Box Trucks on the road

Box Truck Cameras

Box Truck Camera Systems

Built for backing at docks, neighborhood deliveries, blind spots, route visibility, and HD video evidence on every stop.

Built for box trucks, straight trucks, cube vans, and the delivery, courier, and route-based fleets that run them.

Where cameras typically go on a box truck.

Most box truck installs start at the rear of the cargo box for dock backing, then add side cameras for neighborhood blind spots and an in-cab monitor so the driver can see every angle at a glance. Larger fleets layer in an mDVR for multi-channel recording and a black-box recorder to preserve footage through any incident.

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Built for the realities of delivery routes.

Problem

Backing into docks, alleys, and tight delivery spaces

Loading docks, alley pickups, and customer driveways are where most box truck incidents happen. Mirror-based backing in tight spaces is unreliable, and every miss is a claim — bent doors, hit bollards, scraped fences, and the occasional injury.

Solution

Rear camera for confident dock and alley backing

A rear camera mounted at the top center of the cargo box gives the driver a real-time view of every backing maneuver — docks, alleys, customer drives, and tight commercial lots. Continuous recording means backing incidents have HD evidence from the exact angle that matters.

Problem

Side blind spots in neighborhoods and city traffic

Curbside parking, kids on bikes, double-parked cars, and crowded city lanes all sit inside the side blind spots of a box truck. Side cameras close the gap that mirrors leave open during lane changes, right turns, and curbside pull-ins.

Solution

Side cameras for neighborhood and curbside visibility

Left- and right-side cameras cover the blind spots mirrors miss on lane changes, right turns, and curbside pull-ins. The right-side feed is the highest-priority view in residential and city delivery — that's where pedestrians, cyclists, and parked vehicles live.

Problem

Customer complaints and property damage claims

"The driver damaged my fence." "The package was left in the wrong spot." "The driver was rude." Without video, those disputes usually resolve against the fleet. HD route and delivery footage shuts most of them down before they escalate.

Solution

HD route + delivery video for customer and property disputes

The road-facing camera captures every mile of every route. When a customer claims property damage, a wrong-address drop, or a rude interaction, the video resolves the dispute fast — and most disputes go away the moment footage is offered.

Problem

Route verification and stop-level accountability

Operations needs to know what happened at a specific stop — and find the clip without scrubbing eight hours of recording. GPS-linked playback ties video to route history so a stop becomes a search, not a hunt.

Solution

GPS-linked footage for route + stop review

Every clip is tied to GPS location, route, and timestamp. Dispatch can search a stop, replay a specific moment, and retrieve footage from the cloud without pulling the vehicle in — turning route review and incident lookup into minutes instead of hours.

Most delivery fleets start with this system.

Recommended for box trucks

Vision

Front + rear (most common starting point)

Front road-facing plus rear-mounted backing camera — the configuration that addresses the highest-frequency safety event on a box truck (dock and alley backing) while capturing HD route video for customer and property disputes. Most fleets standardize on this across their inventory.

Typical configuration

Front road-facing + rear-mounted backing camera with in-cab monitor

Includes

skEYElite unit · Rear camera · Cloud platform · Mobile app · HD video evidence access

Pricing

$69/mo per vehicle · From $269 + $129 hardware (or main hardware free with 5-year agreement)

When the full system is more than you need

When the full system is more than you need.

Guardian

For larger delivery fleets with insurance pressure or carriers requiring documented driver safety. Adds AI-based fatigue, distraction, and following-distance alerts in the cab.

Best when: High-mileage last-mile or courier operations where driver coaching and AI incident detection matter as much as backing visibility.

See Guardian

Complete

For multi-truck delivery operations that want rear, both sides, in-cab monitor, and the multi-channel mDVR on the same vehicle — the full layout shown above.

Best when: Beverage, foodservice, big-box delivery, and route fleets that need every angle covered with full DVR recording.

See Complete

Box truck camera systems, answered.

Build your box truck camera system.

Tell us about your fleet, your routes, and your dock environments. We'll spec a configuration tailored to your delivery operation and quote it transparently.