A finished system you own vs a project you assemble.
A $250 Dahua or Hikvision ANPR camera looks cheap — until you add the controller, the software, the integrator, the maintenance, and the eligibility questions. Here's the honest comparison between a commodity build and a finished system we own and run for you — including where the cheap camera genuinely wins.
What you actually get
A $250–$999 ANPR camera. You (or your integrator) still buy the overview camera, access controller, relay, barrier, and software — and wire and configure it all together. It's a build, not a product.
A finished system. One vendor owns the whole path — plate, decision, gate — installed for you and supported as one thing.
Who operates it
You or your integrator own the setup, the updates, and every failure, for the life of the system.
We run it. Every gate is monitored around the clock, updated, and supported by the team that built it — often catching a problem before you do.
Total cost, honestly
Lowest hardware capex by far — and the highest assembly, integration, and ownership burden after that.
One transparent price for a working system, with no integration project and no parts to source yourself.
Eligibility (NDAA / FCC Covered List)
Dahua and Hikvision are restricted for the federal government, its contractors and grant recipients, and listed public-safety / critical-infrastructure purposes. A purely private buyer with no federal nexus can still legally buy and use them today.
NDAA-clean and US-hosted, so eligibility is never the question — built for operators who take federal money, serve ports or critical infrastructure, or face cyber-insurance scrutiny.
Supply-chain durability
A platform whose US import and authorization window is narrowing — so future parts, firmware, and support timelines are uncertain.
A supported, updated product from one team you can reach, with a clear path for parts and firmware.
The record
Whatever your assembled software stack happens to log.
Every crossing logged with a plate snapshot, vehicle image, and short clip — searchable, and a cleaner story for insurance and audits.
We won't tell a private HOA that a Hikvision camera is “illegal for you” — for most private buyers, it isn't. Section 889 and the FCC Covered List bind federal buyers, their contractors and grant recipients, and listed public-safety and critical-infrastructure uses; the boundaries are still being redrawn in the courts. The honest case for GateGuardX isn't fear — it's that you get a complete, supported, US-hosted system you own, that stays eligible if your situation ever touches federal money, a port, or critical infrastructure.
When the cheap camera is the right call.
- Lowest upfront cost is the whole decision, and you already have an integrator deploying Dahua or Hikvision cheaply.
- You don't want a subscription or a managed relationship — just a camera bolted to a gate.
- You're a private yard or HOA with no federal nexus and no insurance pressure. For you, the eligibility point is genuinely noise — and we'll tell you that rather than scare you with it.
Want the finished system, not the project?
Send a few photos of your gate, we'll confirm compatibility and send an itemized quote, usually within 48 hours. You own a complete, US-hosted system; we run and support it.
- 30-day money-back guarantee
- 1-year hardware warranty
- No gate replacement
- Compatibility answer in 48 hours