A glimpse into what’s next for intelligent video, the Axis Perspectives 2026 report delivers research-driven insight, expert analysis, and strategic foresight on how smart, connected technologies are reshaping security and beyond.
IP cameras have undergone a significant transformation from simple monitoring devices to sophisticated tools that deliver real-time insights and operational value. This evolution is driven by technological advancements, expanded use cases, and growing integration across industries. This progression invites a closer look at the innovations, strategic benefits, and shifting market trends, shaping the future of intelligent video systems.
The journey from basic video surveillance to intelligent sensing has been marked by a steady progression of breakthroughs – each expanding what cameras can see, understand, and do. What began as a shift from analog to digital has evolved into a fusion of edge computing, AI-driven analytics, and cloud-native architecture.
A foundational enabler was the development of purpose-built chipsets, bringing advanced image processing and analytics directly to the camera and reducing latency, bandwidth use, and reliance on central servers. This made possible the first built-in video analytics, from basic motion detection to advanced object detection and metadata-generated tools, paving the way for today’s deep learning models. Meanwhile, image quality advanced with megapixel resolution, multisensor designs, and innovations like Lightfinder and Forensic WDR, delivering clarity in low-light and high-contrast conditions. To manage rising data volumes, compression technologies – from H.264 and H.265 to AV1-enabled efficient storage and streaming, especially in cloud-based systems.
The rise of cloud and hybrid architectures gave organizations flexibility to scale while maintaining edge performance. Features like auto-configuration, remote updates, and health monitoring made deployment and management faster, more consistent, and less resource-intensive. Industry-wide adoption of open standards such as ONVIF-enhanced interoperability, while growing connectivity brought cybersecurity to the forefront –with secure boot, signed firmware, and encryption now essential safeguards. Together, these milestones have transformed IP cameras into intelligent systems that deliver real-time insight, operational efficiency, and strategic business value.
As IP cameras have evolved, so has their role. No longer limited to surveillance, these systems now deliver immediate intelligence, support faster decision-making, and create value across industries. Their impact is expanding in operational efficiency and business intelligence as well, reshaping how organizations operate, plan, and respond.
From passive surveillance to real-time intelligence
Traditionally, cameras served as passive devices – footage was often reviewed after incidents occurred. Today, IP cameras proactively detect unusual activity, recognize patterns, and trigger real-time alerts. This allows organizations to respond quickly and prevent incidents from escalating.
Smarter sensing at the edge
Onboard processing means critical information is generated the moment it’s needed, enabling capabilities like license plate recognition, object detection, and scene analysis without relying on centralized infrastructure. This improves response times and situational awareness in fast-paced environments like transportation, logistics, and retail.
Improved image quality, efficiency, and reach
New generations of IP cameras deliver high-quality imagery even in low light or harsh conditions, ensuring accurate scene capture across diverse environments. At the same time, energy-efficient designs enable wide-scale deployment – including in remote or infrastructure-light areas – while AI-enhanced image processing reduces false positives and improves long-term reliability
Scalable systems, simplified management
Features like auto-configuration, remote updates, and hybrid cloud support streamline deployment, maintenance, and scaling. Open standards further enable integration across locations and systems, offering flexibility and consistency for distributed operations.
Cross-sector value and measurable ROI
Across industries, intelligent video is driving measurable outcomes:
High-resolution network cameras are central to BMW Group’s AI-driven quality inspection (AIQX) across its iFACTORY facilities. Integrated with BMW’s AIQX platform, they capture detailed vehicle images in real time, enabling automated, accurate inspections of components. Leveraging advanced imaging, the system provides reliable data, allowing AIQX to detect defects instantly and support staff in correcting errors quickly. Used across BMW’s global operations, it drives efficiency, reduces costs, and maintains high cybersecurity and sustainability standards on the path to fully digitalized production.
While security and safety remain primary drivers, the role of video surveillance is rapidly expanding into operational efficiency and business intelligence, reflecting a broader shift toward intelligent, value-generating infrastructure.
In 2025, Axis annual surveys of end customers across the Americas, EMEA, and APAC show continued strong demand for security and safety use cases, alongside increasing adoption of video systems for operational efficiency (42%) and business intelligence (38%). By comparison, in 2024, 38% of respondents reported using video systems for operational efficiency and 20% for business intelligence, in addition to security and safety functions.
Architects and Engineers (A&Es) who specify and recommend these systems report similar adoption rates, signaling growing demand for solutions that contribute to broader innovation goals and deliver measurable business value.
When asked about anticipated future use cases for video surveillance, their responses suggest that customers will significantly expand their usage of IP cameras in all areas, including security, safety, operational efficiency and business intelligence.
