What is BIS / CRS compliance for CCTV cameras in India?
BIS / CRS compliance is the mandatory registration of CCTV cameras and recorders under India's Compulsory Registration Scheme (CRS), run by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) against safety standard IS 13252 (Part 1). Since the scheme's enforcement was tightened in 2025, surveillance hardware sold or deployed in India must carry a valid BIS registration number, and government/critical-infrastructure tenders increasingly require essential-security-component testing of the device firmware. For buyers this means the camera layer must be BIS-registered, while the software layer (the VMS) should be hardware-agnostic so it can onboard any compliant, registered camera. VMukti Cloud VMS is ONVIF-compatible and onboards 1,000+ camera models from any conformant, BIS-registered manufacturer, and is itself STQC-certified — letting Indian enterprises and government bodies build a fully compliant stack without vendor lock-in.
What BIS / CRS actually covers
The Bureau of Indian Standards operates the Compulsory Registration Scheme (CRS) under the BIS Act. Electronic products on the CRS list cannot legally be manufactured, imported, sold, or distributed in India unless the model is registered and carries the BIS standard mark and registration number. CCTV cameras, network video recorders, and digital video recorders fall under IS 13252 (Part 1) — the Indian adoption of IEC 60950 / IEC 62368 safety requirements for information-technology equipment.
In 2025 the government tightened enforcement and added security-screening expectations for surveillance devices destined for government and critical-infrastructure use, including review of device firmware and the supply chain. The practical effect: the camera and recorder hardware must be BIS-registered, and for sensitive deployments the firmware may be subject to essential-security testing.
Why this matters for VMS procurement
A Video Management System is software and is not itself a CRS product — but the cameras it ingests are. Buyers therefore face a two-layer compliance requirement:
- Hardware layer: every camera/recorder model must hold a valid BIS / CRS registration.
- Software layer: the VMS should be hardware-agnostic so the buyer is free to choose among BIS-registered manufacturers rather than being locked to one vendor's appliances.
A proprietary, appliance-locked VMS narrows the choice of registered hardware and can strand a deployment if a specific model loses or lacks registration. An open, ONVIF-based VMS keeps procurement competitive and compliant.
How VMukti fits a BIS-compliant stack
VMukti Cloud VMS is ONVIF-compatible and hardware-agnostic, onboarding 1,000+ camera models from any conformant manufacturer — so buyers can standardise on BIS-registered cameras from multiple vendors and still run a single platform. The platform itself is STQC-certified (MeitY), which is the parallel software-security accreditation Indian government tenders require, and supports data residency on India-resident infrastructure. Combined with NDAA-889-aligned hardware selection, this lets an Indian enterprise, smart city, or government body assemble a stack that is compliant end-to-end: BIS-registered cameras feeding an STQC-certified, ONVIF VMS with in-country storage.
Practical checklist
1. Confirm each proposed camera/recorder model carries a current BIS / CRS registration number under IS 13252. 2. For government / critical-infrastructure projects, confirm any required essential-security / firmware screening. 3. Choose an ONVIF, hardware-agnostic VMS so you are not locked to one vendor's registered hardware. 4. Pair BIS-registered hardware with an STQC-certified VMS and India-resident storage for an end-to-end compliant deployment.
BIS / CRS is a hardware-registration regime; pairing registered cameras with an open, certified VMS is what makes the whole surveillance system both legal to deploy and free of lock-in.
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Last reviewed: 2026-06-29
