
The Right Way to Cover a NJ Home’s Blind Spots with Security Cameras
Last Updated on May 16, 2026 by PJ Windle
When a homeowner calls us after a break-in, the first thing we do is pull the camera footage. And the first thing we see, more often than not, is the intruder walking right through a spot nobody thought to cover.
It is not a technology problem. The cameras they had were fine. It was a placement problem, and placement is something most DIY guides and big-box store salespeople gloss over entirely.
This post walks through the six blind spots we see most often in NJ homes, what makes each one a vulnerability, and how a properly planned security camera system closes every gap.
TL;DR
Most NJ homeowners have blind spots in their security camera coverage without knowing it. The front door gets covered. The side yard gate, detached garage, and rear corners usually do not.
Here is what a proper coverage plan looks like and why placement matters more than camera count.
- Side yard gates and fence lines are the most overlooked entry points
- A detached garage needs its own camera, not shared coverage from the driveway cam
- Rear corners of the property create shadows a single back-door cam cannot see
- Interior coverage (garage-to-house door, basement stairs) matters as much as the perimeter
- Camera angle, resolution, and night vision range determine whether footage is actually usable
- A professional site assessment is the fastest way to find every gap
Why Camera Placement Matters More Than Camera Count
The instinct most homeowners have is to buy more cameras. If two feel inadequate, four should feel safer. But four cameras pointed at the wrong spots are less effective than two cameras positioned correctly.
What determines whether a camera system actually deters crime and captures usable evidence comes down to three things:
- Field of view coverage — are there gaps between camera angles?
- Resolution and zoom — can you identify a face or license plate at the actual distance the camera is mounted?
- Night vision range — does the infrared reach far enough to cover the zone you think it is covering?
A camera with a 90-degree field of view mounted at a corner might look like it covers a wide area on paper. But if there is landscaping, a fence line, or a slight elevation change, that coverage can drop significantly. This is why a physical site walk matters. You cannot design a camera system from a floor plan alone.
I walk every property before I recommend a single camera. I am looking for what I cannot see from the house, not what I can. The spots that have natural shadow, limited sightlines, or easy access from a neighboring property are exactly where coverage needs to go. — PJ Windle, AV Advisor NJ
The Six Blind Spots We Find in Almost Every NJ Home
New Jersey homes, especially in Monmouth, Ocean, and Middlesex counties, tend to share a few common characteristics: attached or detached garages, side yards with fence gates, mature landscaping, and rear yards that back up to other properties or wooded lots. Those features create predictable gaps.
Blind Spot 1: Side Yard Gates
The most common access point for residential break-ins. A gate that opens to the backyard is a direct path to the rear of the home, and the front-facing driveway camera almost never covers it. A dedicated camera angled at the gate latch and the approach path closes this gap completely.
Blind Spot 2: Detached Garages
If your garage is separate from the house, the driveway camera rarely covers the back or side walls where a second entry door is often located. Detached garages need at least one dedicated camera, positioned to cover the secondary door and any exterior storage areas.
Blind Spot 3: Rear Property Corners
A single back-door camera covers the door. It does not cover the corners of the yard where someone can enter from a neighboring property and move along the fence line unseen. Wide-angle cameras or a two-camera setup at opposite rear corners eliminates this dead zone.
Blind Spot 4: The Far End of the Driveway
A front-door camera captures the porch. But if your driveway is longer than 30 feet, a vehicle or person at the street end is often outside the camera’s effective range, especially at night when infrared distance limitations come into play. A separate driveway camera aimed toward the street solves this.
Blind Spot 5: The Garage-to-House Door
The interior door connecting the garage to the living space is one of the most used entry points in a forced-entry scenario. Most homeowners have zero coverage on this door from the interior. A single indoor dome camera in the garage covers both the vehicle area and the entry door in one shot.
Blind Spot 6: Basement Entry Points
Bulkhead doors and basement windows are low-visibility entry points that sit below the sightlines of most exterior cameras. Ground-level or angled mounting is required to cover these properly, and this is almost always something that needs to be planned rather than retrofitted.
Choosing the Right Camera Type for Each Zone
Not every location needs the same camera. Matching camera type to the specific coverage zone makes the system more effective and more efficient.
| Zone | Recommended Camera Type | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Front door | Wide-angle doorbell or dome | Captures face-level detail at close range |
| Driveway / street | Bullet camera with long-range IR | Needs reach and license plate resolution at distance |
| Side yard gate | Compact bullet or varifocal dome | Tight mounting space, needs clear angle on gate latch |
| Rear yard corners | Wide-angle dome or PTZ | Large coverage area, ideally with motion-triggered tracking |
| Detached garage | Weatherproof bullet, separate mount | Covers multiple walls, needs its own mounting position |
| Interior garage door | Indoor dome or wide-angle fixed | Interior-rated, captures both vehicle zone and entry door |
| Basement / bulkhead | Low-profile wide-angle, angled mount | Ground-level entry requires camera positioned below standard height |
Resolution matters more than most buyers realize. A 2MP camera at 20 feet gives you solid facial recognition. At 60 feet, you are getting a silhouette. If your driveway, rear yard, or property line is at a significant distance from where a camera can be mounted, you need either a higher resolution unit or a second camera positioned closer to the target zone.
For more on how recording systems work, see our glossary entry on NVR (Network Video Recorder) systems, which is what most professional installs use to store and manage footage locally.
How Security Cameras Fit Into a Larger Smart Home System
One of the biggest advantages of professional camera installation over DIY is integration. When your security cameras are part of a complete smart home automation system, you get capabilities that standalone cameras simply cannot offer:
- Motion-triggered lighting that activates when a camera detects activity in a specific zone
- Automated door lock responses tied to camera events
- Live camera feeds pulled up on a home theater display or any TV in the house with a single command
- Alerts routed to your phone with a camera thumbnail so you can see what triggered the notification
- Integration with lighting control systems to simulate occupancy when you are away
Want to see exactly how that integration works end to end? Read our post: How We Integrate Security Cameras Into a Full Smart Home System.
What a Professional Site Assessment Actually Looks Like
When we visit a home for a security camera assessment, we are doing a physical walk of the property with a specific checklist in mind. We look at:
- Every entry point to the structure, including non-obvious ones like basement windows and crawl space access panels
- Sight lines from the street to understand what an outside observer can see versus what cameras need to cover
- Landscaping, including where it creates shadow and where it could be used for concealment
- Power and data infrastructure available at or near potential mounting locations
- Neighbor property lines and what approach angles exist from adjacent lots
- Existing lighting and whether it complements or undermines camera effectiveness at night
From that walk, we develop a coverage map that shows exactly where each camera will be mounted, what zone it covers, and how the fields of view overlap to eliminate gaps. The whole process typically takes about an hour for a standard single-family home. The assessment is free, and there is no obligation.
Ready to Find Out Where Your Home Has Gaps?
We offer free site assessments for NJ homeowners. We walk your property, identify every blind spot, and give you a clear coverage plan with no sales pressure.
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