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How to Detect Hidden Cameras in Airbnb — 5 Methods (2026)

Hidden cameras have been found in Airbnbs, hotel rooms, changing rooms, and rental apartments in every country. A 2025 survey of over 1,000 Americans by IPX1031 found that nearly half (47%) say they have discovered a camera in a rental property — almost double the 25% who reported the same in 2023 — while 64%…

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Published May 26, 2026 Updated June 10, 2026 · 24 min read

Hidden cameras have been found in Airbnbs, hotel rooms, changing rooms, and rental apartments in every country. A 2025 survey of over 1,000 Americans by IPX1031 found that nearly half (47%) say they have discovered a camera in a rental property — almost double the 25% who reported the same in 2023 — while 64% admit they do not know how to detect one. Your mobile phone can find the majority of them. This guide shows you exactly how, step by step, for both iPhone and Android. If you’re wondering how to detect hidden cameras in Airbnb properties, the methods below cover the most common risks associated with Airbnb hidden cameras.

⚠ Key fact

Nearly 2 in 3 Americans (64%) do not 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

Can your mobile phone actually detect a hidden camera?

Many travellers researching Airbnb hidden cameras ask how to check for hidden cameras in Airbnb rentals before unpacking. A quick inspection routine can dramatically reduce risk.

Yes — with important caveats. Your phone can reliably detect two of the four main camera types without any extra hardware, and a third with a free app. Here is what each method covers:

  • IR (infrared) detection: The front-facing camera on most smartphones lacks the IR-cut filter used on rear cameras. That means it can see the infrared light emitted by night-vision hidden cameras — appearing as a bright white or purple glow on your screen. This works on the vast majority of consumer spy cameras, because almost all of them use IR LEDs for low-light recording.
  • Wi-Fi network scan: A free app or browser-based tool can list every device connected to the local network. Any IP camera transmitting footage will appear on that list, often with a telling device name or manufacturer.
  • Bluetooth scan: Your phone’s native Bluetooth discovery screen will reveal Bluetooth-connected cameras broadcasting in pairing mode — a capability almost entirely ignored by other guides on this topic.
  • What phones cannot detect without hardware: Cameras recording to a local SD card with no wireless transmission and no IR output in daylight. For those, a flashlight and your eyes are the only tools that work.

No single method catches everything — but the five-method combination below (three phone-based, one flashlight, one physical) covers well over 90% of consumer-grade spy cameras sold online. Run all five every time you check in.

Method 1: use your phone camera to detect infrared light

This is one of the easiest ways for anyone learning how to spot hidden cameras in Airbnb accommodations.

This is the fastest and most reliable phone-based method. Most hidden cameras use infrared LEDs for night vision. The human eye cannot see IR light, but your smartphone’s front-facing camera usually can — it typically lacks the IR-cut filter that blocks IR on the rear lens.

Why most hidden cameras emit IR light

Bedrooms are used at night. Bathrooms are often dim. A camera that only captures footage in bright daylight is of limited use to someone placing it covertly — so the overwhelming majority of consumer spy cameras include IR LEDs that activate automatically in low light. Those LEDs emit a cone of infrared radiation that is completely invisible to the naked eye but shows up clearly on a smartphone screen as a white or purplish-white glow. Even a cluster of two or three small IR LEDs is detectable from three to four metres in a darkened room.

Step-by-step: iPhone (iOS)

  1. Open the Camera app and tap the flip icon to switch to the front-facing (selfie) camera.
  2. Turn off all lights in the room — curtains closed, overhead light off.
  3. Hold the phone at arm’s length and sweep it slowly around the room, watching the screen, not the room itself.
  4. Pay particular attention to smoke detectors, alarm clocks, USB chargers, and any electronic device facing the bed or bathroom area.
  5. IR LEDs appear as a bright white or purple-white glow — distinctly brighter and more precise than the faint grey shapes of furniture. If you see a concentrated white point of light in an object that has no reason to glow (a clock face, a vent, a shelf decoration), stop and investigate further.

Note on iPhone rear camera: Apple includes an IR-cut filter on the rear camera of most iPhone models, which means the rear camera will not show IR light. Always use the front camera for this test on iPhone.

