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Body-Worn Cameras in Manned Guarding: A Practical Guide

The practical, legal, and operational considerations for deploying body-worn cameras with your security guards.

By Michael Bryce · 8 March 2026 · Updated 11 March 2026 · 2 min read

Body-worn cameras (BWCs) are increasingly common in manned guarding, driven by demand for evidence capture, guard safety, and accountability. But deploying BWCs involves more than buying cameras — there are significant legal, procedural, and data management considerations.

Benefits for Security Operations

BWCs provide independent, timestamped video evidence of incidents. This is invaluable for police investigations, insurance claims, and resolving disputes about what occurred. Guards wearing visible cameras often experience fewer confrontations — the deterrent effect is well documented across police and security deployments.

For management, BWC footage helps assess guard conduct, verify incident report accuracy, and identify training needs. In complaint situations, footage either supports the guard’s account or identifies genuine issues to address.

BWC deployment must comply with the UK GDPR, the Data Protection Act 2018, and the Surveillance Camera Code of Practice. Key requirements include conducting a Data Protection Impact Assessment before deployment, displaying clear signage where cameras are in use, having a lawful basis for recording, establishing retention periods and secure storage, and providing procedures for handling subject access requests.

Recording audio raises additional considerations and may not be proportionate in all situations. Many security deployments record video only unless audio is specifically justified by the risk assessment.

Choosing Equipment

Select cameras that offer sufficient battery life for the shift duration, adequate storage capacity or live upload capability, one-touch recording activation, clear video quality in low light conditions, and tamper-evident design with secure data download. Invest in enough cameras for your deployment needs plus spares — a camera policy is useless if guards can’t find a working camera at shift start.

Operational Procedures

Develop clear procedures covering when cameras should be activated, how guards should inform people they’re being recorded, data download and storage processes, who can review footage and under what circumstances, and retention and deletion schedules. Train every guard on these procedures before issuing cameras, and audit compliance regularly.


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Michael Bryce

Founder of TacDesk. Writes about SIA compliance, operations, and running a UK security company — from someone who actually works the shifts.

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