Hidden cameras are small, but they can’t hide everything: they reflect light, emit signals, and need power. Your phone can help you catch all three. Here’s how to sweep a room methodically.
This is the plain-language version for everyday phone users: numbered steps, a picture at each stage, and clear directions to every menu you’ll need. Keep your phone in hand and do each step as it comes.
We’ll start with the fastest, highest-value checks and move toward the more thorough ones, so even the first few minutes are well spent. Where a real tool helps, we link straight to the official one — never a sketchy third-party site.
In short: scan for camera lenses with light, look for infrared with your camera, check the network for unknown cameras, and physically inspect the suspicious spots. Below, every one of those is broken into clear steps with a screenshot-style picture.
Route 1: Scan Methodically
Every step below uses built-in settings, so there’s nothing to install. Follow them top to bottom; the illustrations point out each control you’ll need.
1Scan for camera lenses with light
Camera lenses reflect light distinctly. Dim the room, then slowly sweep your phone’s flashlight across surfaces — smoke detectors, vents, decor, mirrors — watching for a small bright reflection or glint that follows your light.
A tiny, sharp reflection that tracks your flashlight is the classic sign of a lens.
Keep in mind that ordinary wear — an older battery, a heavy app, a warm pocket — explains most single symptoms. What you’re really watching for is a sudden change that lines up with the moment someone could have had your phone.
- Dim the room and sweep your flashlight slowly
- Watch for a small reflective glint that follows the light
2Look for infrared with your camera
Many hidden cameras use infrared LEDs at night, invisible to your eyes but often visible through a phone camera. In a dark room, look through your phone’s camera (the front camera detects IR best on many phones) for small glowing dots.
Faint dots that you can see on screen but not directly point to an IR camera.
It helps to learn the colors on your specific phone once, so the next time a dot appears you react instantly instead of wondering what it means.
- View the dark room through your phone camera
- Small glowing dots on screen suggest infrared LEDs
Route 2: Inspect Closely
This takes only a few minutes and uses tools already on your phone. Work through the numbered steps in order — each builds on the last, and the pictures show exactly where to tap.
3Check the network for unknown cameras
Wi-Fi hidden cameras connect to a network. If you control the router, look at connected devices for strange camera-like names. A network-scanner app can list devices on a shared network too.
An unexplained camera or ‘IPCam’ device on the network is a strong lead.
Last-active times are your friend here — a device that was ‘active’ while you were asleep, or in a place you’ve never been, is the clearest evidence of all.
- Review connected devices on the network you control
- Unknown camera-like devices are a strong lead
4Physically inspect the suspicious spots
Examine the usual hiding places up close — smoke detectors, alarm clocks, chargers, vents, picture frames, and anything with a pinhole or aimed at a bed or seating. Trust your instincts about objects that seem oddly placed.
In practice, if you find a camera, in a private rental or accommodation, document it and contact the platform or local authorities rather than handling it alone.
Be patient and systematic. Small trackers are designed to disappear into seams and gaps, so a slow, deliberate search beats a frantic one every time.
- Inspect detectors, clocks, chargers, vents, and frames
- If you find one, document it and contact authorities
Important Cautions
- No single detection method is perfect; use several together and trust your instincts.
- If you discover a hidden camera where you have a reasonable expectation of privacy, treat it as a serious matter — preserve evidence and contact authorities.
Helpful Tips
- Sweep methodically, focusing on anything with a sightline to a bed or seating.
- A network scan catches Wi-Fi cameras that visual checks might miss.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where are hidden cameras usually placed?
In objects with a clear sightline to a bed or seating: smoke detectors, alarm clocks, chargers, vents, and decor with a small hole. Those are the spots to inspect closely.
What do I do if I find one?
In a rental or accommodation, document it, don’t disturb it more than needed, and contact the booking platform and local authorities. Your safety and evidence come before anything else.
Can my phone really detect hidden cameras?
It helps with three methods: spotting lens reflections with its flashlight, seeing infrared LEDs through its camera, and finding Wi-Fi cameras on a network. None is foolproof alone, but together they catch most hidden cameras.
Helpful Resources
These first-party tools let you check and lock things down directly:
- Google Find My Device — open it to check or manage this yourself.
- Find My on iCloud — open it to check or manage this yourself.
- Google Play Store — open it to check or manage this yourself.
- Apple App Store — open it to check or manage this yourself.
You don’t have to be perfect to be much safer. Even the first method here closes the most common door, and the rest are there whenever you’re ready.
Keeping It That Way
Fixing things once is great — but a light, regular habit is what keeps them fixed. Here’s a quick routine that does most of the work for you.
Pair this with two-factor authentication on your most important accounts — your email above all, since it can reset every other password. With those two habits in place, the doors casual snooping relies on stay shut.
Why It Matters
The reason these steps work is that they target how monitoring actually happens in practice, not the dramatic movie version. Ordinary people are followed through ordinary settings, and ordinary settings are exactly what you’ve just learned to control.
Easy Mistakes
- Forgetting to change a password after removing access, which simply lets the same person back in.
- Acting in a visible hurry when a calmer, quieter approach would be both safer and more thorough.
- Assuming an unfamiliar name is harmless without checking it, or deleting a real system component in a panic.
- Reusing the same password across accounts, so fixing one login leaves the others just as exposed.
When to Get Extra Help
There’s no shame in asking for help if the steps here don’t fully settle your mind. Official support channels for your phone can walk through settings with you, and if safety is part of the picture, a support service that handles tech abuse is the right call.
Quick Recap
To bring it together for everyday phone users, here’s the whole process at a glance:
- Scan for camera lenses with light
- Look for infrared with your camera
- Check the network for unknown cameras
- Physically inspect the suspicious spots
None of it is hard on its own — it’s just a sequence, and now you have it.
Extra Context
- Physical access is the common thread in nearly every monitoring story, which is why a screen lock only you know is one of the highest-value habits there is.
- Your email account is the master key to everything else, since it can reset most other passwords; protecting it first protects the rest by extension.
- Reusing passwords is what turns one company’s breach into your problem across many accounts, so unique passwords are less about that one site and more about containment.
- Updates are unglamorous but powerful — most sneaky monitoring leans on security holes that updates quietly close, so keeping automatic updates on does a lot of the work for you.
Hold onto these and the specific steps above become easier to remember, because you’ll understand the logic underneath them.