Step-by-step: Android

  1. Open your default Camera app and switch to the front-facing camera.
  2. Darken the room as much as possible.
  3. Sweep the phone slowly around the room, watching the screen for any white or purple glow.
  4. If the front camera shows no response, try the rear camera. Unlike iPhone, many Android manufacturers do not include an IR-cut filter on either lens — meaning the rear camera may also detect IR light. Samsung, OnePlus, and Xiaomi front cameras in particular tend to be highly IR-sensitive.

What you are looking for

A legitimate bright-white glow from an IR cluster looks nothing like the ambient grey blur of a window or lamp bleed. It is concentrated, often slightly purple-tinted, and will pulse subtly if the camera uses motion-triggered IR activation. A TV remote control is the easiest way to test that your camera is working — point it at your front camera and press a button. You will see an unmistakable purple-white flash on screen. That is exactly what you are looking for when sweeping the room.

⚠ Limitation

Daytime-only cameras and cameras using ambient-light sensors instead of IR LEDs will produce no glow. Always combine this method with the flashlight sweep (Method 3) for complete coverage.

Method 2: scan the Wi‑Fi network for unknown devices

When people ask how to check for hidden cameras in Airbnb properties, a network scan is usually the second step after a visual inspection.

Any IP camera transmitting footage over the property’s Wi-Fi will appear on the local network as a connected device. This method takes under two minutes and requires only a free app or browser tool.

How to scan with Fing (iOS and Android)

  1. Connect to the property Wi-Fi before opening Fing.
  2. Download Fing (free, iOS and Android) and open it.
  3. Tap “Scan for devices”. The scan takes 15–30 seconds.
  4. Review the device list. Fing identifies each device by manufacturer name, IP address, and MAC address where available.
  5. Tap any device you do not recognise to see its full fingerprint.

Alternatively, use any browser-based network scanner — no app download required.

What device names suggest a hidden camera

Scan results to investigate further:

  • Device names containing: cam, ipcam, nvr, dvr, stream, ipcamera, spycam
  • Manufacturer names: Shenzhen, HiSilicon, Dahua, Hikvision, Reolink, Amcrest — all legitimate in a CCTV context, but suspicious if not disclosed in the listing
  • Generic labels like “Unknown device” or “Android device” appearing alongside a MAC address from a camera manufacturer’s range
  • An unusually high total device count for a single rental — a one-bedroom apartment typically has five to eight devices (router, smart plug, thermostat, TV, host’s phone if nearby). More than ten devices warrants close inspection of each one.

What to do if a suspicious device appears

Note the device name, IP address, and MAC address. Do not disconnect or unplug anything — that would remove evidence. Cross-reference the device with objects in the room: if a device identifies itself as a Hikvision camera and there is a smoke detector directly above the bed, that smoke detector is your first target for a physical inspection. Document everything with photographs before touching anything.

⚡ Critical limitation

Wi-Fi scanning only detects cameras that are transmitting on the local network. A camera recording to an SD card — even a 1080p model with motion activation — will not appear on any network scan. Never rely on a Wi-Fi scan alone.

Method 3: use your phone flashlight to find hidden camera lenses

Camera lenses are made of coated glass. They reflect a direct light source back at you even when the camera is powered off, has no battery, and is completely disconnected from any network. This makes the flashlight sweep the single most important low-tech detection method — and the only free method that works on every camera type regardless of its connectivity or power state.

How lens reflection works

Camera lens glass is multi-coated to reduce flare and maximise light capture. When you shine a direct beam at it from a shallow angle, the coating returns a small, precise, bright-round reflection — distinctly different from the diffuse shine of a painted wall, plastic, or metal surface. The reflection is often slightly coloured (blue-green or red-tinted) due to the anti-reflective coating, and it flashes briefly as you sweep the beam across it. A hidden camera lens will typically reflect brighter and more sharply than surrounding materials, precisely because it is designed to gather light.

