Introduction
Securing rental properties presents unique challenges. Unlike owner-occupied homes, landlords deal with tenant turnover, privacy compliance, liability questions, and maintenance responsibilities. At Garrison Alarms, we’ve worked with Auckland property managers and landlords to design rental-property-specific security solutions.
This guide covers what’s legally required, what’s recommended, how to navigate tenant concerns, and how to protect your investment while respecting tenant privacy.
Legal Framework for Rental Property Security
Landlord’s Obligations
Under the Residential Tenancies Act 2021, landlords must:
1. Maintain Property in Reasonable State of Repair
- Doors, locks, windows in working condition
- Locks must be functional and secure
- This includes providing basic security
2. Not Interfere with Tenant’s Quiet Enjoyment
- Cameras can’t monitor inside private areas (bedrooms, bathrooms)
- Audio recording is prohibited in private tenancies
- Common areas are different from private tenancy spaces
3. Obtain Consent for Inspections
- Can’t install surveillance to monitor tenant activity
- Must provide 48-hour notice for inspections (with exceptions)
- Excessive surveillance could breach quiet enjoyment
Tenant’s Rights
Tenants have right to:
- Privacy (defined boundaries—common areas different from private spaces)
- Security (doors/locks that function)
- Undisturbed occupancy (not monitored in private spaces)
Balance: Landlord’s Rights
Landlords have right to:
- Protect property from theft/damage
- Install security in common areas
- Record entry points
- Monitor perimeter
The key: Landlord security must protect PROPERTY, not monitor TENANTS
What You CAN Install in Rental Properties
Entry Point Security (Permitted)
Front door cameras:
- Acceptable to monitor entry to property
- Captures who enters/exits
- Doesn’t intrude on private spaces
- Requires clear tenant notification
Back/side door cameras:
- Same as front door
- Captures access routes
- Doesn’t monitor interior
Garage entry cameras:
- Acceptable if garage isn’t exclusive tenant space
- Captures vehicle theft prevention
- Common in multi-unit properties
Perimeter/fence cameras:
- Acceptable to monitor property boundaries
- Protects against external theft
- Doesn’t monitor tenant activity
Common Area Security (Permitted)
In multi-unit properties:
- Hallway cameras (main corridors, not individual unit doors)
- Stairwell cameras (safety and security)
- Lobby/entry cameras
- Parking lot cameras
- Laundry area cameras (if shared)
Requirement: Tenants must be informed of monitoring
Physical Security (Always Permitted)
- Quality locks on entry doors
- Deadbolts on all doors
- Window locks
- Fence gates with locks
- Landscaping maintenance
What You CANNOT Install in Rental Properties
Absolutely Prohibited
Bedroom cameras: Illegal; invasion of privacy
Bathroom cameras: Illegal; invasion of privacy
Interior room cameras: Not permitted in private tenancy spaces
Audio recording: Illegal without consent of all parties
Cameras monitoring specific tenant activity: Illegal; oppressive surveillance
Hidden cameras: Legal issues with covert surveillance
Problematic Areas
Kitchen: Can monitor entry if main entrance, but not sitting/working areas
Living room: Generally not appropriate unless it’s entrance to property
Hallways in single-unit properties: Invades private space; not permitted
Shared spaces (multi-unit): Only common areas where multiple tenants pass through
Tenant Notification Requirements
What Tenants MUST Be Informed About
By law, you must inform tenants of security measures:
In lease agreement:
- “This property is protected by CCTV”
- Specify which areas are monitored
- Note monitoring purpose (security, not surveillance)
- Clarify that private areas (bedrooms, bathrooms) are NOT monitored
In writing (separate from lease):
- Detailed security policy
- Camera locations
- Retention schedule for footage
- How footage is accessed/secured
On the property:
- Clear signage: “CCTV in operation”
- Signage on building entry
- Visible cameras
- No hidden surveillance
Before installation:
- Notify tenants of planned security improvements
- Explain purpose (property protection)
