Paxton Entry Video Intercom
Paxton Entry provides video calling and controlled door release at visitor entrances and can operate standalone or alongside Net2 or Paxton10.
Choose the operating mode before selecting hardware
The same entrance can require very different components depending on whether calls remain local, users are managed through Net2, or Entry is part of a Paxton10 environment.
Panels, monitors and control components
The exterior panel is the visitor’s point of interaction and must be selected for mounting, weather exposure, vandal resistance, accessibility, camera view and credential needs. Interior monitors should be placed where authorized staff can reliably answer calls without exposing sensitive video or allowing casual door release.
The required control unit and network connections depend on the selected operating mode. Power, Ethernet, switch capacity and pathway design should be confirmed before walls are closed. The electric lock and egress hardware remain separate parts of the door opening and require their own power and life-safety coordination.
- Surface or flush panel mounting
- Standard, premium or audio answering stations where appropriate
- Mode-specific control and network components
- Door release, sensing, power and egress hardware
Standalone, Net2 and Paxton10 operation
Standalone Entry can be appropriate for a small, self-contained visitor entrance. Net2 integration is useful when the organization wants centralized people, credentials, access levels and reporting. Paxton10 integration is appropriate when Entry calls, doors and video are part of the broader Paxton10 operating model.
The operating choice affects administration, hardware, training, remote access and future growth. Confirm whether the client expects one receptionist, a concierge function, multiple buildings, mobile answering, scheduled call routing or after-hours escalation before selecting equipment.
- Number of entrances and answering locations
- Central credential and event-management requirement
- Remote or mobile answering expectations
- Future expansion to additional doors or sites
| Mode | Best fit | Design emphasis |
|---|---|---|
| Standalone | Simple local visitor entry | Local programming, panel, monitor and release hardware |
| With Net2 | Centralized access administration | Net2 server, controller, users and event workflow |
| With Paxton10 | Unified access and video operations | Paxton10 server, controllers, credentials and remote workflow |
Entrance design and user experience
A clear camera view depends on mounting height, approach direction, sun position, nighttime lighting and how close a visitor stands to the panel. Audio quality depends on ambient noise, wind, traffic and reverberation. Accessibility considerations may affect mounting, signage, call feedback and door-release timing.
Call routing should reflect real staffing. A system that rings an unattended desk does not improve entrance control. Define who answers during normal hours, after hours and during an emergency; how identity is verified; how deliveries are handled; and when a visitor should be denied or redirected.
- Day and night field-of-view review
- Noise and weather conditions
- Accessibility and signage
- Normal, after-hours and exception workflows
Commissioning and maintenance
Commissioning should test calling, two-way audio, video, monitor selection, mobile answering where enabled, credential reading, door release, door position, call history and failure behavior. Tests should be repeated under realistic lighting and noise conditions instead of only at a quiet workbench.
Ongoing service includes cleaning the panel, checking seals and mounts, verifying audio and camera performance, testing release hardware and reviewing official software guidance. Any update should be planned with compatibility and rollback in mind.
- Visitor-call acceptance testing
- Door-release and door-state validation
- Lighting, audio and network checks
- Documented support and update path
How we plan and deliver the work
The final design depends on site conditions, existing systems, client policies and the selected manufacturer or platform.
Observe
Map visitor approaches, staffing, lighting, noise and door hardware.
Design
Choose the operating mode, panels, answering endpoints and release workflow.
Test
Validate calls, video, audio, credentials, releases and exception behavior.
Train
Document normal, after-hours and denied-entry procedures.
Information to gather before design
Good decisions are easier when the project team starts with complete operational and technical information. The following items help reduce assumptions, change orders and avoidable return visits.
- Entrance count and visitor volume
- Panel mounting and environmental conditions
- Answering locations and staffing schedule
- Standalone, Net2 or Paxton10 operating preference
- Door lock, egress and accessibility requirements
Frequently asked questions
These are common planning questions. A site-specific answer should be confirmed during discovery and design.
Can Paxton Entry operate without Net2 or Paxton10?
Yes. Paxton describes a standalone operating mode for simpler installations.
Can Entry use an existing network?
Entry is IP-based, but the existing network still needs adequate switching, addressing, PoE or power, cybersecurity policy and support ownership.
Does Entry include the electric lock?
No. The complete opening may require separate locking, power, request-to-exit, sensing and life-safety hardware.
Can visitors be answered remotely?
Supported app workflows may be available depending on the system mode, licensing and current Paxton requirements. Confirm the current manufacturer guidance during design.
Manufacturer software, firmware and technical files remain on the manufacturer’s official website. We do not mirror firmware files locally.
Discuss a commercial security project
Tell us about the doors, buildings, users, existing equipment, operational requirements and desired completion date. We will help organize the right discovery and design conversation.