Security remains the cornerstone – cited by 89% end customers and 96% of A&Es as the primary use case – reaffirming its critical role in protecting people, assets, and infrastructure. Yet organizations are now layering on new applications:
Together, these trends reveal a powerful shift: video technology is evolving into a multi-dimensional platform. While security remains fundamental, organizations increasingly see camera networks as tools for insight, safety, and operational excellence – protecting what matters most while driving measurable business value.
Overall, this data underscores a broader transformation underway in the video surveillance market. According to Novaira Insights, the number of installed cameras outside China is projected to reach 562 million by the end of 2025, climbing to 736 million by 2029. Globally, the largest regional installed bases in 2025 include the U.S. (100 million), India (86 million), and Latin America (70 million), with Western Europe, the Middle East and Turkey, Southeast Asia, Northeast Asia, and Oceania contributing significant additional volumes.
In the U.S., an estimated 10 million cameras are added each year, while other regions see annual shipments ranging from 0.8 million in Oceania to 11 million in India. As analog HD cameras continue their steady decline – accounting for just 10% of total camera revenue in 2024 – IP cameras accounted for 90%, highlighting the prevalence of connected, digital infrastructure.
In parallel, intelligence is becoming the new standard: nearly 80% of cameras shipped in 2024 included analytics capabilities – with 23% offering rules-based analytics and two-thirds already featuring deep learning-based functionality.
As technology becomes more advanced and interconnected, it is enabling smarter, more responsive environments. IP cameras are now integral to digital transformation strategies, positioning video not just as a security asset, but as a driver of enterprise intelligence.
The intelligent edge is increasingly shaped by external forces that influence how it is applied, integrated, and valued within organizations. Broader shifts in enterprise strategy, technology maturity, and regulatory landscapes are redefining expectations – positioning edge systems not just as infrastructure, but as critical enablers of performance, security, and innovation.
The prevalence of manual processes in security – with roughly 80% of expenditures devoted to guards, monitoring, installation, and maintenance – highlights a broader macro trend: industries that remain labor-intensive are ripe for transformation. Intelligent IP devices, equipped with AI and video analytics, can automate routine tasks, reduce false alarms, and minimize alert fatigue, allowing personnel to focus on higher-value strategic work.
The impact is clear: Securitas reports AI-powered monitoring has cut escalated false alarms by 59%, freeing hundreds of guard-hours annually, while a study by Omdia, commissioned by BriefCam, found that over 85% of organizations using video analytics achieve rapid ROI within one year.
Security operations exemplify how antiquated, manual workflows are driving the adoption of digitalization, edge intelligence, and automation – enabling organizations to modernize operations, optimize labor, and extract actionable insights from connected devices.
Physical security technology is a strategic asset driving measurable business outcomes, with today’s organizations prioritizing investments that align with business goals. Axis research confirms this: 64% of end customers prioritize upgrading infrastructure for performance and compatibility as a primary driver to success over the next 1-3 years, while 37% emphasize investing in emerging technologies like AI and IoT to future-proof operations and unlock new value.
Another key trend is the convergence of information technology (IT), operational technology (OT), and physical security. Traditionally siloed systems are increasingly unified as enterprises adopt integrated platforms that connect video, sensors, and enterprise applications. This convergence enhances data sharing, strengthens security, and increases operational efficiency.
Integrated platforms also enable edge-generated data to flow seamlessly into business workflows, supporting realtime monitoring, advanced analytics, and process automation across the enterprise. In our recent research, 41% of end customers identified integrating different security systems into one unified platform as a top priority for success over the next 1–3 years. This demand signals a strategic move toward resilience, simplified management, and enhanced situational awareness.
Deep learning at the edge is transforming how intelligence is deployed and scaled – with hybrid architectures enabling AI models and analytics to run both centrally in the cloud and locally at the edge, for low-latency, real-time decision making.
By processing data on the edge and sending only essential information to the cloud, organizations reduce bandwidth demands and improve privacy while maintaining scalable analytics. Reflecting this shift, IDC forecasts that global edge-computing spending to grow from US$208 billion in 2023 to over US$380 billion by 2028 (13.8% CAGR), underscoring the rapid enterprise adoption of distributed, hybrid infrastructures that support real-time intelligence at the edge.
As IP video systems become more advanced, enterprises are implementing simplified, intuitive interfaces that reduce operator workload and accelerate decision-making. Automation is crucial: Organizations want systems that minimize manual oversight, streamline complex workflows, and augment human capabilities through AI-driven assistance with clear, measurable impact on safety and efficiency.
Industry research reinforces this evolution. In Axis’ State of AI in video surveillance report, 62% of system integrators identified AI and generative AI as top trends, while end customers prioritized analytics and actionable insights. This points to a growing recognition that how intelligence is delivered – through dashboards, alerts, or embedded recommendations – is just as critical as the intelligence itself.
