Pricing guide
How OSHA AI video monitoring cost is estimated
The cost of construction safety video review depends less on the camera brand and more on how many camera-hours are reviewed, how fast reports are needed, and how complex the site rules are.
Camera-hours drive review volume
A simple planning model is cameras multiplied by hours per day multiplied by days per month. A four-camera pilot is very different from continuous review across dozens of cameras.
Setup affects accuracy
Camera calibration, PPE policy, traffic routes, fall zones, lift zones, and client SOPs improve both detection quality and the usefulness of the report.
Value comes from prevented exposure
A monitoring program should be compared with the cost of missed hazards: OSHA penalties, claims, schedule disruption, insurance pressure, and management time.
What this page covers
- Pilot, active-site, and enterprise scope ranges
- Camera-hours and cadence planning
- Setup and zone configuration
- Penalty exposure and risk reduction
Frequently asked questions
Short answers for contractors, safety officers, and risk teams evaluating AI video review for compliance support.
Is the calculator a quote?
No. It is a planning range. A quote requires camera samples, site rules, reporting cadence, and the desired rule catalog.
What is the best first purchase?
Start with a focused paid pilot on the cameras that see the highest-risk work, then expand based on evidence value.
Does near-real-time review cost more?
Usually yes, because shorter review windows require more operational capacity and stronger intake automation.
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