Summary

BS 8418 addresses a specific problem: standard CCTV recording is evidence after the fact, but it doesn't stop a crime in progress or guarantee a police response. A BS 8418 registered system changes this — it is connected to a permanently staffed Alarm Receiving Centre (ARC) that monitors video in real time (or responds to analytic-triggered alerts), verifies that an activation is genuine, and then contacts the police with a URN reference that triggers a response.

The standard exists to control false alarms. Before BS 8418, ARCs were flooded with false activations from motion-detection CCTV, causing police to deprioritise video-verified alarms. BS 8418 requires that the system has analytics capable of distinguishing humans and vehicles from other movement (animals, foliage, lighting changes), and that the ARC operator verifies the alarm before calling police. This verification step dramatically reduces false calls and keeps the police response prioritised.

From an installer perspective, offering BS 8418-compliant systems opens commercial opportunities — commercial premises, high-value residential, retail, and construction sites routinely require police-response CCTV as an insurance condition. It also requires significant investment: an ARC agreement, appropriate camera and analytics specification, and maintained installer approval from NSI Gold or SSAIB.

Key Facts

  • BS 8418:2015 — the current version of the standard; originally published 2003, significantly revised 2015
  • Scope — applies to detector-activated CCTV systems with remote monitoring; does not apply to locally-recorded CCTV without remote monitoring
  • Police URN — Unique Reference Number; issued by police to the ARC; used when reporting a verified activation; required for police response
  • ARC requirement — the ARC must be staffed 24/7, be NSI Gold or SSAIB approved for remote monitoring, and have a current contract with the police in each area where systems are monitored
  • Video verification — the ARC operator must view live or recorded video to confirm a genuine intruder/vehicle before calling police; alarm activation alone is not sufficient
  • False alarm filtering — video analytics must be capable of distinguishing human and vehicle intruders from environmental causes (animals, foliage, shadows, lighting changes)
  • Camera image quality — minimum specification: clear identification of individuals at the point of detection; in practice, 2MP+ IP cameras are standard for new installations; poor quality images will fail ARC verification
  • Lighting requirements — cameras must operate in ambient lighting at the site; where ambient light is insufficient, supplementary IR illumination or white-light illumination is required
  • Response time — BS 8418 sets maximum times between activation and the ARC receiving a verified alarm signal; analytic-triggered systems: typically within 30 seconds; human-verified systems: within 90 seconds of operator review
  • System grades — BS 8418 references intruder alarm grade principles; systems are typically specified at Grade 2 (domestic to low-risk commercial) or Grade 3 (commercial, higher risk)
  • Zones — camera coverage areas are defined as detection zones (where analytic or PIR triggering occurs) and identification zones (where the camera provides adequate resolution to identify individuals)
  • Commissioning documentation — a BS 8418 commissioning certificate must be issued; includes camera locations, detection zone definitions, image quality assessment, and ARC details
  • Maintenance — annual maintenance is required; ARC will typically require a service report before renewing the monitoring contract

Quick Reference Table

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Requirement BS 8418:2015 Specification Practical Implication
Camera resolution — detection zone Adequate to detect human presence Minimum 25 pixels/metre at detection point
Camera resolution — identification zone Adequate for facial identification Minimum 100 pixels/metre at identification point (Caltech CCTV standard)
Frame rate Minimum 6fps (live); 6fps at ARC for verification 25fps recommended for smooth verification
Transmission Video transmitted to ARC within response time window Good broadband connection at site required
Lighting Camera functional in ambient conditions of the site IR or white-light supplement where <1 lux
Alarm confirmation ARC operator visually confirms activation before police call ARC agreement required before installation
False alarm filtering Analytics or dual-detector confirmation required Video analytics with human/vehicle classification standard
Installer approval NSI Gold or SSAIB required Unapproved installers cannot issue commissioning certificate
URN eligibility Met where above requirements are fulfilled ARC applies to police for URN on completion

Detailed Guidance

Image Quality — The Most Critical Technical Requirement

The single most common reason a BS 8418 system fails to achieve useful ARC verification is inadequate camera image quality. An ARC operator needs to see enough detail to determine that the activation is a genuine human intruder — not a cat, shadow, or swaying branch. This requires:

Resolution at the point of interest: Analogue cameras: D1 resolution (704×576 pixels) minimum; HD-TVI/AHD (1080p) strongly preferred. IP cameras: 2MP (1080p) minimum; 4MP or higher for wide-angle coverage.

The relevant metric is pixels per metre at the point where detection and identification occurs — not just camera megapixel rating. A 4MP camera covering 30 metres at wide angle may have fewer pixels per metre at the detection zone than a 2MP camera covering 6 metres.

The Caltech CCTV image quality standard (adopted by many ARCs and police forces) defines:

  • Detection: 25 pixels per metre (confirms human presence, not identity)
  • Observation: 50 pixels/m (allows details of clothing, movement)
  • Recognition: 100 pixels/m (allows recognition of a known individual from the video)
  • Identification: 250 pixels/m (allows identification of an unknown individual from the video)

For BS 8418 police response, ARC verification typically requires recognition-level quality in the identification zone. For many commercial applications, 100 pixels/m at the camera's primary monitoring zone is the design target.

