Most renters who want security cameras either install basic wireless cameras without asking (and hope for the best) or assume they have no options and don't bother. Both approaches leave value on the table. Many landlords are more open to security camera installations than tenants assume — particularly when the request is framed thoughtfully, the installation method addresses their legitimate concerns, and the tenant makes it easy to say yes.
Understanding what landlords actually worry about when a tenant asks to install cameras, and addressing those concerns proactively, dramatically improves the outcome of the conversation.
What Landlords Are Actually Worried About
Landlord objections to security camera requests typically cluster around three concerns. First, property damage — holes drilled in walls, adhesive that removes paint, cable runs that are difficult to reverse, or mounting hardware that leaves marks when removed. Second, neighbor and tenant relations — a camera that makes other tenants feel surveilled, or that a neighbor complains about. Third, liability — an installation that goes wrong and causes damage, or a camera positioned in a way that creates a legal complaint.
Each of these concerns has a specific response. Damage concerns are addressed by specifying installation methods that are genuinely non-damaging: adhesive mounts that are rated for clean removal, cable management that uses removable raceways rather than permanent conduit, and a commitment to restoring the property to its prior condition on move-out. Neighbor relation concerns are addressed by camera placement that covers only your unit's entry and your private outdoor space, not shared areas. Liability concerns are addressed by your agreement to bear responsibility for any damage caused by the installation.
The Written Request Approach
A verbal conversation about cameras is easy to say no to because it's low-commitment and abstract. A written request changes the dynamic: it forces specificity, it creates a record that protects both parties, and it signals that you've thought through the details rather than making an impulsive ask. A good written request for a camera installation includes the following elements.
The specific locations where you want cameras. The mounting method you'll use (adhesive, existing screw holes, a freestanding mount). The cable management approach. A statement that you'll remove all equipment and restore any modified surfaces on vacating. And a brief description of the camera product — OOSSXX wireless cameras for outdoor use, for instance — that gives the landlord a sense of what professional, appropriate equipment looks like versus a concern that you're installing something makeshift.
Non-Damaging Options That Address Most Concerns
OOSSXX wireless outdoor cameras with adhesive or magnetic mounting bases are specifically designed for installation scenarios where permanent attachment isn't possible. Battery-powered or plug-in models eliminate the need for cable drilling entirely. A camera positioned inside a window facing outward — covering your unit's entry or outdoor area from inside your living space — requires no exterior installation whatsoever and typically needs no landlord permission at all.
When you bring these specific options to a landlord conversation, you're demonstrating that your request is reasonable and well-considered. "I'd like to mount this specific camera using this adhesive mount that leaves no marks" is a much easier yes than "I want to install security cameras" with no further specifics.
What to Put in the Lease Addendum
If the landlord approves your installation, get it in writing — a simple one-paragraph addendum to your lease that specifies the approved camera locations, the approved mounting method, and your obligation to remove equipment and restore the property at move-out. This protects you from a landlord who later changes their mind or hands the property to a new management company that doesn't know the prior arrangement. It protects the landlord by creating a documented scope for the installation. And it creates the mutual accountability that makes the agreement reliable for both parties over the course of the tenancy.