Egypt
Egypt Recording Laws: All-Party Consent Rules and Penalties (2026)

Egypt requires all-party consent before recording any private conversation, whether by phone or in person. Penal Code Article 309(bis), amended by Law No. 37 of 1972, is the core prohibition; civilians face up to one year in prison and public employees face 3 to 15 years for the same offense.
Overview of Egypt Recording Laws
Egypt treats unauthorized recording as a criminal act. The country's legal framework requires the consent of all parties before anyone can record a private conversation, tap a phone line, or capture images of someone in a private setting. This all-party consent requirement sits at the intersection of several overlapping laws: the Penal Code, the Constitution, a relatively new data protection statute, a cybercrime law that targets the online distribution of recordings, and a media regulation law that governs journalists and online publishers.

The foundation of these protections goes back to Article 309(bis) of the Egyptian Penal Code (Law No. 58 of 1937, as amended by Law No. 37 of 1972). But the legal landscape has shifted considerably in recent years. The Personal Data Protection Law No. 151 of 2020 received its executive regulations in November 2025, introducing licensing requirements for surveillance cameras and formal rules governing how personal data (including audio and video recordings) must be handled. Meanwhile, Law No. 174 of 2025, a sweeping rewrite of the Code of Criminal Procedures, is scheduled to take effect on October 1, 2026, and will significantly expand the government's authority to monitor private communications.
For anyone living in Egypt, doing business there, or simply traveling through the country, these rules carry real consequences. Violations can lead to prison time, substantial fines, and civil liability.
This article presents general legal information about Egypt's recording and surveillance laws as of May 2026. It does not constitute legal advice. Laws in Egypt can change; consult a lawyer licensed in Egypt for guidance on your specific situation.
Constitutional Protections: Article 57
The 2014 Egyptian Constitution establishes privacy as a fundamental right. Article 57 states that private life is "inviolable, safeguarded, and may not be infringed upon."
The article goes further, specifically addressing communications. Postal correspondence, telegrams, electronic messages, telephone calls, and all other forms of communication are constitutionally protected. Their confidentiality is guaranteed, and authorities may only intercept, examine, or monitor them under a judicial order that is limited in duration and confined to circumstances defined by law.
Article 99 reinforces this protection by declaring that any assault on individual freedom or the inviolability of private life constitutes a crime with no statute of limitations. This means someone whose conversations were illegally recorded can pursue legal action regardless of how much time has passed since the violation occurred.
These constitutional provisions serve as the ceiling against which all other recording and surveillance laws are measured. Any statute or government action that conflicts with Article 57 can be challenged before the Supreme Constitutional Court.
Penal Code Article 309(bis): The Core Recording Prohibition
Article 309(bis) of the Egyptian Penal Code is the primary criminal statute governing unauthorized recording. Added through Law No. 37 of 1972, which amended the original 1937 Penal Code, it criminalizes several specific acts:
- Eavesdropping on or recording conversations that take place in a private setting
- Recording or transmitting telephone calls using any type of device
- Photographing or filming a person in a private place without their knowledge
- Broadcasting or facilitating the broadcast of any recording or document obtained through the above methods
The law covers recordings made through any instrument or device, regardless of the technology used. A smartphone voice memo, a hidden microphone, a wiretap device, or a video camera all fall within the statute's reach.
Penalties for Civilians
Any person who violates Article 309(bis) faces detention for a period not exceeding one year. Courts can also impose fines alongside the prison sentence. The conviction carries a permanent criminal record, which can affect employment, travel, and professional licensing.
Enhanced Penalties for Public Employees
When a public employee commits these same offenses, the penalties increase dramatically. Government officials, police officers, military personnel, and other state employees who eavesdrop on, capture, record, or transfer audio or video of someone without authorization face imprisonment of 3 to 15 years.
This sentencing gap reflects the Egyptian legislature's recognition that government agents hold disproportionate power over citizens. The harsher penalties serve as both a deterrent and a signal that abuse of official authority will be treated far more severely than violations by private individuals.
Article 309(bis)(A): Extended Provisions
Article 309(bis)(A) extends the criminal framework to cover additional scenarios. It addresses the use of illegally obtained recordings for purposes beyond simple eavesdropping, including threatening someone with the release of a private conversation. When a recording is used as leverage for blackmail, the penalties escalate to up to five years in prison.
The article also covers situations where someone facilitates or distributes an illegal recording even if they were not the person who originally made it. Passing along a secretly recorded conversation to third parties is itself a criminal act.
Phone Recording vs. In-Person Recording
Egyptian law draws no meaningful distinction between recording a phone call and recording a face-to-face conversation. Both require the consent of all parties involved, and both carry identical penalties under Article 309(bis) when conducted without authorization.
Phone Calls
Recording a phone call without the knowledge and consent of the other party is a criminal offense. This applies whether the call is made on a landline, mobile phone, or internet-based communication platform. The law covers calls made through any device or technology.