To meet these expectations, intelligent edge platforms are prioritizing usability, presenting insights that are visual, accessible, and tailored to non-technical users. These tools empower faster response times, reduce training burdens, and improve situational awareness. Clean design and efficient insight delivery are increasingly essential for adoption, scalability, and long-term value.
With the proliferation of connected devices and the growing volume of data generated and managed across distributed environments, governance is critical. Enterprises face mounting challenges around privacy, compliance, and data security
Axis research shows that 44% of end customers identify cybersecurity and data protection as a top priority for success over the next 1–3 years, underscoring the need to safeguard sensitive data without hindering innovation.
Cybercrime is now the world’s fastest-growing criminal threat, with annual worldwide losses currently at US$9.22 trillion8 from crimes ranging from data theft and ransomware to IP losses and operational shutdowns. This highlights both growing exposure and an expanding attack surface within physical security infrastructure.
This convergence of rising threat exposure, growing attack frequency, and high breach costs makes clear that enterprises integrating physical security with IT and OT must adopt unified governance strategies. Safeguards across video, sensors, and enterprise systems are no longer just best practices – they are essential to preserving trust, ensuring compliance, and preventing disruptions.
Open, vendor-neutral platforms are now crucial to intelligent edge architectures. By enabling seamless integration across systems, networks, and devices, open ecosystems reduce deployment complexity, lower costs, and foster innovation, eliminating vendor lock-in and increasing agility.
A recent milestone is the adoption of the AV1 video codec in surveillance [EN], which improves compression efficiency, reduces bandwidth and storage needs while enhancing video quality, AI performance, and cybersecurity – especially in cloud-connected environments.
Overall, open platforms allow organizations to unify video, sensors, analytics, and enterprise applications, scaling intelligent edge solutions as needs evolve. Together, these forces – enterprise demand for value, IT/OT/Physical Security convergence, edge and cloud AI, stringent governance, user-centric design, and open ecosystems – are redefining the intelligent edge.
Success now depends on upgrading infrastructure, strengthening cybersecurity, integrating systems, and embracing emerging technologies to unlock new competitive advantages in a rapidly digitizing world.
AV1 is a modern, open, royalty-free video codec created by the Alliance for Open Media (AOM), a consortium of major technology companies including Google, Amazon, Netflix, Microsoft, and others. Launched in 2018, it was designed to replace older, proprietary codecs with a more efficient, future-proof standard optimized for high-resolution video, cloud streaming, and broad device interoperability. As an open standard, AV1 encourages industry-wide adoption and innovation, positioning it as the next foundational codec for digital video—including IP surveillance.
With embedded analytics, AI capabilities, and seamless integration into broader systems, IP cameras now contribute directly to business operations, customer experience, and strategic decision-making. Their expanding role reflects a broader shift from passive monitoring to active, value-generating assets within the modern enterprise.
IP cameras have evolved into platforms that deliver real-time analytics, AI-driven threat detection, and automated response. Their capabilities now span risk mitigation, compliance, and operational insight, driving measurable business value.
Today’s IP cameras are generating actionable business insights by analyzing behavior and activities.
IP cameras extend significant value supporting asset monitoring, logistics, and compliance.
In practice, IP cameras are transforming operations across industries. This illustrates the broader value of these devices: enabling smarter, safer, and more efficient operations through real-time insight, automation, and proactive decision-making. of intelligent cameras: enabling smarter, safer, and more efficient operations through real time insight, automation, and proactive decision-making.
Advances in sensor technology and AI are pushing intelligent IP cameras beyond purely visual capabilities into multimodal analytical domains, enhancing situational awareness, detection accuracy, and contextual understanding. Cameras are increasingly becoming data-rich platforms capable of interpreting complex environments both in real time and over time.
By combining these diverse modalities, multimodal AI systems synthesize a richer, layered dataset that enhances decision-making and automation. They enable more nuanced event interpretation, reduce false alarms, and improve responsiveness in a wide range of environments.
As intelligent camera technology evolves, form factors are diversifying to meet the distinct operational, environmental, and regulatory demands of various industries. This expansion is enabling more precise, scalable, and context-aware deployments across sectors such as public safety, healthcare, manufacturing, transportation, and critical infrastructure.
This broadening of camera form factors reflects a shift from static surveillance to highly adaptive, mission-specific tools. By selecting the right form factor for the environment and task, organizations can improve visibility, reduce infrastructure complexity, and unlock greater operational and strategic value.
Body worn cameras are seeing significant adoption beyond law enforcement, driven by rising demands for accountability, safety, and operational transparency. According to Omdia (2024), the market is experiencing steady growth due to both technological evolution and expanding use cases across commercial sectors.
