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Public Safety and Security Market (By Solution: Biometric Security & Authentication System, Backup & Recovery System, C2/C4isr System, Critical Communication Network, Cybersecurity, Emergency & Disaster Management, Public Address & General Alarm, Surveillance System, Screening & Scanning System; By Service: Managed Services, Managed security services, Others; By Deployment Mode: Cloud, On-Premises; By Software Type: Record Management Software, Investigation Management, Others; By Application: Emergency Services, Critical Infrastructure Security, Homeland Security, Logistics & Transportation Systems, Others) - Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends, Regional Analysis and Forecast 2025 to 2034

Public Safety and Security Market Size and Growth 2025 to 2034

The global public safety and security market size was estimated at USD 569.61 billion in 2024 and is expected to hit around USD 1,603.36 billion by 2034, growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 11.32% over the forecast period from 2025 to 2034. The public safety and security market is expected to grow at a significant rate owing to rising threats of terrorism, increasing cyberattacks, and the growing need for surveillance in urban and critical infrastructure environments. Governments worldwide are investing heavily in advanced technologies such as AI-powered surveillance, emergency communication systems, and predictive analytics. Additionally, smart city initiatives and stringent public safety regulations are accelerating the adoption of integrated security and emergency response systems.

Public Safety and Security Market Size 2025 to 2034

The public safety and security market focuses on the integration of modern technologies such as artificial intelligence, the internet of things (IoT), big data, and cloud computing to improve responder efficiency, threat detection, and the safeguarding of essential infrastructure. The rapid evolution of threats, including terrorism, cyberattacks, natural disasters, and public health crises, requires integrated systems that offer real-time monitoring, smarter analytics, and automated decision-making capabilities. These systems are crucial for private and public entities implementing advanced surveillance systems with smart access control and communicative networks, fueled by urbanization and the growth of smart cities. This market is changing as a result of technological advancements, partnerships with security firms, the regulation of data rights, AI governance, and increasing reliance on digital infrastructure, which requires the integration of cyber and physical security.

Public Safety and Security Market Report Highlights

  • By Region, North America has accounted highest revenue share of around 38.5% in 2024.
  • By Solution, the critical communication network segment has recorded revenue share of around 38.2% in 2024 due to its crucial role in real-time coordination, reliable emergency response, and disaster management communications.
  • By Application, the homeland security segment has recorded 45.6% market share in 2024 due to rising geopolitical tensions, counter-terrorism efforts, and increased investment in border surveillance and public safety infrastructure.
  • By Service, the managed security services segment has recorded 37.6% market share in 2024, due to the growing need for continuous threat monitoring, risk mitigation, and cost-effective outsourced security operations.
  • By Deployment Mode, the cloud segment has recorded 66.6% market share in 2024, due to scalability, reduced infrastructure costs, remote access capabilities, and enhanced data analytics for public safety solutions.
  • By Software Type, the record management software has recorded 56.6% market share in 2024, due to its efficiency in tracking, storing, and analyzing criminal records, incident reports, and legal evidence for law enforcement.

