In a bold move to fortify national cybersecurity, India has rolled out stringent new regulations for all CCTV systems being imported, sold, or deployed within its borders. These requirements—enforced by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY)—signal a major pivot in how physical security systems must be designed, tested, and monitored moving forward.
With increasing concerns about espionage and supply chain risks, especially regarding Chinese-made surveillance technology, this regulatory overhaul prioritizes secure-by-design principles. For manufacturers, system integrators, and end-users in both the public and private sectors, the message is clear: if your CCTV equipment isn’t secure, it won’t be compliant—and it won’t be allowed in the Indian market.
🔐 What’s Changing?
As of April 2025, all CCTV products must meet the newly established
Essential Requirements (ER:01).
These include:
- End-to-end encryption for data in transit.
- Access control policies such as role-based access and strong authentication.
- Secure firmware and update mechanisms to prevent tampering or unauthorized access.
- Mandatory vulnerability and penetration testing as part of product validation.
- Compliance with Indian standards like IS 13252 (Part 1):2010 and certification from STQC-accredited labs.
While the goals are commendable, the process is anything but simple.
🚨 Why It’s a Challenge for Many
This regulatory shift is already sending shockwaves through India’s surveillance industry. Thousands of small to mid-sized Indian companies are struggling to meet the new testing requirements. Chinese vendors, who have long dominated the Indian CCTV market, face growing scrutiny and an uphill battle due to geopolitical tensions and certification hurdles.
As the Indian government holds firm on compliance deadlines and discourages extensions, the clock is ticking. Companies that can’t adapt will be shut out. But this opens a critical opportunity—for those who
can meet the new bar for security assurance.
✅ Where CREST-Certified Providers Come In
This is where global cybersecurity organizations like
CREST International and its members become indispensable.
CREST-accredited companies are recognized for their rigorous standards in penetration testing, vulnerability assessments, and secure systems engineering. These firms already operate under globally accepted frameworks for testing and certifying digital security. That makes them ideally positioned to help both Indian and international stakeholders:
- Conduct mandated security assessments and penetration tests for CCTV and IoT systems.
- Develop compliance roadmaps aligned with India's new security standards.
- Validate and certify that software and hardware controls are resilient against threats.
- Support supply chain audits to verify that imported components don’t pose hidden risks.
CREST’s focus on accreditation, ethics, and capability means that businesses working with certified partners get more than a checkbox—they get assurance.
🌐 Strategic Compliance: More Than a Checkbox
This isn’t just about regulatory paperwork. It’s about embedding a security-first mindset into technology that protects people, property, and information. With IoT and CCTV devices increasingly connected to critical infrastructure and sensitive environments, the margin for error is gone.
Organizations that treat this regulation as a catalyst—not just a constraint—will come out ahead.
🤝 Need Help Navigating the Shift?
At
Proactive Risk, we work closely with CREST and CREST-accredited partners to offer cybersecurity services that meet both technical and regulatory expectations. Whether you're a manufacturer trying to pass certification, a government body deploying infrastructure, or a security integrator reviewing product compliance--
we've got your six.
Let’s talk about how to make your CCTV systems secure, certifiable, and future-ready.
Adversaries plan. We preempt.