Step-by-step: flashlight sweep

  1. Use your phone’s torch (flashlight) on full brightness. A dedicated flashlight is better if you have one, but a phone torch works.
  2. Dim the room slightly — you do not need complete darkness. Reducing ambient light makes lens reflections easier to spot.
  3. Hold the torch at eye level and angle it approximately 30–45 degrees to the surface you are inspecting, rather than shining it straight on.
  4. Begin at the door and sweep clockwise around the room. Cover walls, shelves, objects, vents, and ceilings.
  5. Squint slightly to reduce glare from reflective surfaces. You are looking for a small, bright, round reflection — more precise and intense than the surrounding surface. It may flash briefly as the beam crosses it.
  6. Repeat the sweep at ceiling height for smoke detectors and overhead fixtures.

Objects most likely to conceal a lens

Concentrate your flashlight sweep on: smoke detectors (especially those slightly off-centre or with an unusual hole pattern), USB wall chargers and power adapters, digital alarm clocks on bedside tables, picture frames hanging opposite the bed, air purifiers and desk fans with vent-covered fronts, and bookshelves with gaps facing into the room. Any object that is both (a) pointed toward a private area and (b) has a small dark opening deserves close attention.

Method 4: detect Bluetooth cameras with your phone

This method is almost entirely absent from other guides on this topic — which is why it belongs here. Bluetooth-connected spy cameras are widely sold, inexpensive, and common in documented cases. They transmit footage or receive control commands over Bluetooth rather than Wi-Fi, meaning they will not appear on any network scan.

To check for them:

  1. On iPhone: open Settings → Bluetooth and ensure Bluetooth is turned on. Wait 20–30 seconds. Any Bluetooth device broadcasting nearby will appear in the “Other Devices” list, even if it is not paired to your phone.
  2. On Android: open Settings → Bluetooth → Available devices (or “Pair new device”). Wait 30 seconds for nearby devices to populate.
  3. Look for device names you do not recognise — particularly anything generically named (e.g., “BT Camera”, “V380”, “IPC”, “SQ11”, “SQ13” — all common Bluetooth spy camera model names), or any device listed simply as a string of letters and numbers with no obvious brand.

Important limitation: a Bluetooth camera only broadcasts when it is in pairing mode or actively transmitting data. A camera that has already been paired to the owner’s device may not appear. Use this scan in combination with the Wi-Fi scan and IR sweep, not instead of them. Still, catching the cameras that are detectable is worth the 60 seconds this scan takes.

Method 5: use a hidden camera detector app

Several apps advertise themselves as hidden camera detectors. They vary significantly in what they actually do — and it is worth being honest about what works and what does not before recommending any of them.

Best apps for iPhone (iOS)

  • Fing (free) — the strongest network scanner available on iOS. Lists all devices on the current Wi-Fi network with manufacturer identification. Best for IP camera detection.
  • Hidden Camera Detector by Avanquest (free, in-app purchases) — combines a magnetic sensor (EMF) with a camera-based lens reflector. The lens detection feature is genuinely useful; the EMF component has limited reliability on modern iPhones (see note below).
  • DontSpy 2 (paid, ~€3) — focuses on magnetometer-based detection. More consistent than free EMF apps, but works best when held within 5–10 cm of a concealed device.

Best apps for Android

  • Fing (free) — same capabilities as iOS. The most reliable free network scanner across platforms.
  • Wireless Network Watcher (free) — lightweight, no account required, clear device list output.
  • Glint Finder (free) — uses the camera to detect lens reflections using image analysis. Works best in low light with a flashlight. Slower than doing a manual flashlight sweep but useful as a secondary confirmation.

Do EMF and RF detector apps actually work?

Here is the honest answer that most articles promoting these apps will not give you: EMF (electromagnetic field) detector apps on smartphones are largely unreliable for finding hidden cameras, and in many cases they are close to useless. Here is why.

A genuine RF detector is a dedicated hardware device with a tuned antenna covering specific transmission bands (1.2 GHz, 2.4 GHz, 5.8 GHz). It costs €15–200. A smartphone’s magnetometer — the sensor that powers the compass — was designed to measure the Earth’s magnetic field for navigation. It is not a radio-frequency antenna, and it does not pick up the signals emitted by wireless cameras. Apps that claim to use your phone’s “EMF sensor” to detect spy cameras are using the magnetometer. While a magnetometer can detect the magnetic fields of large electrical devices held very close (within a few centimetres), it cannot reliably identify the RF signals of a camera transmitting from across a room.