Public Safety and Security Market Growth Factors

  • Increasing urbanization and smart city expansion: With the shift in focus to urban areas and the development of a smart city, municipalities have started to adopt smart cameras with artificial intelligence and predictive policing for safety management systems (AI smart cameras), as well as for handling overcrowded infrastructure and dense population. With an increase in smart city grants, funding for sensor networks and emergency communications under DOE and DHS initiatives also experienced a 15% increase in 2023. The Department of Home Security (DHS) 2024 Artificial Intelligence Roadmap noted 39 pilot projects with safety impacts, of which 28 had already been implemented. Smart cities preliminary trials indicated an increase in automation technology efficiency by 35% and a reduction in fatal incidents by 8-10%. These findings imply that the need for automated safety technology is a result of urbanization, encouraged by federal government policy. Integration from above provides assurance that implementation will adhere to privacy laws and civil rights, bolstering constitutional compliance. Although this becomes less important, it remains vital in stimulating growth in the sector.
  • Use of AI and ML technology for proactive defense: An existing machine learning based surveillance and cyber-defence systems equate to 97% accuracy and successfully blocks about 85% of cyber-attacks made on the government’s network systems. The Department of Homeland Security ('DHS) initiated AI projects aimed at detection of fentanyl trafficking and the protection of critical infrastructure which, commenced in 2023, indicating strong federal support. The AI Incident Reporting and Security Enhancement Act of 2024 proposes directing NIST to add vulnerabilities of AI systems to its national repository of critical infrastructure threats. During trial periods, law enforcement agencies applying data-driven analytics reported a 30-40% reduction in crime coupled with 20-35% faster response times. Such trends, coupled with these statistically validated outcomes, prove the importance of machine learning driven tools to accelerate growth in the public safety sector.
  • Increased awareness and adoption of personal and community safety technologies: The institutional awareness of DHS is evidenced in the formation of an AI Governance Board along with other safety public policy initiatives that seek to regulate the use of public safety technology. An ACLU report of April 2025 expressed greater concern towards the use of AI video surveillance by government bodies, urging jurisdictions to adopt more stringent laws on privacy. There was almost 25% increase in the use of public safety apps by state-sponsored agencies between the years 2023 to 2025. In response to violence in schools, some districts deployed over 400 AI-powered cameras during the 2024-25 academic year. Transparency and effectiveness are now at the forefront when it comes to community demand for personal safety tools driven by privacy concerns.
  • Technological progress in biometrics and facial recognition: U.S. police departments fully adopted biometric and/or facial recognition technologies by over 84% in 2024. The 2024 face recognition report by DHS required supervision and user opt-out options, which are necessary for civil liberties. Legislative activity in California and Illinois has resulted in a 30% rise of compliance audits for biometric systems in the year 2023. These documents are legitimizing the use of biometrics on a wide scale in the areas of crime prevention, access control, and public safety. Legal frameworks have encouraged responsible practices, which have enabled the growth of systems that now form the basis of automated identification of citizens and the subsequent counteraction to identified threats.
  • The Evolution of 5G Improving Live Communication: The 5th generation (5G) networks are being rolled out and with them comes the capabilities for ultra-fast, high-bandwidth Artificial Intelligence (AI) powered public safety systems. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has its own AI Roadmap which underlines its plans of leveraging 5G for live surveillance and the deployment of Generative AI (GenAI) chatbots to assist emergency responders. A pilot program in Michigan is scheduled for 2024 and will use real-time video over 5G, which has been shown to decrease incident detection by 35% during its trial phase. In 2023, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) allocated nearly $0.2 billion for 5G public safety projects, which expedited their implementation. All these advancements clearly show that 5G is set to act as an underlying infrastructure platform for public safety systems as opposed to just improved connectivity.
  • Convergence of cyber and physical security systems: The public safety industry is now converging cybersecurity with physical monitoring systems into a single unified system. An AI-driven defense surveillance system for monitoring cyberattacks and drone-initiated physical threats has been placed on the agenda of the 2024 DHS task force. According to the DHS, 70 percent of critical infrastructure systems within the United States utilize AI-enhanced cybersecurity features. The proposed AI Incident Reporting Act of 2024 mandates reporting on threats and vulnerabilities concerning cyber systems and AI-controlled physical systems. This sort of integration is exactly how DHS defines ‘AI Safety and Security.’ This also illustrates the trend towards legal and regulatory frameworks moving towards more consolidated, multi-faceted resilience to cross-domain threats.
  • The ethics of artificial intelligence (AI) and compliance with data privacy regulations is critical: Surveillance systems have been categorized as high risk under the EU’s AI Act, which becomes effective in August 2024. It will mandate transparency, bias mitigation, and auditing.  In March 2024, the U.S. OMB’s M-24-10 memo newly directed federal agencies to account for AI applications and to enforce ethical risk management, with 39 applications assessed for safety by the end of the year. Biometric privacy laws in California and Illinois now require companies to handle such data under strict regulatory frameworks. We see that legally required ethical AI practices span multiple jurisdictions. This is now driving investment in systems that are privacy-compliant from the start and framing compliance as a fundamental element to be embraced for market integration.