- Address tenant concerns
- Document notification
Recommended Rental Property Security Setup
Single-Unit Rental House
Recommended system:
- Front door camera (turret, 4K)
- Back door camera (turret, 4K)
- Driveway camera (driveway overview)
- Motion lights at entry points
- Quality door locks + deadbolts
NOT recommended:
- Interior cameras
- Monitoring interior rooms
- Audio recording
Cost: $3,500–$5,000 installed
Tenant notification:
- Clear signage at entry
- Lease agreement note
- Detailed security policy letter
- Inform of new tenants
Multi-Unit Property (2-8 Units)
Recommended system:
- Main entrance camera (identify visitors, monitor entry)
- Hallway cameras (common area, safety + security)
- Parking area camera (vehicle theft prevention)
- Laundry room camera (if shared, theft prevention)
- Perimeter cameras (deter external theft)
- Rear exit/access points
NOT recommended:
- Cameras pointing into individual units
- Unit-specific monitoring
- Audio recording
Cost: $6,000–$10,000+ installed (scalable with property size)
Tenant notification:
- Prominent lobby signage
- Lease addendum
- Individual unit notification letter
- Privacy notice (what is NOT monitored)
Large Multi-Unit Property (8+ Units)
May warrant:
- Professional security system
- Monitored entry (buzzers, gates)
- Comprehensive common-area CCTV
- Access control systems
- Emergency communication systems
Key principles remain:
- Only common areas monitored
- No private unit monitoring
- Tenant notification mandatory
- Privacy policy clearly documented
FAQ: Rental Property Security
Can I monitor inside my rental units to catch damage?
No. That invades tenant privacy and likely breaches Residential Tenancies Act. Instead:
- If suspicious damage, use non-secret investigation
- Conduct regular inspections (with 48-hour notice)
- Document condition on move-in/move-out
- Use normal wear-and-tear clause
What if I suspect tenant theft? Can I set up hidden camera?
Absolutely not. That’s illegal and creates massive liability. If you suspect theft:
- Investigate through legal channels
- Use public camera evidence if available
- Contact police if criminal theft
- Address in formal inspection
- Use tenancy tribunal if necessary
Can I require tenants to agree to CCTV as lease condition?
You can include CCTV clause in lease, but it must be:
- Lawful (common areas only)
- Reasonable (not oppressive or excessive)
- Clearly documented
Tenants can’t waive privacy rights, so unreasonable surveillance clauses may be unenforceable.
Are doorbell cameras acceptable in rentals?
Yes, if:
- At entry point only (front door)
- Doesn’t monitor inside unit
- Tenant is informed
- Not used to monitor tenant activity
- Used only for security purposes
What’s the liability if someone is injured and we have CCTV?
CCTV can protect you by showing incident wasn’t landlord’s fault. However:
- Don’t delete footage if incident may be involved
- Provide footage to police/insurance if requested
- Don’t use footage to retaliate against tenant
Can I use CCTV to enforce house rules?
No. That crosses into tenant surveillance. You can:
- Monitor common areas for security
- Address rule violations through normal inspection/communication
- Use CCTV evidence only if incident directly involves security
Should I tell tenants if upgrading CCTV?
Yes. Best practice:
- Notify 7–14 days in advance
- Explain improvement (better security, higher resolution)
- Clarify any new areas being monitored
- Maintain privacy standards
What if tenant objects to CCTV?
Address concerns:
- Explain it protects property, not monitors them
- Show camera locations (entry points only)
- Clarify private areas are NOT monitored
- Provide written security policy
- Discuss specific concerns
If tenant has legitimate privacy concerns, work with them (relocate camera, add signage, etc.)
How long should I keep rental property CCTV footage?
Typically 30–90 days for routine security. Longer if:
- Incident documented (theft, damage)
- Police investigation ongoing
- Tenancy dispute likely
Maximum: 12 months; beyond that requires documented reason (legal hold, incident investigation)
Can I share CCTV footage with police without tenant consent?