The two things that do reliably work in app form are: network scanning (Fing, browser-based tools) for Wi-Fi cameras, and camera-based lens detection (Glint Finder, or your own phone camera with the IR test). Stick to those and skip the EMF claims.

Where to look: common hiding spots in Airbnbs and hotels

Understanding where Airbnb hidden cameras are commonly concealed makes detection much easier.

Knowing which objects and locations to prioritise makes a room sweep take three minutes instead of fifteen. The following list is based on publicly reported cases, court records, and marketplace listings for disguised spy cameras.

Bedroom: what to check first

The bedroom accounts for the majority of documented hidden camera placements in short-term rentals. Focus your sweep here first and most thoroughly.

  • Smoke detector on the ceiling — ceiling-mounted, offers a wide field of view over the entire room. Inspect for a lens hole at the centre or edge, asymmetric design, or a small indicator light that does not match a standard smoke alarm. A legitimate smoke detector does not need a pinhole on the face.
  • Digital alarm clock on the bedside table — pointed directly at the bed by design. The lens is typically hidden behind the clock face or in a vent slot at the “12 o’clock” position. Check both ends of the device.
  • USB wall charger or power adapter — needs mains power, so a mains adapter provides a permanent power source. Look for a dark, circular pinhole on the face of the plug or a slightly raised bump that does not correspond to any button or indicator.
  • Picture frames on walls facing the bed — hung at an angle that covers the sleeping area. Check the frame edge for a pinhole or a small dark aperture between the frame and the wall.
  • Smart speaker or Wi-Fi router — frequently accepted by guests as normal rental equipment. Check for a pinhole on the front face that does not correspond to any microphone grille or LED indicator.
  • Air purifier or desk fan — vent slots provide natural cover for a small lens. Any electronic device with a grille that faces the bed deserves a flashlight sweep.

Bathroom: highest-risk areas

Recording someone in a bathroom is illegal in every jurisdiction covered by this guide. It is also, unfortunately, documented in real cases. Any hole in a bathroom wall near the shower or toilet should be treated as suspicious and reported to the platform immediately, regardless of whether you can confirm a camera is present.

  • Showerhead fixtures — replacement showerheads with integrated cameras are sold openly online. If the showerhead looks new or does not match the rest of the bathroom’s fixtures, inspect it.
  • Towel hooks and coat hooks — hook cameras are among the most common hidden camera types sold. The lens sits inside the hook aperture. Any hook screwed to a wall facing the shower or toilet warrants inspection with a flashlight.
  • Wall outlets near the shower — outlet cameras are real. Check for a pinhole on the outlet face between or below the sockets.
  • Toiletry bottles or wall-mounted dispensers — less common, but documented. Any object that was clearly placed (not installed) and faces inward deserves a look.

Common everyday objects used to hide cameras

The six most frequently documented disguised camera types, in order of how often they appear in reported cases: smoke detectors, USB wall chargers and power adapters, digital alarm clocks, Wi-Fi routers and smart speakers, air purifiers and desk fans, and picture frames or decorative objects. All of these are available as pre-built spy camera units from mainstream online marketplaces for under €30–80, which is why they are so prevalent.

Can a hidden camera work without Wi-Fi?

⚡ The most overlooked fact in hidden camera detection

A significant share of consumer spy cameras sold today record to a microSD card with no Wi-Fi, no RF signal, and no IR output in daylight. Network scanning apps will not detect them. Only a physical inspection and flashlight sweep will.

Yes — and this is the most important gap in most guides on this topic. A significant proportion of consumer spy cameras sold today operate entirely offline. They record footage to a microSD card (typically 32–256 GB), which the person who placed them retrieves physically. Many use motion-activation to conserve storage, meaning they only record when there is movement in frame.

These cameras emit no Wi-Fi signal, no RF signal, and no IR light in daylight. They are completely invisible to every network scanner, RF detector app, and IR camera sweep. The only methods that reliably detect them are the physical inspection and the flashlight lens sweep. The flashlight sweep in particular — which works on cameras that are powered off, out of battery, and completely inert — is the only technique that gives you any protection against this category of device.