Report Scope

Area of Focus Details
Market Size in 2025 USD 631.72 Billion 
Expected Market Size in 2034 USD 1,603.36 Billion
Projected Market CAGR 2025 to 2034 11.32%
Dominant Area North America
Fastest Growing Area Asia-Pacific
Key Segnments Solution, Service, Deployment Mode, Software Type, Application, Region
Key Companies Motorola Solutions, Inc., Cisco Systems, Inc., Honeywell International Inc., NEC Corporation, Thales, IBM, Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd., Tyco (Johnson Controls), General Dynamics Corporation, Siemens

Public Safety and Security Market Dynamics

Market Drivers

  • Information integration for swift decision-making: AI-driven analyses within comprehensive smart city initiatives have augmented responsiveness to emergency situations by more than thirty-five percent, concurrently decreasing fatality rates by nearly ten percent. The 2024 AI roadmap from DHS emphasized the deployment of live-stream chatbots and real video feeds to enhance field operations. In-law enforcement, adoption of in-car and body cameras increased to approximately 55% by 2024, enhancing commanders’ situational awareness. The proposed AI Incident Reporting Act aims to improve coordination through nationwide AI-incident visibility. These data integration efforts are driving fast, informed interventions - making the case for deeper deployment in public safety responses.
  • Grants and funding within the public sector regarding safety enhancements: Federal funding, encompassing the DHS GenAI pilots, NTIA 5G grants, and compliance funding under M-24-10, has increased significantly from 2023 through early 2024 for smart city and AI-enabled public safety initiatives. Moreover, the funding stemming from the AI Incident Reporting Act (H.R. 9720) also permits AI oversight concerning vulnerability assessments by NIST, thus broadening governmental control over AI. Utah and New York have enacted legislative frameworks sponsoring AI R&D and public sector financing in 2023 and 2024. These factors provide oversight and funding alongside expanding business opportunities and reducing costs of doing business for municipalities and private vendors.
  • Federal policy action taken to improve safety measures: AI technologies in public safety applications have designated authority boundaries. The M-24-10 Memorandum and DHS governance over facial recognition technology serve both as federal AI public safety milestones. The 2024 AI Incident Reporting and Security Enhancement Act imposes national vulnerability disclosure requirements. The EU AI Act (August 2024) introduces a requirement that high-risk surveillance systems obtain regulatory approval prior to their deployment. States California and Illinois now expect bias audits and external supervision. This creates a requirement that public safety AI not only serves to augment security but also must respect human rights and transparency, thus spurring innovation and adoption with well-defined requirements.

Market Restraints

  • Disparate Regulatory Frameworks: The U.S. lacks a comprehensive law on biometrics; only California, Illinois, and New York City Biometric regulations such as Local Law 144 from July 2023 are in place. Regulations like M-24-10 remain confined to federal agencies, leaving local entities unregulated. The splintered infrastructure within the regions of the country increases the compliance burden for suppliers which increases costs and hampers procurement processes. InterFirm organizational meetings with different legal frameworks reduces the efficiency of AI safety solutions.  
  • Breached systems have exposed personally identifiable information (PII): Even though 40% of public systems were breached in 2024 because of misconfigured AI interfaces, 78% of critical infrastructure sectors are using AI for cybersecurity. The AI Incident Reporting Act of 2024 aimed to address tracking system vulnerabilities, but gaps remain. An ACLU FOIA request found instances of agency-enabled AI having unchecked access to personal records, indicating a substantial problem. These cyber-physical systems create systemic vulnerabilities that could erode public trust and adoption in the absence of robust security frameworks.
  • Cumbersome public procurement procedures: The implementation of new AI-based systems must now adhere to OMB M-24-10’s risk frameworks (effective Dec 2024), EU high-risk AI certifications (Aug 2024), and DHS/NTIA grant stipulations on ethical AI. Compliance with these multi-tiered frameworks increases procurement timelines to between nine and fourteen months. Outdated technology becomes further outpaced as agile agency responsiveness is stifled by evolving market needs, fast-maturing technology, and burdensome review and audit clearances.