Key trends include:
This evolution underscores the broader trend toward intelligent, wearable surveillance as part of integrated safety and accountability ecosystems.
The transformation toward intelligent edge video solutions is being propelled by a powerful convergence of enabling technologies – AI, advanced imaging, cloud integration, and edge computing. Recent Axis data also reveals strong alignment among end users and system integrators around upgrading existing infrastructure, improving cybersecurity, integrating siloed systems, and leveraging emerging technologies. For system integrators, expanding beyond traditional security use cases to deliver operational and business insights is a growing differentiator. Together, these market drivers and technical capabilities are redefining surveillance.
Continued advancements in imaging technology have substantially enhanced how edge cameras perform, especially under challenging conditions. Notable developments include:
These imaging advancements directly support end users’ top priorities – particularly the 64% focused on upgrading existing infrastructure – by delivering enhanced resolution, color accuracy, and dynamic range that improve the reliability and performance of modern security systems. By enabling intelligent edge cameras to capture high-quality video suitable for both human monitoring and AI-driven analysis, even in challenging conditions, these innovations form the visual backbone of today’s intelligent surveillance and monitoring solutions.
As organizations modernize their infrastructure, scalable and efficient video storage is becoming increasingly important – not only to manage growing data volumes, but also to ensure interoperability with cloud platforms and AI-driven analytics. This trend reflects the priorities of the 37% of end users investing Resolution and detail preservation: in technologies that enable more intelligent, data-rich systems.
To keep pace with rising video storage demands, many customers are shifting toward more flexible, scalable storage architectures – such as hybrid and edge cloud solutions. Efficient video storage and transmission will be a cornerstone of sustainable, scalable edge deployments – particularly as AI workloads and retention policies evolve.
AI-powered analytics are revolutionizing how intelligence is generated and acted upon at the edge. By enabling real-time, data-driven insights with minimal latency, reduced bandwidth, enhanced privacy, and scalable deployment across diverse environments, these technologies are reshaping operational workflows and driving significant growth. Key advantages include:
Flexibility and future‑proofing are critical in IP camera deployments. Open architectures and ecosystem‑based approaches provide that adaptability by enabling seamless integration and evolution. Axis survey findings reveal that unifying disparate security systems into a single cohesive platform ranks among the top three priorities for end customers, as organizations seek to simplify management and improve operational efficiency, with 41% of respondents* emphasizing its importance.
The steady rise in cloud-connected camera deployments – with over 1.5 million Axis cameras now connected via a oneclick cloud connection (O3C) service, AXIS Camera Station, Axis Cloud Connect, and partner platforms – further reinforces the market’s readiness for hybrid and cloud-integrated architectures at scale.
An open, ecosystem-driven approach reflects industry momentum toward flexible, extensible architectures that foster collaborative innovation in IP camera deployments.
Security considerations underpin the IP camera ecosystem. As threats targeting connected devices continue to escalate, safeguarding edge deployments has become a strategic imperative. Axis survey data shows that cybersecurity now ranks as the #2 concern among end users, A&Es, and system integrators, highlighting growing awareness of risks tied to connected infrastructure.
Together, these cybersecurity and lifecycle management practices help customers keep their intelligent edge systems protected from evolving threats while ensuring consistent uptime, smoother operations, and easier compliance across even the largest deployments.
Intelligent video is entering a new era – one defined not just by smarter cameras, but by a shift in how organizations think about security, data, and enterprise performance. As imaging, AI analytics, hybrid architectures, and secure lifecycle management converge, IP cameras have evolved into powerful edge platforms that deliver real-time insights across the business.
Organizations are already moving in this direction, prioritizing modernization, unification, cybersecurity, and the adoption of AI, IoT, and cloud technologies. What began as a security function is now expanding into broader operational and strategic value, enabling teams to improve safety, streamline processes, optimize resources, and make more informed decisions.
This creates new expectations for integrators, technology providers, and end users – demanding deeper expertise, stronger security practices, and seamless integration across ecosystems. Success from here will hinge on how well organizations bring these technologies together and overcome challenges like legacy integration, data complexity, and workforce adoption.
Those that get it right will turn intelligent video into a long-term competitive advantage. The intelligent camera has become a true strategic asset. And as organizations embrace more connected, AI-enabled, and secure video systems, the question is no longer if video will shape the future of operations and decision-making – but how far its impact will reach.
A glimpse into what’s next for intelligent video, the Axis Perspectives 2026 report delivers research-driven insight, expert analysis, and strategic foresight on how smart, connected technologies are reshaping security and beyond.
* For sources of industry and Axis research data cited on this page, please go to the report.