Security & Cameras

Motion Sensors and False Alarms: Placement Tricks That Actually Help

False alarms usually come down to bad sensor placement. Learn where to mount motion detectors to catch real events and ignore pets, vents, and sun.

Motion sensor mounted in a corner
Photograph via Unsplash

Nothing sours you on a security system faster than a phone that buzzes at 3 a.m. because a heating vent kicked on. After years of installing and troubleshooting motion sensors in real homes, I can tell you that the overwhelming majority of false alarms have nothing to do with a faulty detector. They come from where the thing is mounted and what it happens to be pointing at. Fix the placement and you fix most of the problem.

How a Motion Sensor Actually Sees the Room#

Almost every consumer motion detector is a passive infrared (PIR) sensor. It does not send out a beam or "watch" the room like a camera. Instead, it reads the infrared heat radiating off objects and looks for that heat pattern moving across its field of view. The lens on the front is divided into a fan of invisible zones, and the sensor triggers when a warm body passes from one zone into the next.

That single fact explains nearly everything about good placement:

  • A person walking across the detector's face crosses many zones quickly, so detection is fast and reliable.
  • A person walking straight toward the sensor stays inside the same zone much longer, so detection is slow and sometimes missed entirely.
  • Anything that makes the heat pattern of the whole room change suddenly, like sunlight sweeping across a floor or a blast of warm air, can look like a moving warm body even though nothing walked by.

Once you internalize "crossing motion good, approaching motion weak, changing heat bad," you stop guessing and start placing sensors on purpose.

Mount So Movement Crosses the Beam#

The most common mistake I see is a sensor aimed straight down a hallway or right at a doorway, expecting to catch someone the instant they enter. It feels intuitive and it is exactly backwards.

Instead, mount the detector so an intruder's most likely path cuts across its field of view rather than marching toward it.

  • In a hallway, put the sensor high on a wall at one end but angle it slightly so people walk through the beam pattern, not along it. Even a modest angle helps.
  • In a living room or open area, aim it so anyone moving between the entry point and the valuables has to walk laterally past the lens.
  • For a corner install, you get the widest natural spread because the fan of zones covers two walls' worth of approach angles.

Height and corners#

Standard mounting height is roughly 7 to 8 feet, in a corner, angled slightly downward. Corners are the workhorse position for a reason: a 90-degree corner lets a single detector cover most of a rectangular room, and the geometry naturally turns approaching intruders into crossing ones as they move through the space.

Avoid mounting too high. Above about 8 feet the detection zones spread so far apart near the floor that a person can walk between them, especially small movements. Too low, and pets or furniture block the view.

Keep Detectors Away from Heat and Light#

Remember that a PIR sensor is really a rapid-change heat detector. Anything that swings the temperature in its field of view quickly can trip it. When I get called out for "random" alarms with no one home, this is where I look first.

Keep sensors away from:

  • HVAC vents and registers. A gust of hot or cold air moving across the zones mimics a moving body. This is the number one false-alarm culprit I find. Never mount a sensor where it stares at a ceiling vent or a floor register.
  • Direct sunlight and windows. Sun creeping across the floor, or moving cloud shadows, produces slow but real heat changes. Reflections and headlights through a window at night cause the same trouble.
  • Radiators, space heaters, fireplaces, and wood stoves. Obvious heat sources, and their warm-up cycles are exactly the kind of change PIR reacts to.
  • Kitchens and near ovens or stovetops. The heat and steam make kitchens a rough environment for reliable motion sensing.
  • Exterior walls in direct afternoon sun, which can radiate enough warmth as they heat up to matter for very sensitive units.

The line-of-sight trap#

One caveat worth naming: PIR does not see through glass or solid objects, but it does react to what is on its side of them. A sensor will not detect motion outside a closed window, yet it will happily false-trigger on sunlight coming through that window and landing on the floor in front of it. People get this backwards all the time.

Dealing with Pets Without Going Blind#

Pets are the other big source of nuisance triggers, and the fix depends on the animal.