Market Opportunities

  • Safety and alert applications for mobile devices: DHS intends to create mobile emergency chatbots and citizen-reporting functionalities as part of the GenAI 2024 initiative. The preliminary use in Colorado and Michigan showed over 40% increases in usage over the year. There was a 20% increase in federal funding in 2023 for communication systems that provided real-time alerts. These applications enable users to report incidents, receive live updates of potential threats, and communicate with AI-driven responders in a secure manner. They merge public safety systems with civic engagement and facilitate community-driven multi-layered safety services.
  • Growth of PSaaS: The addition of ALPR, gunshot detection, and drone services to over 5000 US communities by Flock Safety is accelerating growth in the PSaaS market. Flock became the first to market with drone-as-first-responder services under a PSA-as-a-Service model after acquiring Aerodome in October 2024. Federal procurement policy now allows the use of PSaaS funded by DHS. Innovative legal frameworks are provided by Norfolk’s 2024 surveillance lawsuit which is forcing service providers to integrate compliance, privacy, and oversight into design. For municipalities, PSaaS offer contemporary public safety services that are easily scalable and affordable with no capital expenditure.
  • Deployment of Digital Identity and Biometric Facial Recognition Technology at Borders: By 2024, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) expanded its face-recognition pilot project to cover border control for preventing illegal crossings. Preliminary data indicates a 12% reduction in illegal crossing attempts in the trial areas. OMB M-24-10 has highlighted issues related to risk management concerning AI-integrated biometric systems, whereas the AI Bill of Rights proposes optionality for travelers. State laws governing biometrics guarantee some level of transparency. These systems have some legal framework that increases operational safety and expedites processing. Thus, biometrics border control systems are a dual enhancement to national security and public trust.
  • Public–private partnerships for infrastructure safety: Starting July 2023, Google, Microsoft and other prominent technology companies entered into partnerships with government agencies for the testing of public safety solutions. The AI task force by DHS in collaboration with the industry from April 2023 to August 2024 worked on fentanyl trafficking and CBRN threats. In 2024, NTIA funded private-operated emergency communication networks under grant programs. This model synergizes innovation from the private sector while adhering to public accountability, thus advancing the development of resilient safety ecosystems at scale.

Market Challenges

  • DHS AI Corps and The Skills Gaps In AI and Cybersecurity: The 2024 report by the DHS on AI and cybersecurity highlights the understaffing issue which facilitated the creation of DHS AI Corps that has only hired 31 specialists as of October 2024. Regional offices continue to face challenges in filling positions necessary for the secure functioning of systems, thereby impeding operational cybersecurity. According to NTIA, academic funding is slow and lags two years behind the deployment of technology. The M-24-10 policy, which mandates staff supervision for AI operations, creates additional headroom investment constraints for the public sector and heightens risks associated with inadequate system resource staffing.  
  • Public Acceptance of Self-Regulating Safety Systems: Unchecked video surveillance sparked public concerns, which the ACLU has reported on in April 2025. Privacy-centric resistance is demonstrated through the Norfolk v. Flock lawsuit (2024) and Seattle’s AI-reporting policy demand. AI in school raised debates over pupils’ rights, participation, and fairness. Compliance alone is not sufficient to gain the trust of the community. Trust can be achieved through transparent governance which includes reporting dialogues, ethics-based frameworks, and audits performed by uninterested third parties that respect privacy.
  • Navigating through bureaucracy in procurement processes, alongside legal constraints, is complicated in relation to M-24-10 which has mandated federal AI compliance by the close of 2024. Similarly, EU’s AI Act compliance became necessary in August 2024. There also have been changes to grant applications requiring ethical and security plans to be detailed thoroughly. The added varying state biometric laws contribute to the legal ambiguity. In combination, these factors stretch procurement timelines beyond a year. For vendors and agencies, balancing ambition with procedural expectations remains the technological friction point slowing the pace of innovation.
  • Safeguarding systems from external disruptions: Systems powered by AI are susceptible to cyber-physical attacks and other forms of disruption. The AI Incident Reporting Act of 2024 and data exposes by ACLU show real threats to unsupervised AI access. Due to constitutional concerns the Norfolk drone surveillance trial was suspended in 2024. Ensuring redundancy and legal compliance is critical to preserving system resilience and avoiding gaps in public safety service.

Public Safety and Security Market Segmental Analysis

Solution Analysis

Biometric Security & Authentication System: As a form of authentication, biometrics employs the face, fingerprint, iris, or voice of an individual to authenticate identity for legal processes. Between September and November 2024, DHS‐OBIM posted RFIs for vendors to propose methods of migrating IDENT's over 260 million records to HART’s microservices architecture, emphasizing modern data management and cloud scalability. An August 2024 PIA lessened foreign data-sharing partnerships and enhanced opt-out and retention protocols. GAO audits suggest privacy-preserving system configuration and scheduling optimizations. These actions illustrate the modernization of biometics undertaken by the federal government with privacy and legal frameworks.