Yes, police can request footage with warrant or in emergency. You can voluntarily provide it. However:
- Document request formally
- Provide only requested footage
- Keep records of what was provided
- Don’t share more than necessary
Can I use CCTV in shared properties (e.g., hostel-style)?
- Common areas only (kitchens, lounges, hallways)
- Private rooms never monitored
- Clear notice requirement
- Careful Privacy Act compliance
- Audio always prohibited
Liability and Insurance Considerations
Liability Questions
If someone is injured on property:
- CCTV can show you weren’t negligent
- Can identify intruders or responsible party
- Provides timeline and evidence
If tenant is harmed by third party:
- CCTV evidence helps police investigate
- Shows you had security measures
- Demonstrates duty of care
Insurance Implications
Most insurers expect:
- Basic security (locks, functioning doors)
- For commercial properties: Professional CCTV
- For rental properties: Reasonable security appropriate to area
Insurance discounts available:
- Professional alarm systems: 5–10% discount
- CCTV systems: 3–5% discount
- Combined systems: 8–15% discount
Data Security and Privacy Compliance
How to Store Footage Securely
- NVR/DVR in locked room
- Only landlord/property manager access
- Backup power supply
- Climate control (prevents humidity damage)
- Access control
- Password-protected system
- Audit log of who accessed footage when
- Limited admin access
- Strong passwords
- Cloud backup (optional)
- Encrypted storage
- Secure provider
- Data protection compliance
- Backup of critical incidents only
- Retention schedule
- Document retention policy (e.g., “30-day retention”)
- Automatic deletion after period
- Exception process for incidents
- Staff training on protocol
Enforcement Action: When to Use CCTV Evidence
Appropriate uses:
- Security incident investigation
- Police cooperation in criminal matter
- Insurance claim documentation
- Tenancy tribunal dispute (if relevant to property damage/security)
Inappropriate uses:
- Proving tenant violation of house rules (non-security related)
- Monitoring tenant activity/personal behavior
- Retaliatory action against tenant
Professional Security System for Rental Properties
Garrison Alarms recommends:
Single-unit rentals:
- 4K entry-point cameras (front + back)
- Driveway camera if applicable
- Professional installation
- Local storage, cloud backup optional
- Annual maintenance
Multi-unit properties:
- Comprehensive common-area CCTV
- Professional monitoring recommended
- Access control for main entry
- Professional management of system
- Quarterly maintenance
Creating a Rental Property Security Policy
Document your approach:
- Purpose statement
- Why security installed
- Protection of property and residents
- Compliance with privacy law
- Scope
- Which areas monitored
- Which areas NOT monitored (important to specify)
- Camera locations and purposes
- Tenant notification
- How tenants informed
- Lease agreement clause
- Signage present
- Access and storage
- Who can access footage
- How it’s stored and protected
- Retention schedule
- Deletion procedure
- Incident response
- What triggers footage review
- Police cooperation protocol
- Documentation process
- Legal hold procedures
Internal Linking Notes
Link to these related Garrison Alarms resources:
- “Home Security Checklist NZ” (residential version)
- “CCTV Installation Cost Auckland: Complete 2026 Pricing Guide” (system costs)
- “Commercial CCTV Requirements in NZ: Compliance, Privacy & Best Practice” (commercial version for comparison)
- “CCTV vs Alarm System: Which Is Better?” (system selection)
Summary
Rental property security requires careful balance between protecting your investment and respecting tenant privacy. Key principles:
- Permissible: Entry points, common areas, perimeter, property protection
- Prohibited: Bedrooms, bathrooms, private spaces, oppressive monitoring
- Required: Clear tenant notification, documented policy, privacy compliance
- Recommended: Professional installation, audit trail, secure storage
Well-designed rental property security protects your asset while maintaining tenant trust and legal compliance.
For rental property security assessment, contact Garrison Alarms—0800-427747.
About Garrison Alarms
Since 1989, Garrison Alarms has helped landlords and property managers install compliant security systems. We specialize in rental property security that protects assets while respecting tenant privacy. Our systems are designed for long-term reliability and minimal maintenance.
Last updated: February 2026