A virtual tripwire is a configurable line drawn across a security camera's field of view that triggers an alert when an object crosses it. Unlike a detection zone, which monitors an area, a tripwire monitors a specific boundary — making it the most precise tool for detecting directional movement such as perimeter breaches, unauthorised entry, or exit-only violations. Combined with AI object classification, a virtual tripwire can distinguish between a person crossing a fence line and a bird flying past it.
The operator draws a line across the camera view in the video analytics configuration interface. The AI engine monitors the area around this line for objects that cross from one side to the other.
Direction logic determines which crossings trigger alerts. A one-way tripwire fires only when an object crosses in a specified direction — for example, entering a restricted zone from the outside but not when exiting. A two-way (bidirectional) tripwire fires on any crossing regardless of direction.
Object class filtering adds a second layer of precision. The AI classifies each object that approaches the tripwire — person, vehicle, animal — and only generates an alert if the object matches the configured class. This is the single most effective setting for reducing false alerts: a tripwire configured to alert only on people will ignore a cat, a windblown bag, or a moving shadow.
It is important to distinguish a tripwire from a detection zone. A detection zone monitors a defined area and triggers when an object appears within it. A tripwire monitors a line and triggers only when an object crosses it. Tripwires are better suited for boundary and access control scenarios; detection zones are better for occupancy and presence monitoring.
A tripwire drawn along a fence line, wall, or property boundary detects the moment someone crosses the perimeter. Because the trigger is directional, it can alert on inward crossings while ignoring authorised personnel leaving the site. This is more precise than a zone-based approach, which would also fire on legitimate activity within the boundary area.
Tripwires placed at doorways to server rooms, loading bays, or storage areas detect unauthorised access at the point of entry. Combined with time-of-day scheduling, a tripwire can be active only outside business hours — alerting on after-hours entry while remaining silent during normal operations.
In environments with one-way corridors, exit-only gates, or directional pedestrian flows, a one-way tripwire detects movement against the permitted direction. This is particularly useful in transport hubs, retail loss prevention (detecting products moving toward emergency exits), and logistics facilities.
The tripwire line must be placed where the camera has a clear, perpendicular view of movement. Lines drawn at oblique angles to the direction of travel reduce crossing detection accuracy because objects may move along the line rather than clearly across it. The ideal placement is a straight line that objects must cross at roughly 90 degrees.
Bidirectional tripwires are simpler to configure but generate more alerts. One-directional tripwires are more precise and produce fewer false positives in access control scenarios. Choose direction based on the security question you are answering: "Did anyone enter?" requires one-way. "Did anyone cross?" may need two-way.
Always filter to the relevant object class. A perimeter tripwire monitoring for people should ignore vehicles, animals, and unclassified motion. Unfiltered tripwires — those that alert on any pixel change across the line — are a primary source of false positives and a major contributor to alarm fatigue.
Tripwires can be scheduled to activate only during specific time windows. A tripwire at a normally-staffed entrance might be active only from 8 PM to 6 AM, reducing daytime noise while maintaining after-hours protection. Most analytics platforms support per-tripwire time schedules.
SafetyScope supports configurable virtual tripwires with direction logic, object class filtering, and time-based activation schedules. Tripwires are drawn directly on the camera view in the configuration interface, with real-time preview showing detections as they occur. Alerts from tripwire crossings integrate with the platform's standard alert pipeline — push notifications, dashboard events, and webhook delivery.
Published: 2026-01-28 · Updated: 2026-04-02