This is also why checking in for a longer stay is not a one-time task. Offline cameras are particularly common in longer-term rental situations, because the person placing them intends to retrieve the device and footage multiple times. If you are staying somewhere for more than two nights, briefly recheck high-risk areas after any maintenance visit or host access to the property.

Detection method comparison — what each method catches
Method Detects Wi-Fi cameras Detects offline/SD cameras Works if camera is off Cost
IR smartphone sweep ✓ Yes (if using IR) ✓ Yes (if using IR) ✗ No (LEDs off) Free
Wi-Fi network scan ✓ Yes ✗ No ✗ No Free
Bluetooth scan ✗ No ✓ Yes (if BT active) ✗ No Free
Flashlight lens sweep ✓ Yes ✓ Yes ✓ Yes Free
Physical inspection ✓ Yes ✓ Yes ✓ Yes Free
RF detector (hardware) ✓ Yes ✗ No ✗ No €15–200

What to do if you find a hidden camera

The way you respond in the first few minutes matters — both for your safety and for any legal action that follows. Follow these steps in order.

Step 1: document without disturbing evidence

Do not touch, move, or unplug the camera. Doing so may destroy forensic evidence (fingerprints, positioning), could technically be considered tampering with property, and removes the evidence that the camera was placed there. Instead, photograph it in place using your phone — capture the object from multiple angles, its position in the room, and what it is pointed at. Note the time, your exact location in the property, and any device names or IP addresses you identified during your scan.

Step 2: leave the space if you feel unsafe

If you are in a short-term rental and feel unsafe, gather your belongings and leave the property. You are under no obligation to remain. Most platforms provide full refunds in documented hidden camera cases — do not stay somewhere that has been surveilling you.

Step 3: report to Airbnb, Vrbo, or hotel management

Contact the platform before contacting the host. This is important: reporting directly to the host alerts them to remove the device before any investigation. Airbnb has a dedicated safety line (+1-855-635-7754) and an in-app reporting flow under “Get Help.” Vrbo and Booking.com have equivalent dedicated reporting channels. Provide your photographs and any scan evidence. Most platforms will escalate hidden camera reports as a priority safety issue and issue a refund while investigation is under way.

Step 4: file a police report

Even if you are travelling and will not be present for an investigation, file a report with the local police. A filed report creates an official record, may connect your case to prior complaints about the same property or host, and is required documentation if you pursue civil action later. Bring your photographs and any notes from your network scan.

Is it illegal? A quick legal overview by region

The short answer is yes, everywhere that matters — but the specifics are worth knowing:

Jurisdiction Applicable law Maximum penalty
United States 18 U.S.C. § 2511 + state voyeurism statutes 1–5 years (criminal); civil damages also available
United Kingdom Voyeurism (Offences) Act 2019 + Data Protection Act 2018 Up to 2 years imprisonment
European Union GDPR Art. 9 + member-state criminal codes Up to €20M or 4% global turnover + criminal penalties per member state
Australia Surveillance Devices Acts (state-level) + Criminal Code 2–5 years depending on state; civil remedies available

The legal concept underpinning all of these laws is “reasonable expectation of privacy.” Courts in the US, UK, and EU have consistently held that bedrooms, bathrooms, and changing rooms fall within that protected zone. A camera placed in any of those spaces without your knowledge and consent is a criminal act, not a civil matter — regardless of whether footage was ever viewed or transmitted.

One additional point specific to Airbnb: in April 2024, Airbnb banned all indoor cameras without exception — including previously permitted entry-area cameras. A 2025 IPX1031 survey found that 55% of Airbnb hosts admit to still using indoor cameras despite this ban. If you find any undisclosed camera inside an Airbnb property, it violates both platform policy and criminal law in most jurisdictions.

Guests concerned about Airbnb hidden cameras should inspect bedrooms, bathrooms, and devices facing private areas immediately after check-in.

If you need to know how to detect hidden cameras in Airbnb rentals, combine IR scanning, Wi‑Fi scanning, and a flashlight inspection.

A common question is how to check for hidden cameras in Airbnb? The answer is to use multiple detection methods rather than relying on a single app.

