — in two specific ways. The front-facing camera can detect infrared light emitted by night-vision cameras (visible as a white or purple glow in a dark room). Network scanning apps and browser-based tools can list IP cameras on the same Wi-Fi. What a phone cannot do: detect any camera that is offline, recording to an SD card, or operating in daylight mode without IR. For those, the flashlight sweep is the only reliable approach. Also note: apps claiming to use your phone’s magnetometer or EMF sensor to detect cameras are not real detection tools — they generate false positives from every nearby device and should be ignored entirely.
Run a network scan on your phone (takes 60 seconds, no app required with a free browser-based scanner), then do a flashlight sweep of the room. These two methods combined catch the large majority of cameras found in short-term rentals. Add the IR smartphone test in a dark room and a careful physical inspection for complete coverage. No single method is sufficient; all four together are.
Yes — and this is the fact most guides miss entirely. Cameras that record to a microSD card emit no network signal, no RF transmission, and no infrared light in daylight mode. Network scanners and RF detectors will not detect them at all. The flashlight lens sweep and physical inspection are the only reliable methods for finding offline cameras, which is why no phone app alone is ever sufficient for a complete sweep.
Look for an unusually dark spot or small hole on the face of the device — particularly one offset from the centre, the test button, and the indicator LED. All three have legitimate positions on a smoke detector; a pinhole that corresponds to none of them is the tell. Shine a flashlight at a 30–45° angle across the face — a lens returns a small bright round reflection that a painted plastic surface will not. Also check positioning: a smoke detector mounted so its face angles toward a bed rather than straight down has been adjusted for a reason.
In hotels specifically: the bedside alarm clock (provided by the hotel, pointing directly at the bed), the ceiling smoke detector, the door peephole (which can be reversed to see inward — cover it with card if in doubt), small boxes near or behind the TV, and picture frames facing the bed. The bathroom is also a priority: showerhead area, towel hooks, and wall outlets.
No — not anywhere in the US, UK, or EU. Covert recording in a bedroom, bathroom, or any space where a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy is a criminal offence carrying custodial sentences in every major jurisdiction. Property ownership does not change this. A landlord, hotel, or Airbnb host placing a camera in a guest’s private space is committing a crime regardless of who owns the building.
Do not touch it. Photograph it in place from multiple angles. Leave the property if you feel unsafe. Contact the platform (Airbnb safety line: +1-855-635-7754) before contacting the host — this matters for evidence preservation. File a police report in the country where the offence occurred. Preserve all your photographs. Request a full refund and rebooking assistance from the platform simultaneously.
RF detectors do not — they rely on detecting wireless signal, and a wired camera produces none. Optical and lens detectors do work on wired cameras, since they detect the physical glass lens regardless of power or connectivity. This is the single most important distinction most buyers overlook. If you are purchasing a detector specifically because you are concerned about professional or long-term surveillance installations, an optical detector is the relevant tool — not an RF device.
Yes. Infrared cameras use IR LEDs invisible to the human eye, allowing them to record in total darkness. Your phone’s front camera will reveal these LEDs as a white or purple glow. Higher-end cameras use low-light “starlight” sensors that amplify ambient light without IR — these produce no detectable glow and can only be found with a physical inspection and flashlight sweep. Motion-activated cameras that switch between daylight and IR night mode may show nothing on an IR check if they happen to be in daylight mode during your sweep — always follow the IR test with a flashlight sweep regardless.
Use the fingernail test: press your fingertip to the mirror surface. A standard mirror has a visible gap between your finger and its reflection — the coating is on the back of the glass. A two-way mirror has no gap — the coating is on the front surface, and the reflection meets your finger directly. Confirm with the flashlight test: cup your hands against the mirror, press close, and shine a light through. If there is space behind the mirror, you will see it. Run this on any bathroom or bedroom mirror that could have space behind it.

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