LA County has no specific doorbell camera ordinance, so California Penal Code 632 two-party consent for recorded conversations and Civil Code 1708.8 anti-paparazzi privacy rules govern Ring and Nest installations in unincorporated areas.
Los Angeles County does not separately regulate doorbell cameras such as Ring, Nest Doorbell, Arlo, or Eufy. State law fills the gap. California Penal Code 632 requires all-party consent before recording any confidential communication, meaning audio capture of passersby at the doorstep can violate the law if a reasonable expectation of privacy exists. California Civil Code 1708.8 creates civil liability for invasive recording of personal activities. Federal video-only doorbell cameras facing public sidewalks generally do not violate Penal Code 632, but audio is the risk. Some HOAs in unincorporated areas restrict installations through CC&Rs. Incorporated cities including Beverly Hills add their own placement rules; LA County does not.
Recording doorstep audio without consent can be a misdemeanor under Penal Code 632 with up to 2,500 dollar fines per violation, plus civil damages of 5,000 dollars per violation under Civil Code 1708.8.
See how Torrance's doorbell camera disclosures rules stack up against other locations.
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