If you’ve searched “CCTV camera price in Pakistan” or “best CCTV camera for home,” you’ve probably landed on a dozen near-identical listicles ranking the same five brands. What most of that content skips is the part that actually matters once you’re standing in a shop – or a WhatsApp chat – trying to decide what you actually need. We sell security equipment out of Saddar Regal in Karachi, home to Pakistan’s main wholesale CCTV and electronics market, and out of Mashallah Center in Lahore, so this guide leans on what we see customers get wrong in person, not just spec sheets copied from a manufacturer’s page.
WiFi/IP Cameras vs. Wired CCTV Systems
Most buying guides assume you’re choosing between analog CCTV brands, but the real first decision is WiFi (IP) versus wired. A WiFi camera like our EZVIZ H6C connects straight to your home or shop’s internet, so you can check the feed from your phone anywhere, and setup takes minutes rather than a day of cable-pulling. Traditional wired CCTV – a DVR box, coaxial cabling, and multiple cameras – is still the better choice for larger properties, warehouses, or anywhere WiFi coverage is patchy, since it doesn’t depend on your internet staying up. We’re actively expanding our wired CCTV range for customers who need a multi-camera, DVR-based kit – message our Karachi or Lahore team if that’s your situation and we’ll source the right setup rather than sell you a WiFi camera that won’t cover a large commercial space properly.
How Many Cameras Do You Actually Need
This is the question we get asked most, and the honest answer is fewer than most people assume. A single-entrance home or small shop is usually well covered by one or two cameras aimed at the main door and the till or driveway – a pan and tilt indoor WiFi camera can cover a surprising amount of a room on its own by rotating to follow motion. Larger properties – a warehouse, a multi-entrance office, or a compound with a boundary wall – need a proper camera count based on sightlines, not a round number pulled from a package deal. Before you buy, walk your property and mark every entry point, blind corner, and cash-handling area; that list is your real camera count, and it’s usually shorter than the 8- or 16-camera “packages” some sellers push regardless of property size.

Resolution, Night Vision, and Storage: What Actually Matters
Camera spec sheets throw a lot of numbers at you, but three actually affect what you’ll see when it matters. Resolution (2MP is a practical minimum, 4K if you need to zoom in and still read a face or number plate) determines how usable your footage is after the fact, not just how it looks live. Night vision range matters more than most buyers realize in Pakistan specifically, since a large share of break-ins and theft happen after dark – check the quoted infrared range against your actual distance to the gate or entrance, not just the spec on the box. Storage is the part people forget until they need footage and it’s gone: our EZVIZ H6C ships with 64GB onboard, which is enough for continuous recording over several days on motion-triggered mode, but if you want weeks of retention or multiple cameras on one system, you’re better off pairing wired cameras with a dedicated DVR/NVR housed in a proper server rack rather than relying on a single camera’s onboard card.
Wholesale vs. Retail Pricing: Where the Markup Hides
Here’s the part that’s genuinely different about buying from Saddar Regal rather than a general electronics shop: this is the wholesale market, not a retail add-on. A lot of “security camera” listings online are retail shops buying from distributors here and adding a markup before reselling – which isn’t dishonest, but it does mean the same camera can cost noticeably more once it’s changed hands twice. Buying directly from a Karachi or Lahore wholesaler cuts that out. It also means we can be straightforward if a package deal looks too cheap to be real: watch for sellers advertising an 8-camera kit at a price that barely covers one decent camera, since that’s almost always analog cameras with a resolution far below what’s advertised, or a DVR with no real brand warranty behind it.
Pairing Cameras with Alarms and Access Control
A camera records what happened; it doesn’t stop it from happening. Most of our commercial customers pair CCTV with a burglar alarm system – our 626 Security Siren is a common straightforward add-on for a 12V/24V setup – so there’s an audible deterrent alongside the recording. For properties that also control who gets in, access control and electronic locks – fingerprint, PIN, or card-based – pair naturally with a camera aimed at the same entry point, since you get both a log of who entered and a visual record. If you’re building a system from scratch, it’s worth planning cameras, alarms, and access control together rather than bolting each on separately later, since a lot of the wiring and power setup overlaps.
Installation Tips
Before you buy anything, confirm three things: whether your WiFi signal actually reaches the spot you want to mount a camera (a weak signal is the single most common reason WiFi cameras disappoint people), where your power source is relative to the mounting point, and whether the mounting surface needs a specific bracket – our TV and monitor wall mount range covers some of the same mounting hardware needs if you’re also setting up a monitor for live viewing. None of our WiFi cameras need an electrician, but a wired multi-camera DVR system usually does, particularly for a commercial installation with a proper rack.
Getting the Right System for Your Property
If you already know what you need, browse our CCTV Cameras & Surveillance Systems category directly. If you’re not sure whether you need one WiFi camera or a full wired setup with a DVR and rack, message our Karachi or Lahore team on WhatsApp with your property size and layout – we’ll tell you honestly what you actually need, not what has the highest margin.