Critical Communication Network: The critical communication networks dominated the market. Critical communication networks provide encrypted, interoperative voice and data systems to first responders as per government specifications, such as P25. By late 2024, 83 countries had adopted Project 25 compliant radios under DHS/CISA and TIA guidance. In May 2024, NSPACs’ pilot demonstrated mission-critical field team coordination via 5G, permitting real-time video streams to the field. Later that year, the BLM was awarded a $0.0027 billion contract from the federal government for the installation of satellite-backed radios for wildfire response. Government contracting and technical pilot projects reinforce the shift to legally mandated resilient critical communications.

C2/C4ISR System: The C2/C4ISR systems provide lawful centralized situational oversight by integrating command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance. In 2024, ISR pilots operating drones and radar systems funded by the DHS supported interagency cooperation under legal MOUs in both civilian and military spheres. Additionally, OMB authorized funding for secure information-sharing networks to be issued under CISA, which had previously been operationalized with respect to national security protocols. The fusion of real-time analytics with sensor data streamlining cross-agency fusion continues to enhance operational oversight while adhering to legal security requirements.

Surveillance System: Surveillance systems incorporate video apparatus and AI-driven analytic tools to watch over certain areas while remaining compliant with privacy and civil rights regulations. The DHS Biometric Technology Report of 2024 set forth mandates concerning accuracy parameters and oversight for facial-recognition technology in public spaces. Advocacy led by the ACLU from 2023 to 2024 resulted in a 30 percent increase to state-level audits of camera installations ensuring compliance with legal standards. ITAR regulations now require vendors to certify the AI systems employed for public surveillance. These changes highlight the increasing capabilities of AI surveillance technologies under stringent legal oversight.

Screening & Scanning System: As directed by the TSA and DHS, checkpoint screening biometrics and X-ray systems scan individuals and, where applicable, their belongings. DHS was scheduled to audit TSA’s implementation of biometric ID and facial recognition systems at major airports in mid-2024 to assess legal compliance. By late 2024, TSA had awarded contracts for next-gen multimodal scanners meeting DHS and IEC data protection standards. These advancements are fortified within federally mandated frameworks and supervised constructions augment threat detection capabilities in transportation hubs.

Emergency & Disaster Management: The emergency and disaster management segment is expected to experience the fastest CAGR during the forecast period. Under FEMA and DHS authorities, emergency and disaster management systems function within multi-agency coordination frameworks. In November 2023, DHS awarded a contract worth $0.0031 billion to the University of Illinois for ISO 17025 NG911 interoperability testing. In the latter part of 2024, the BLM received funds to deploy satellite-radio kits for cross-jurisdictional wildfire response improvement. These legally structured investments bolster systematized, transparent enhancements in crisis coordination and responsiveness.

Cybersecurity: Cybersecurity frameworks safeguard the digital public safety critical infrastructure as per CISA and NIST guidelines. With a focus on public sector employees, NIST sponsored $300 million in workforce development grants in cybersecurity in 2024. Organizational resilience policies were updated with NIST’s Cybersecurity Framework 2.0, released in 2024. CISA published an AI-cybersecurity playbook for the protection of AI-enabled systems in 2025. These laws and regulations, combined with recent advancements, strengthen the cyber posture for public safety.

Public Address and General Alarm: Public address and general alarms transmit emergency messages in compliance with NFPA and OSHA legal requirements. Between 2023 and 2025, FEMA’s Integrated Public Alert and Warning System CAP-based architecture was enhanced to enable NG911 and wireless alerts, which will be operational across all federal channels by April 2025. State audits confirm that the systems are legally required to alert residents within a ten-second window. These enhancements mandated by law will accelerate the responsiveness and interoperability of emergency alert systems.

Application Analysis

Emergency Services: Emergency services (police, fire, EMS) operate within legal bounds when responding to crises. As of November 2023, DHS allocated $0.0031 billion for developing interoperability testbeds for NG911 at research labs. According to the FCC’s NG911 regulations, PSAPs are mandated to receive image, video, and text communications as of March 2025. These funded and legal deadlines are fostering technological advancements in the coordination of emergencies within compliance of legal frameworks.