However, Egyptian courts have carved out a narrow but significant exception. The Court of Cassation (Egypt's highest court of appeal) has ruled that recordings of phone calls are admissible as evidence when the call itself constitutes a crime or incites criminal activity. In a notable harassment case, the Court held that a victim's phone recording of threatening or harassing calls did not require prior judicial permission because such calls fall outside the constitutional protection of private communications.
This exception is narrowly defined. It applies only when the recorded conversation is itself illegal, such as verbal harassment, threats, extortion, or solicitation of a crime. Recording a lawful conversation without consent remains prohibited regardless of the caller's subjective motivations.
In-Person Conversations
Conversations in private settings receive the same legal protection as phone calls. Recording someone speaking in a home, office, hotel room, or any other private space without their consent violates Article 309(bis).
The key legal distinction is between "private" and "public" settings. Egyptian courts look at the context and nature of the conversation, not just the physical location. A conversation held in a private office is protected even if the building itself is accessible to the public. A speech delivered at a public rally generally is not protected because the speaker voluntarily addressed an open audience. A semi-private conversation held in a restaurant booth occupies a gray area: courts examine whether participants reasonably expected the exchange to remain confidential and whether the circumstances indicated an intent for privacy. The burden of proof lies with the person who made the recording to justify any claim that the conversation was "public" in nature.
Blackmail and Extortion Using Recordings
Egypt treats the weaponization of recordings with particular severity. Multiple statutes intersect to create a layered system of penalties for anyone who uses a recording to threaten, coerce, or extort another person.
Penal Code Article 327
Article 327 of the Penal Code criminalizes threatening another person in writing with a crime against their life, property, or reputation. When someone threatens to release a private recording unless their demands are met, this provision applies. The term "writing" has been interpreted by Egyptian courts to include electronic communications, text messages, social media messages, and emails.
If the threat is accompanied by a specific demand or instruction, the offense carries a sentence of imprisonment. The severity of the sentence depends on the nature of the threat and the demand attached to it.
Article 309(bis)(A) Blackmail Provisions
Using an illegally obtained recording to blackmail someone carries penalties of up to five years in prison under Article 309(bis)(A). This applies regardless of whether the blackmailer actually made the recording themselves or obtained it from someone else.
Anti-Cybercrime Law Provisions
When blackmail involving recordings occurs through digital channels, the Anti-Cybercrime Law (Law 175/2018) adds an additional layer of criminal exposure, with minimum sentences of six months and fines starting at EGP 50,000.
Anti-Cybercrime Law (Law 175/2018): Sharing Recordings Online
Egypt's Anti-Cybercrime Law No. 175 of 2018 specifically targets the digital distribution of recordings and personal content. Multiple articles of this law create standalone criminal penalties for sharing recordings and images online without consent.
Article 25: Sharing Without Consent
Article 25 makes it a crime to post videos, photos, or texts of another person on websites or social media platforms without their consent and in violation of their privacy. It also prohibits publishing information, news, or images that infringe on the privacy of any person involuntarily, regardless of whether the information is accurate.
Violators face a minimum of six months in prison and/or a fine of no less than EGP 50,000 and no more than EGP 100,000. These penalties apply even if the shared content is truthful. The law's focus is on the act of sharing without consent, not on the accuracy of what was shared.
Article 25 reaches beyond simple recordings. It covers any content that "infringes family principles or values of Egyptian society." Courts have interpreted this broadly. In several high-profile cases, individuals have been prosecuted for sharing videos on TikTok and other social media platforms under this provision. The law applies regardless of where the person sharing the content is physically located, as long as the content is accessible in Egypt or involves an Egyptian citizen.
Article 27: Website and Account Administrator Liability
Article 27 of the Anti-Cybercrime Law targets those who create, manage, or operate websites and accounts as platforms for criminal activity. Any web administrator who creates, manages, or uses a website or private account with the aim of committing or facilitating a crime under the law faces imprisonment of not less than two years and/or a fine of EGP 100,000 to 300,000.
This provision reaches beyond the person who originally posts illegal content. Platform operators, page administrators, and group managers who knowingly host illegal recordings or facilitate their distribution can face prosecution under this article.
Article 29: Negligent Platform Security
Article 29 imposes criminal liability on web administrators who allow their platforms to be used for crimes through insufficient security measures. Where a web administrator exposes a website, email account, private account, or information system to a crime punishable under the Anti-Cybercrime Law, the penalty is imprisonment of not less than one year and/or a fine of EGP 20,000 to 200,000. When the exposure resulted from the administrator's negligence rather than intent, the minimum sentence drops to six months but the fine range stays the same.
