Why Accuracy Matters

The most overlooked aspect of indoor gunfire detection accuracy is precision reporting. A shooter on the 28th floor versus the 5th floor changes everything. Only rigorously tested, SAFETY Act-approved systems reliably deliver floor-level and corner-of-the-building accuracy—even from a far distance. In stadiums, where multi-level or multi-floor structures dominate the landscape, this vertical certainty prevents responders from searching the wrong building or floor, turning potential tragedies into rapid neutralizations.

Learning more about indoor gunfire detection for stadiums

Join the growing number of stadium stakeholders attending monthly virtual briefings on next-generation indoor gunfire detection. These sessions feature law-enforcement end-users, DHS evaluators, and venue operators who share unfiltered lessons learned—plus live Q&A on integrating accurate systems into stadium’s existing security ecosystem without disruption.

How to choose the right indoor gunfire detection for stadiums

When evaluating indoor gunfire detection providers for your venue, demand proof of reporting accuracy. For example, ask for test data showing the system can distinguish the 12th floor from the 14th during live-fire trials. Only a handful of SAFETY Act-certified platforms have passed these DHS-evaluated vertical tests—critical for a skyline of mixed-use towers.

Other considerations for indoor gunfire detection in stadiums

Beyond accuracy, stadium decision-makers must consider liability exposure. Only DHS SAFETY Act-covered indoor gunfire detection provides statutory caps or elimination of third-party claims following an attack. Without this protection, even the most accurate system leaves venues like schools and businesses vulnerable to lawsuits claiming the technology “should have done more.”

Learn More about SAFETY Act-approved indoor gunfire detection