Alaska Daycare Camera Laws
By Jayesh Parayali, Founder, CareCam · 15+ years building daycare camera systems
Alaska does not mandate daycare cameras, but licensed centers using them should disclose to parents. Alaska is treated as a one-party consent state for audio recording.
Note: This is general educational information, not legal advice. Consult Alaska Department of Health — Child Care Program Office (CCPO) for regulations specific to your facility.
Want a compliant camera setup in Alaska? CareCam is a video-only, parent-streaming daycare camera system — no audio (so the consent question never arises), enrollment-gated access, and center-controlled viewing hours.
Does Alaska require cameras in daycares?
Alaska has no statewide mandate requiring daycare cameras. Centers may use them with disclosure; courts read the eavesdropping statute to bar only third-party interception, so a participant may record (one-party).
Audio recording in Alaska: One-party consent
Alaska is a one-party consent state for recording conversations. Even so, classroom audio is sensitive and rarely worth the exposure.
The simplest compliant default: video only
CareCam streams video with no microphone, which removes the audio-consent question in Alaska (and every other state) entirely.
What Alaska centers should disclose
Licensed Alaska centers using cameras should disclose them to families in enrollment materials and confirm current rules with the Child Care Program Office.
- ✓Whether cameras are in use in classrooms
- ✓Which areas are monitored
- ✓Who has access to footage
- ✓How long footage is retained
- ✓Whether parent access is available (and how to request it)
Where cameras can and cannot be placed
Permitted
- ✓Classrooms and learning areas
- ✓Hallways and common areas
- ✓Playgrounds and outdoor areas
- ✓Entryways and check-in areas
- ✓Infant/nap rooms (varies — check local rules)
Never permitted
- ✗Bathrooms
- ✗Dedicated changing rooms
- ✗Any area where children undress
- ✗Staff-only areas without notice
References & official sources
Verify current requirements directly — statutes and licensing rules change.
How CareCam keeps Alaska centers compliant by design
Video only, no audio
Removes the audio-consent question under Alaska law and everywhere else.
Authenticated, enrollment-gated access
Each parent sees only their own child's classroom — never other families' rooms.
Center-controlled hours
Streaming is active only during the windows the director sets.
No parent footage archive
Live-only streaming means no stored footage to manage or leak.
Looking at another state? See the full daycare camera laws by state guide.
