About Flock in Miami
Miami-Dade County operates Flock cameras primarily on mainland corridors and suburban roads. Florida has no ALPR oversight legislation, giving agencies complete discretion over data retention and access. The combination of police-operated cameras and HOA networks in Coral Gables, Doral, and Aventura creates significant coverage despite the C grade.
Primary corridors: I-95, SR-836, Biscayne Blvd, US-1, Coral Way, Palmetto Expressway.
Cameras are deployed by a mix of the local police department, county sheriff, and private homeowners associations — all connected to the same law enforcement database. Any officer at any of the 3,000+ agencies on Flock's network can query vehicle movement history with no warrant.
Local News & Stories
Miami-Dade Police Expand Flock Network — No Public Oversight Process
Miami-Dade Police expanded their Flock network in 2025 without a formal public hearing or oversight process. Florida law requires no community approval for ALPR deployments, making Miami one of the least regulated major camera networks in the country.
Coral Gables and Doral Deploy HOA-Integrated Flock Networks
Upscale Miami suburbs Coral Gables and Doral integrated Flock cameras into their residential HOA infrastructure, creating dense coverage in wealthy neighborhoods while lower-income communities on the mainland received less monitoring — raising equity concerns from privacy advocates.
Known Camera Corridors
These corridors have the highest confirmed or estimated camera density in the Miami area:
- I-95 North-South corridor
- Biscayne Boulevard
- Palmetto Expressway
- Coral Gables/Doral residential networks
Camera locations are estimated based on crowdsourced data from DeFlock and community reports. See the full map for individual camera positions.
What Flock Cameras Collect in Miami
Every Flock camera in Miami captures:
- Your license plate number and state
- Vehicle make, model, color, and body type
- Distinguishing features — bumper stickers, roof racks, window stickers, body damage
- Direction of travel and exact timestamp
- GPS coordinates of the camera location
- A photograph of your vehicle
This data is stored for 30+ days and is instantly accessible to over 3,000 law enforcement agencies nationwide — including agencies in other states.
Is It Legal to Avoid These Cameras?
Yes, completely legal. You have an absolute right to choose which roads you drive on. There is no law in Florida — or any other state — that prohibits planning your route to avoid surveillance cameras. UnFlocked's privacy routing feature helps you exercise this right.
See every camera in Miami
Open the full map to see individual camera locations, click any camera for details, and plan a route that avoids them.
Open Miami Camera Map →