Learning how to find hidden cameras in Airbnb rental properties can help protect your privacy during short-term stays.

Reports involving Airbnb hidden cameras have increased awareness of guest privacy and safety.

Travellers often search for how to spot hidden cameras in Airbnb rooms before going to sleep on the first night.

If you are researching how to detect hidden cameras in Airbnb listings, pay special attention to smoke detectors, clocks, and chargers.

Another frequent question is how to check for hidden cameras in Airbnb? Start with a physical inspection and then verify with your phone.

Knowing how to find hidden cameras in Airbnb rental units is especially important for longer stays.

Awareness of Airbnb hidden cameras helps guests identify suspicious devices more quickly.

Frequently asked questions

Yes — in two reliable ways. The front-facing camera detects infrared light from night-vision cameras (visible as a white or purple glow in a darkened room). Free network scanning apps or browser tools identify IP cameras connected to the local Wi-Fi. Your phone cannot detect cameras that are offline and not emitting IR — for those, a flashlight sweep is the only free alternative. Combine all methods for maximum coverage.
Use the front-facing (selfie) camera — not the rear. Apple includes an IR-cut filter on rear lenses that blocks IR light. Switch to front camera, turn off the lights, and sweep the room watching your screen for a white or purple glow. For network-connected cameras, download Fing (free) and scan the Wi-Fi. Then do a flashlight sweep along walls, shelves, and any object pointing toward the bed or bathroom. Run all three in sequence — it takes under five minutes combined.
Yes, and this is the most important caveat when using network scanning tools. Cameras recording to a microSD card emit no network signal, no RF, and no IR light in daylight. A Wi-Fi scan will not find them; neither will an RF detector. The flashlight lens sweep and physical inspection are the only reliable methods for detecting these devices. Because they leave no detectable electronic trace, the flashlight sweep should never be skipped.
Yes. Fing (free, iOS and Android) is the most reliable for detecting Wi-Fi cameras via network scan. Glint Finder (free, Android) uses your camera to identify lens reflections. For a no-download option, browser-based network scanners perform the same Wi-Fi scan as Fing. Be cautious of apps claiming to use your phone’s “EMF sensor” to detect cameras — smartphones do not have the hardware to pick up RF camera transmissions. The magnetometer-based EMF claims are not reliable for this purpose.
Look for: a small circular pinhole on the face or edge that does not correspond to any vent or indicator light; asymmetric design compared to the standard disc shape; a lens glint when you shine a flashlight directly at the face from a shallow angle; an unusual LED behaviour (a smoke detector with a continuously lit or pulsing blue/red LED rather than the standard green standby blink). A legitimate smoke detector also does not need a USB or mains power cable — if one is plugged into the wall with a separate cord, that is a strong indicator it is not a standard detector.
Yes. Infrared cameras use IR LEDs that are invisible to the naked eye, allowing them to record clearly in total darkness. Your phone’s front camera reveals these LEDs as a white or purple glow. Higher-end cameras use starlight or low-light sensors that amplify ambient light without any IR output — these produce no glow at all and can only be found through physical inspection and a flashlight sweep. Most budget spy cameras (under €50) use IR, making the front-camera sweep effective against the vast majority of devices you are likely to encounter.
Do not touch it. Photograph it in place from multiple angles. Leave the property if you feel unsafe. Contact Airbnb’s safety line (+1-855-635-7754) or use the in-app reporting flow — do this before contacting the host. Then file a police report, even if you are travelling. Preserve all photographs and scan evidence. Do not delete anything. Most platforms refund the stay in documented hidden camera cases and take immediate action against the host.
No, not reliably. Smartphones do not contain an RF antenna capable of detecting the transmission frequencies used by wireless cameras. Apps that claim to use your phone’s “EMF sensor” are using the magnetometer (compass sensor), which measures magnetic fields rather than radio frequencies. It can detect large electrical motors held within centimetres, but it cannot pick up camera transmissions from across a room. The two things that do work in app form are network scanning (Fing) for Wi-Fi cameras, and camera-based lens detection (your phone’s front camera in the dark, or Glint Finder). For genuine RF detection, you need a dedicated hardware device (€15–40 entry level).

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