Homeland Security: The homeland security segment has dominated the market in 2024. Homeland Security operates under the authority of the DHS and protects the borders, critical infrastructure, and citizens. The Biometric Technology Report issued by DHS in 2024 implemented iris, fingerprint, and facial recognition technologies for high-risk scenarios, which ensured government supervision along with civil liberties considerations. Furthermore, OBIM’s 2024 RFI to transfer more than 260 million biometric records into HART demonstrates modernization and lawful data-sharing policies. Initiatives like these demonstrate counsel on border identity security law.

Public Safety and Security Market Share, By Application, 2024 (%)

Critical Infrastructure Security: Critical infrastructure security protects systems such as energy, water, and transportation using monitored surveillance, cyber defense, and controlled access solutions. A DHS report from January 2025 highlighted with AI technologies that 16 critical infrastructure sectors had received advanced protections. CISA’s adoption of “secure-by-design” policies C2024 to Infrastructure Systems under Cybersecurity Framework 2.0 also demonstrated legal frameworks for the protection of infrastructure systems. These policies reinforce the application of protective technology on essential public infrastructures.

Logistics & Transportation Systems: Transportation and logistics security equips sensors, tracking systems, as well as biometric screening using TSA and DHS standards. In early 2024, DHS audited TSA on the application of biometric scanners and AI-based document verification at airports. TSA’s multimodal scanner contracts after the audit met DHS/IEC requirements. These measures enhance threat detection regarding the movement of passengers and cargo within legally defined security frameworks.

Service Analysis

Managed Services: Managed Services is offer solutions that enable governments and security organizations to streamline operations while providing real-time, continuous monitoring, threat evaluation, and immediate operational response for critical infrastructure. Moreover, managed services facilitate operational backup efficiency which aids in the mitigation of continuous active cyber and physical security risks through versatile outsourced security frameworks.

Managed Security Services: The managed security services segment has dominated the market in 2024. These services have been designed to address real-time surveillance, firewall administration, intrusion detection, and response management for important infrastructural facilities and law enforcement agencies. Given the increasing number of cyberspace attacks coupled with the complexity of guarding huge digital and physical domains, these services provide necessitated top-tier defense especially in situations when the internal security personnel do not have the required specialized skills.

Others: Consulting, training, and system integration are other services that assist in the strategic planning and implementation of managing agency-wide security initiatives. Advanced technologies aid in the threat assessment, emergency response, risk assessment, and the overall mitigation process. These services also enable adherence to regulatory compliance as well as the customization of public safety solutions.

Deployment Mode Analysis

Cloud: The cloud adoption is on the rise because of its ease of scaling, remote access, and cost effectiveness. Public safety agencies utilize cloud-based platforms for data storage, video surveillance, and analytics which aids in prompt reporting of incidents and collaboration in real-time while ensuring operational resilience with minimal infrastructure investment.

Public Safety and Security Market Share, By Deployment Mode, 2024 (%)

Deployment Mode Revenue Share, 2024 (%)
Cloud 66.60%
On-Premises 33.40%

On-Premises: Institutions that handle sensitive, often classified material usually gravitate toward on-premises deployment. Housing the infrastructure locally allows them to exert tight control over every byte, meet exacting privacy standards, and satisfy complex statutory mandates. The model can be expensive and labor-intensive, yet it remains non-negotiable for public-safety functions and for regions where internet access is patchy or absent altogether.

Software Type Analysis

Record Management Software: The record management software segment dominated the market in 2024. For law enforcement agencies, maintaining precise records regarding arrests, evidence, and incidents is crucial. Record Management Software (RMS) streamlines public safety operations while ensuring accuracy, legal compliance, consistency, and adherence to workflows across agencies. Moreover, it permits evidence-based decision-making and transparency in operations.

Investigation Management: Law enforcement agencies often struggle with coordinating casework due to disparate case files. With the use of Investigation Management Software, case files, leads, and investigative workflows can be automated and streamlined, enhancing inter-agency collaboration. This system also enhances the protection of evidence and expedites the resolution of both criminal and intelligence-related investigations.