  1. Use a pet-immune sensor. Many detectors are rated to ignore animals under a certain weight, commonly around 40 pounds, sometimes higher. They work by ignoring warm masses that are low to the ground and small relative to a standing human. They genuinely help, but they are not magic.
  2. Mind the vertical angle. Pet immunity assumes the animal stays near the floor. If your cat climbs the back of the couch or the dog jumps onto the bed, it rises into the human-detection zones and trips the alarm. Aim the sensor's lower zones above the furniture your pet loves.
  3. Consider the layout of pet paths. A cat tree, a windowsill perch, or a staircase can lift a small animal right into the detection band. Place sensors so those elevated spots fall outside the field of view.
  4. Big dogs are hard. A large dog reads to the sensor much like a crouching person. In homes with big animals, I often lean on door and window contact sensors for the perimeter and use motion detection more sparingly indoors, or point interior sensors at zones the dog cannot reach.

There is an honest trade-off here. The more aggressively you tune a sensor to ignore pets, the more you risk missing a real intruder who crawls or moves low. Perimeter contacts plus glass-break sensors take pressure off the motion detectors so you do not have to push their sensitivity to a fragile extreme.

Tune Sensitivity and Test Every Zone#

Installation is not finished when the sensor is on the wall. Most decent detectors, wired or wireless, give you some adjustment, and the good ones let you set it in the app or on the panel.

  • Sensitivity controls how much heat change is needed to trigger. Lower it in rooms with vents or sun you could not fully avoid; raise it in a stable interior room where you want reliable catches.
  • Pulse count, on units that offer it, requires the sensor to see motion across two or more zones before it alarms. Higher pulse count means fewer false triggers but slightly slower detection. It is a great setting for reducing nuisance trips.
  • LED walk-test mode is your best friend. Enable it, then walk the room slowly along every path an intruder might take. Watch for the LED to light. This is how you find the dead spots and the over-eager spots before an alarm does it for you.

Do the walk test properly#

When I commission a system, I walk the room three ways: across the sensor, toward it, and along the room's natural traffic path. If the detector only lights up when I move across it, I adjust the aim so real entry paths cross the beam too. Then I sit still for a few minutes and watch whether vents, sun, or the furnace cycling set it off on their own. Both halves matter: it has to catch what it should and ignore what it should not.

Wireless Placement Realities#

If you are running wireless sensors, placement has a second constraint beyond line of sight: signal. A detector tucked in a far corner behind ductwork or inside a metal-framed room may sense motion perfectly and still fail to report it reliably.

  • Keep sensors within reasonable range of the hub or a repeater, and account for walls and floors between them.
  • Check the battery life expectations and put reminders in your calendar. A dying battery can cause erratic behavior that looks like false alarms.
  • After mounting, trigger the sensor and confirm the hub logs the event promptly. A slow or dropped report is a placement problem, not a bad sensor.

A Simple Placement Checklist#

Before you screw anything to the wall, walk through this:

  • Mounted 7 to 8 feet high, ideally in a corner, angled slightly down.
  • Aimed so likely intruder paths cross the field of view.
  • No vents, registers, radiators, or heaters in the field of view.
  • No windows or direct sun landing in front of the lens.
  • Pet perches, cat trees, and stair landings kept out of the detection band.
  • Pet-immune model chosen if animals share the space.
  • Sensitivity and pulse count set for the room, not left at default.
  • Walk-tested across, toward, and along the room, then watched at rest.

The Bottom Line#

Motion sensors are not temperamental by nature. When they cry wolf, they are almost always reacting to something real in their field of view that simply is not a burglar: a vent breathing, sun moving, a cat climbing. Give the sensor a stable view, aim it so genuine threats cross its beam, keep heat and light sources out of frame, and spend the ten minutes to walk-test and tune it. Do that, and your system goes back to doing its one job, telling you when something is actually wrong, and staying quiet when it is not.

Amara Osei
Written by
Amara Osei

Amara covers cameras, locks and sensors with a healthy respect for privacy — she reads the data policies so you don't have to. A former IT support lead, she values setups that are secure by default and simple enough that everyone in the house will use them.

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