Practical camera siting:

  • A camera must cover both a wide detection area AND provide sufficient resolution in the critical identification zone
  • Wide-angle cameras can cover detection zones but may not provide identification-level resolution at the extremities
  • Use a combination: a wide-angle camera for detection, a narrow-angle or PTZ camera for identification if the detection zone is large

Video Analytics — False Alarm Reduction

Video analytics replace (or supplement) PIR detectors as the trigger mechanism for BS 8418 alarms. The analytics must classify movement as human or vehicle to prevent false alarms from:

  • Animals (fox, cat, dog, bird)
  • Environmental movement (foliage, flags, rain, shadows)
  • Lighting changes (headlights, sunrise/sunset)
  • Infrastructure movement (gates, shutters, vehicles in background)

Types of analytics:

  • On-camera analytics (edge analytics): processing happens in the camera itself; fastest response; lower cost per camera; quality varies by manufacturer
  • On-NVR/server analytics: processing at the recording device; can be applied retrospectively; higher quality; requires capable NVR or server
  • Cloud analytics: processed off-site; adds latency; not compatible with BS 8418 response time requirements in most configurations

Minimum analytic capability for BS 8418:

  • Human detection and classification (distinguish from animals and objects)
  • Vehicle detection and classification
  • Zone-based alerts (alert only when the human/vehicle enters defined zones, not on background movement)
  • Adjustable sensitivity (to tune out residual false positives from specific environmental conditions)

Testing analytics before handover: Walk the detection zone at various times of day and in different weather conditions during commissioning. The ARC should be involved in initial testing — an ARC that is receiving constant false alarms from a newly commissioned site will flag the system and, in extreme cases, may remove it from monitoring until the issue is resolved.

ARC Integration — What the Agreement Covers

Before installing a BS 8418 system, an agreement must be in place with a monitored CCTV ARC. The agreement covers:

  • Response protocol: what the ARC does when an activation is received (how quickly they must view, verify, and escalate)
  • Police reporting: the ARC's current police URN registration in the relevant force area; some ARCs have national coverage, others are regional
  • False alarm policy: the number of false alarms permitted before the ARC suspends or downgrades the response
  • Transmission method: IP (primary); cellular (secondary/backup)
  • Commissioning documentation: what the ARC requires before taking a new site onto monitoring
  • Maintenance requirements: minimum service intervals and documentation the ARC requires

The installer cannot commission a BS 8418 system and retrospectively seek an ARC — the ARC must be agreed before the system is designed, as the ARC's technical requirements (resolution, transmission, analytics) will shape the system design.

Commissioning — What the Certificate Must Include

A BS 8418 commissioning certificate documents that the system meets the standard at the time of installation:

  • Site address and customer details
  • Installer details and NSI/SSAIB approval number
  • ARC details and URN
  • Camera schedule: camera reference, position, type, resolution, detection zone coverage
  • Zone definitions: detection zones, identification zones (drawn on site plan)
  • Image quality assessment: pixels per metre at critical points (measured at commissioning, not calculated)
  • Lighting assessment: lux levels in camera field of view
  • Analytics configuration: zones, sensitivity settings, classification filters
  • Transmission path: primary and backup
  • Equipment schedule: NVR type, storage capacity, retention period
  • Customer instructions: how to operate the system, reporting procedure, maintenance frequency

The certificate must be issued to the customer and a copy retained by the installer for a minimum of 6 years.

Maintenance Requirements

BS 8418 requires annual maintenance. The maintenance visit must include:

  • Camera image quality check (compare to commissioning standard)
  • Analytics sensitivity test (walk the zones; confirm detection and classification)
  • Recording function check (verify footage is being saved correctly)
  • Transmission test (send a test signal to the ARC; confirm receipt)
  • Camera physical condition (seals, housing, cable entry)
  • Lens cleaning (external cameras accumulate dust and grime — critical for image quality)

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a customer use their existing CCTV system for BS 8418 registration?

Possibly, but it depends on the system. The existing system must meet all BS 8418 image quality, analytics, and transmission requirements. In practice, many existing systems do not — they may have low-resolution cameras, no analytics, or no IP transmission capability. A site survey is required to assess suitability. Where cameras can be retained but recording and analytics equipment needs upgrading, a hybrid upgrade may be cost-effective. Where cameras are inadequate, replacement is required.

How does the police URN actually work in practice?

The ARC holds the URN for each monitored site. When an activation is verified, the ARC calls the police 999 line and quotes the URN. The police control room can look up the site address, the type of system, and historical information. Providing a URN signals to the police that the call is from a monitored system with verified activation — which improves prioritisation. The NPCC guidelines state that police will give priority response to verified alarms with URNs; unverified activations may not receive an immediate response.

Does BS 8418 apply to ANPR (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) systems?

No — BS 8418 covers detector-activated video monitoring for intruder detection. ANPR is a separate technology governed by different standards and legal frameworks. However, an ANPR camera installed within a BS 8418 system (covering a vehicle entry point, for example) would need to meet the BS 8418 image quality requirements for its zone designation.

Regulations & Standards