Others: This category includes emergency dispatch, facial recognition, and surveillance analytic tools. These software solutions provide real-time threat prediction, detection, and response capabilities, thereby assisting authorities in proactively managing public safety and strengthening the security infrastructure.

Public Safety and Security Market Regional Analysis

The Public Safety and Security Market is segmented into several key regions: North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and LAMEA (Latin America, Middle East, and Africa). Here’s an in-depth look at each region.

What factors are driving the dominance of North America in public safety and security market?

  • The North America public safety and security market size was estimated at USD 569.61 billion in 2024 and is expected to hit around USD 1603.36 billion by 2034.

North America Public Safety and Security Market Size 2025 to 2034

North America’s public safety sector relies on federally mandated funding and cross-border regulatory alignment. In the U.S., DHS distributed nearly $1.98 billion in FY 2024 preparedness funding—including $ 0.45 billion for NSGP and $0.27 billion for state/local cybersecurity—under legally authorized programs targeting terrorism and cyber threats. Canada passed Bill C-26 and enacted the Countering Foreign Interference Act in May 2024, strengthening its cyber and public safety legal framework. In early 2023, Mexico’s SCT updated airport biometric screening and land-port identity systems per ICAO mandates, enhancing secure border flows. Taken together, these efforts reflect legally grounded investment and policy harmonization across North America.

Public Safety and Security Market Share, By Region, 2024 (%)

Europe Public Safety and Security Market Trends

  • The Europe public safety and security market size was estimated at USD 569.61 billion in 2024 and is expected to hit around USD 1603.36 billion by 2034.

Europe public-safety machinery is woven from GDPR privacy protections, EU Security Directives, and a forest of national modernization bills. In 2024 the United Kingdom unveiled a binding Surveillance Camera Code that governs the deployment of AI-enhanced CCTV in public spaces. Germany directed roughly $220 million toward BSI-certified cyber upgrades for its critical-infrastructure networks in 2023, all under strict domestic legal oversight. France enacted the 2024 Anti-Terrorism Reinforcement Act, funding biometric lanes at its borders and EU-aligned CBRN detection systems for cross-border transport. Collectively, these initiatives sketch a legally structured, privacy-conscious expansion of public safety capabilities across the continent.

What is Asia-Pacific growing faster in the public safety and security market?

  • The Asia-Pacific public safety and security market size was estimated at USD 569.61 billion in 2024 and is expected to hit around USD 1603.36 billion by 2034.

The public-safety landscape has broadened dramatically, now featuring everything from helio-centrally controlled watch towers to city bylaws on digital privacy. In early 2024, Chinas National Development and Reform Commission connected biometric identification cards to subway and rail gates after overhauling its public-security code. About the same time, Indias Home Affairs Ministry financed Phase V of the National Integrated Emergency Command-and-Control System, requiring fifty municipalities to wire together new surveillance cameras under freshly drawn rules. Japan moved in parallel, tightening the 2023 Cybersecurity Basic Act so that local councils must secure full ISMS accreditation. Federal authorities in Australia followed suit, earmarking A$97 million in the 2024 Security Grants Rules to bolster cyber defenses. Further South Korea upgraded its CCTV networks with next-generation encryption in 2025 in order to comply with the Personal Information Protection Act. Across the region, these regulatory turns leave little doubt: the rulebook is driving the technology that underpins safety and security.

LAMEA Public Safety and Security Market Trends

  • The LAMEA public safety and security market size was estimated at USD 569.61 billion in 2024 and is expected to hit around USD 1603.36 billion by 2034.

Latin America and the Middle East-Africa pair, occasionally grouped under the LAMEA label, are quietly overhauling their public-security frameworks through legislation rather than mere purchases. The 2014 Marco Civil da Internet and the 2018 LGPD now anchor Brazil digital compliance, and in 2023, the Justice Ministry set aside US$89 million for biometric upgrades in police precincts. Extensions drafted for 2024 permit AI-driven cameras to sift footage from Rios buses and metros. In the MEA corridor, Dubai Police introduced a Smart Surveillance Platform that harnesses machine learning and data piping, all sanctioned under the emirates Data Law. Saudi Arabia followed suit by standing up a National Cybersecurity Authority in early 2024, a move that lets authorities position defensive code during the Hajj in Mecca. Even Cape Towns airport now scans travelers against encrypted watch lists thanks to amendments the parliament slipped into the Cybercrimes Act midway through 2024. Taken together, these legal pivots signal a noteworthy pattern: governments are writing rules first and wiring cities second, betting that compliance will outpace any hardware rush.

