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Network camera exports to Brazil | ANATEL certification practical operation guide, avoiding pitfalls and smoothly passing customs inspection

Author:中认联科 time:2026-03-02 Ctr:26

The network camera featuring high-definition video recording, wireless transmission, remote monitoring, and night vision capabilities is a must-have product in the Brazilian security market. It is widely used in home security, store surveillance, office duty, and other scenarios. Exporting this product to Brazil, obtaining ANATEL certification is an inevitable hard requirement. Unlike the focus on wearability and battery safety in fitness trackers' CE certification and the focus on energy storage safety in battery packs' PSE certification, ANATEL is a mandatory radio frequency and electrical safety certification specific to Brazil. It mainly controls the compliance and stability of the wireless transmission of the network camera and directly determines whether the product can clear customs, enter Brazilian local e-commerce and offline channels.

Many friends who export network cameras often fail to understand ANATEL certification or even confuse it with other countries' certifications. Here, let's clarify that ANATEL is the full name of the Brazilian National Telecommunications Agency, which is the official institution in Brazil responsible for regulating telecommunications and wireless communication equipment. It implements mandatory certification based on the Brazilian Telecommunications Law. All network cameras entering the Brazilian market (whether wired or wireless) must pass this certification. Products without certification will not pass customs and will face seizure, fines, and will not be able to be legally sold in Brazil.

Combining the core characteristics of wireless transmission and remote monitoring of network cameras, the focus of ANATEL certification is very clear. It is mainly divided into two major sections, both of which are indispensable. The first is radio frequency compliance control, targeting the WiFi, Bluetooth, etc. wireless modules of the camera, verifying the transmission power, frequency accuracy, and spectral purity to avoid interfering with the local Brazilian communication network; the second is electrical safety control, testing the power module, circuit insulation performance, and overload protection of the camera to prevent leakage, fire, etc. during operation, and adapting to different voltage environments in Brazil.

Regarding the testing standards, there is no need to blindly investigate. Just directly correspond to the exclusive Brazilian standards. The radio frequency test follows the Brazilian ANATEL NBR 14136 standard, focusing on verifying the stability and compliance of wireless transmission; the electrical safety test refers to the NBR 13800 standard, focusing on power adaptation, circuit protection, etc., especially for the 24-hour standby characteristic of network cameras, conducting special stability tests to ensure long-term use safety.

Here, three key points to avoid pitfalls are emphasized: First, wireless models must undergo radio frequency testing, even if it is low-power wireless transmission, it cannot be omitted; second, the core components (lens, wireless module, power supply) of the samples and production products must be completely consistent, and parameter changes require re-testing; third, the materials must be in Portuguese, and the safety warnings should comply with Brazilian local norms to avoid review rejection due to expression issues. By doing these, one can smoothly pass the ANATEL certification and enable network cameras to easily enter the Brazilian security market.

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