Cruise privacy

How to check a cruise ship cabin for hidden cameras

A cabin privacy checklist for mirrors, TVs, clocks, vents, outlets, and limited onboard networks.

6 min readUpdated July 12, 2026

Ship networks and compact cabin layouts change how digital checks should be interpreted. A useful check combines room context, physical inspection, and more than one phone-based method. No single result proves that a camera is present or absent.

Important: No consumer app or inspection method can guarantee that a space is camera-free. Use multiple checks and contact a qualified professional for high-risk situations.

Start with placement and purpose

Consider what the object can see, how it is powered, and whether its position makes sense. Prioritize private areas and unusual sightlines.

  • Inspect sightlines toward the bed and bathroom.
  • Identify normal cabin controls and safety equipment.
  • Report credible concerns to ship security and preserve documentation.

Inspect without tampering

Use normal room light first, then a flashlight from several angles. Look for mismatched openings, unexpected wiring, glass reflections, or components that do not match similar objects nearby.

Add network and nearby-signal checks

On a network you are authorized to use, review visible Wi-Fi devices and nearby Bluetooth signals. Guest isolation, local storage, cellular links, and powered-off devices can all produce a negative scan.

Verify and respond safely

Identify the physical object before reaching a conclusion. If a device remains credible, photograph it in context, leave the private area, and contact property management, the booking platform, or local authorities.

Questions answered

Frequently asked questions

Will ship Wi-Fi reveal cabin devices?

Usually not reliably because managed networks isolate clients.

Who handles a report at sea?

Contact ship security and keep written records; jurisdiction can be complex.