Comparison

CCTV Night Vision Guide: IR, ColorVu, TiOC & OwlView

Use infrared for discreet monitoring in darkness, full-colour low-light cameras where colour evidence matters, hybrid light where IR should switch to visible light during events, and active deterrence only where warning behaviour is appropriate.

Buying Guide

Editorial review: Reviewed by Jack and Chris, SecurityWholesalers Editorial Team, 15 July 2026. Public product information and linked authoritative sources were reviewed. This is editorial guidance, not independent laboratory testing or legal advice.

Quick answer

Use infrared for discreet monitoring in darkness, full-colour low-light cameras where colour evidence matters, hybrid light where IR should switch to visible light during events, and active deterrence only where warning behaviour is appropriate.

Night technology comparison

Technology Best for Limitation
Infrared Discreet black-and-white monitoring Colour information is lost and reflective surfaces can flare
Full-colour low light Clothing and vehicle colour Needs ambient or supplemental visible light
Hybrid light IR normally, colour on selected events Exact behaviour depends on model and setup
Active deterrence Driveways, gates and after-hours boundaries Light and audio may disturb neighbours or occupants

Product-family pathways

Hikvision ColorVu is our all-round home starting point. Dahua TiOC is strongest when deterrence matters, while Dahua WizColor focuses on low-light colour. Uniview OwlView/ColorHunter provides an alternative colour path and Tri-Guard adds warning features.

Design the scene first

  • Check ambient light after midnight, not only at dusk.
  • Look for white walls, eaves, insects, rain and headlights near IR.
  • Decide whether visible white light is acceptable.
  • Use stronger night capability on the two or three scenes that matter most.
  • Test event zones and exposure after installation.

Colour is not always the answer

Good IR can outperform forced colour in a scene with almost no light. The purpose is useful evidence, not colourful footage at any cost.

Worked example: driveway beside bedrooms

Use hybrid light so the camera can monitor discreetly with IR and switch to visible light only for a configured person or vehicle event. Avoid loud warnings near bedrooms unless the risk justifies them. Test headlights, wet pavement and reflective walls after dark.

Commissioning checklist

Review live and recorded footage after full darkness, walk through the detection zone, confirm faces are not blurred, check colour accuracy, adjust exposure and verify that lights or warnings do not create neighbour or occupant problems.

Why night footage fails even when the specification sounds strong

Useful night evidence depends on the whole scene, not the advertised illumination distance. A camera can show a bright driveway while still blurring a moving face. Slow shutter makes a static image look clean but can smear a walking person; high gain brightens the scene but adds noise; strong noise reduction can erase fine detail. Headlights, porch lights and reflective number plates can also force exposure away from the subject.

Symptom Likely cause Commissioning response
White fog or halo IR reflecting from eaves, walls, dust, rain or a dirty dome Re-aim or relocate the camera, clean the cover and keep the lens away from nearby surfaces
Moving face is soft Shutter is too slow, gain/noise reduction too aggressive, or subject too small Increase useful light, tighten the scene and test a moving subject at the intended distance
Subject becomes a silhouette Bright doorway, streetlight or headlights dominate exposure Change the angle and tune WDR/exposure for the evidence zone
Repeated insect alerts Insects are attracted to or illuminated by on-camera IR Move illumination away from the lens, tighten analytics zones and avoid vegetation near the camera
Colour switches unpredictably Ambient light is close to the day/night threshold Set an appropriate schedule or threshold and verify the selected model's light logic

Choose the night mode by outcome

  1. Evidence: decide whether clothing and vehicle colour are required.
  2. Light: inspect the actual scene after midnight, not only at dusk.
  3. Behaviour: decide whether visible light or audible warnings are acceptable.
  4. Verify: test moving subjects, headlights and wet reflective surfaces.

Hikvision ColorVu is our number-one general residential pathway when consistent colour context is important and the scene can support colour imaging. Dahua TiOC Pro is the second pathway where red/blue warning lights, audible warnings or active deterrence are central to the brief. Uniview OwlView/ColorHunter is the third pathway and can be a compelling alternative where the selected NVR, analytics and price fit the project. These are editorial positions for the stated scenarios-not a claim that one brand wins every scene.

For a quiet side passage beside bedrooms, conventional IR or carefully configured hybrid light may be more neighbour-friendly than permanent white light. For a driveway where clothing colour and vehicle colour matter, full-colour or hybrid light is often more useful. At a gate after business hours, deterrence may be appropriate, but warning audio should be deliberate, limited and tested.

A practical after-dark acceptance test

  1. Wait until full darkness; dusk is not a valid night test.
  2. Export recorded footage rather than judging only the live view.
  3. Have a person walk toward, across and away from the camera at the planned evidence distance.
  4. Repeat with a vehicle entering with headlights on and, where safe, with the pavement wet.
  5. Check face usability, motion blur, colour usefulness, reflections, event accuracy and whether visible lighting causes nuisance.
  6. Record the camera model, firmware, lens, height, distance, exposure settings and illumination mode so later changes are auditable.
Evidence status - 15 July 2026: this comparison is based on published product information, system design principles and editorial review by Jack and Chris. SecurityWholesalers has not published controlled, side-by-side field-test results for these exact camera families yet. Product claims should be confirmed against the exact model datasheet, and the installed scene must be commissioned after dark.

Questions to put on the quote

  • What is the intended identification distance at night?
  • Will the camera use IR, constant white light, hybrid light or event-triggered light?
  • What happens when headlights enter the scene?
  • Which person/vehicle analytics run on the exact camera and NVR combination?
  • Will the installer perform and document an after-dark moving-subject test?
  • Can warning lights and audio be scheduled or disabled per camera?

Frequently asked questions

What is the best CCTV night vision?

It depends on the scene. ColorVu is our all-round colour pathway, TiOC suits deterrence, and IR remains useful where visible light is not wanted.

Can full-colour cameras see in complete darkness?

Colour imaging needs light. The camera may use visible supplemental light when ambient light is insufficient.

What is hybrid light CCTV?

Hybrid light cameras can use infrared for discreet monitoring and switch to visible light under configured conditions or events.

Need help selecting a system?

Provide the property type, camera positions, night conditions, required retention, network constraints and future camera count.

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