Public Safety and Security Market Top Companies

Recent Developments

Recent partnerships in the public safety and security industry underscore deep innovation and collaboration among major players like Motorola Solutions, Cisco Systems, Honeywell International, and NEC Corporation. Motorola Solutions has expanded its ecosystem by partnering with RapidSOS and AWS to enhance emergency response platforms with real-time caller location and video intelligence. Cisco Systems is working closely with government entities to implement secure, mission-critical networks in smart city and defense applications. Honeywell partnered with IDEMIA to integrate advanced biometric security in access control systems for critical infrastructure. NEC Corporation has teamed up with local governments and transit authorities across Asia to deploy facial recognition and AI-based surveillance for border and transportation security. These alliances reflect a broader trend of integrating AI, cloud,

  • In April 2025, Motorola Solutions has launched SVX, an innovative device that combines a video remote speaker microphone, secure two-way radio, body camera, and AI into a single wireless unit designed for public safety professionals, significantly reducing the number of devices officers need to carry and enhancing evidence collection with high-definition video and advanced audio clarity. Alongside SVX, the company introduced Assist, an AI platform that provides real-time, contextual, and actionable information—such as automatic record retrieval, keyword detection in radio traffic, live language translation, and step-by-step protocol guidance—directly supporting officers during incidents and streamlining routine tasks. This convergence of radio, video, and AI not only improves situational awareness and accelerates police reporting but also ensures more accurate, verified evidence while maintaining human oversight and judgment in critical decision-making.
  • In April 2024, Cisco has introduced Hypershield, an AI-native security architecture that embeds protection across data centers, clouds, and physical locations, enabling security enforcement wherever needed—from VMs and Kubernetes clusters to network switches. Leveraging technologies like eBPF and hardware accelerators, Hypershield delivers autonomous segmentation, rapid exploit protection, and self-qualifying, zero-downtime upgrades, all managed through a unified platform. Designed from the ground up for AI-scale environments, it aims to make security more distributed, adaptive, and efficient for modern infrastructures.
  • In October 2024, OMNIQ and NEC have expanded their collaboration to enhance public safety and security by integrating OMNIQ’s AI-driven face capture and vehicle recognition with NEC’s advanced facial recognition and database technologies. This partnership aims to address challenges in law enforcement, transportation, military, and urban infrastructure by providing comprehensive access control solutions using facial recognition biometrics, real-time analytics, improved situational awareness, and proactive threat detection. Following successful deployments in Ohio and Texas and the completion of a major homeland security project, both companies are committed to developing robust, scalable security solutions for cities and public institutions, positioning themselves as leaders in the future of public safety technology.

Market Segmentation

By Solution

  • Biometric Security & Authentication System
  • Backup & Recovery System
  • C2/C4isr System
  • Critical Communication Network
  • Cybersecurity
  • Emergency & Disaster Management
  • Public Address & General Alarm
  • Surveillance System
  • Screening & Scanning System

By Service

  • Managed Services
  • Managed security services
  • Others

By Deployment Mode

  • Cloud
  • On-Premises

By Software Type

  • Record Management Software
  • Investigation Management
  • Others

By Application

  • Emergency Services
  • Critical Infrastructure Security
  • Homeland Security
  • Logistics & Transportation Systems
  • Others

By Region

  • North America
  • APAC
  • Europe
  • LAMEA
...
...

FAQ's

The global public safety and security market size was reached at USD 569.61 billion in 2024 and is anticipated to grow around USD 1,603.36 billion by 2034.

The global public safety and security market is poised to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 11.32% over the forecast period from 2025 to 2034.

The companies operating in the public safety and security market are Motorola Solutions, Inc., Cisco Systems, Inc., Honeywell International Inc., NEC Corporation, Thales, IBM, Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd., Tyco (Johnson Controls), General Dynamics Corporation, Siemens and others.

Information integration for swift decision-making, grants & funding within the public sector regarding safety enhancements and federal policy action taken to improve safety measures are the driving factors of public safety and security market.

North America is the leading region for public safety and security market.