Personal Data Protection Law (Law 151/2020)
Egypt's Personal Data Protection Law No. 151 of 2020 represents the country's first comprehensive data privacy statute. After years of delay, the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology issued the law's Executive Regulations on November 1, 2025, through Ministerial Decree No. 816 of 2025. Organizations have until November 1, 2026, to achieve full compliance.
How the PDPL Affects Recording
The PDPL classifies audio recordings, video footage, and photographs as personal data when they can identify an individual. This means that recording someone, even in a context where Article 309(bis) might not directly apply, can still violate the PDPL if the recording captures identifiable personal data and proper consent was not obtained.
CCTV and Visual Surveillance Licensing
One of the most significant provisions for recording law is the PDPL's requirement that any visual surveillance system deployed in a public space must be licensed by the Personal Data Protection Centre (PDPC). This applies to businesses, government offices, commercial establishments, and any entity operating CCTV cameras that capture identifiable individuals.
The PDPL Executive Regulations set out the specific licensing fee structure: EGP 1,000 for a three-year license to use visual surveillance systems in public areas, or EGP 500 for an annual permit. Operators must also display a visible sign at each location where surveillance cameras operate, informing persons present of the system's operation.
The licensing requirement does not apply to CCTV systems installed within private residences, provided the camera coverage does not extend beyond the property boundaries.
Purpose Limitation and Data Use Restrictions
Surveillance data may not be used for any purpose incompatible with the original reason it was collected. For a security camera installed to monitor building access, that footage cannot lawfully be repurposed for employee performance monitoring, marketing analysis, or any other secondary use. The use of CCTV data must be lawful and must not violate public order or morality.
Consent Requirements
The PDPL mandates explicit prior consent before processing personal data. For sensitive data categories, which include biometric identifiers captured by surveillance systems, explicit written consent is required. Controllers must clearly state the purpose of data collection and cannot use recordings for purposes beyond what was originally disclosed.
Penalties for PDPL Violations
The penalties under the PDPL are substantial:
- Unlicensed data processing: EGP 500,000 to EGP 5 million
- Failure to appoint a Data Protection Officer: EGP 200,000 to EGP 2 million
- Data security breaches: EGP 300,000 to EGP 3 million
- Repeat offenses: penalties are doubled
- Criminal liability in certain cases
Data Protection Centre
The PDPC has been established as the supervisory authority responsible for enforcement. Its investigators have judicial authority, including the power to inspect electronic records and conduct on-site compliance assessments.
2025 Code of Criminal Procedures Reform (Law 174/2025)
On November 12, 2025, President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi ratified Law No. 174 of 2025, a comprehensive rewrite of Egypt's Code of Criminal Procedures. The new code comprises 546 provisions. Parliament subsequently postponed enforcement, and the code is now scheduled to take effect on October 1, 2026. Articles 79, 80, and 116 directly address government surveillance and recording powers.
Article 79: Seizure and Monitoring Powers
Article 79 authorizes investigating judges to order the seizure of communications, letters, telegrams, newspapers, publications, and parcels. It also permits the monitoring of wired and wireless communications, social media accounts (including private content), emails, and messages stored on phones and electronic devices.
These orders can be issued when deemed "beneficial for uncovering the truth" in any felony or misdemeanor punishable by more than three months of imprisonment. That threshold covers the vast majority of criminal offenses in Egypt.
Article 80: Duration and Renewal
Surveillance orders under Article 80 may be issued for periods not exceeding 30 days. However, the orders can be renewed indefinitely in 30-day increments. There is no maximum total duration written into the law, which means surveillance of a single individual could theoretically continue for months or years through successive renewals.
Article 116: Prosecutorial Authority
Article 116 transfers certain interception powers directly to public prosecutors, without requiring prior judicial approval. The International Commission of Jurists and other human rights organizations have described this as the first time in Egypt's legislative history that prosecutors have been granted standalone authority to order communication monitoring. The provision applies to specific categories of offenses, including crimes involving intentional harm to public property and defamation via phone calls.
The ICJ concluded that Articles 79, 80, and 116 together violate international human rights standards because they are neither precise nor sufficiently limited in scope, enabling arbitrary interference with the right to privacy.
Privacy Concerns
The Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Article 19, Access Now, and several other organizations have raised serious concerns about these provisions. Critics argue that the vague language, unlimited renewal periods, and lack of notification requirements conflict with Article 57 of the Constitution.
There is no mechanism in the new code requiring authorities to notify individuals after surveillance has ended, which denies targets the opportunity to challenge the legality of the monitoring.
Recording Police and Government Officials
Recording Egypt's security forces, military, police, or government operations is a high-risk activity under Egyptian law. Several overlapping statutes apply, and enforcement is documented as both aggressive and inconsistent.
Anti-Terrorism Law (Law 94/2015) Restrictions
Egypt's Anti-Terrorism Law prohibits journalists and civilians from disseminating anything other than official information about terrorist attacks or security operations. The law broadly defines what qualifies as terrorism-related activity. Violators face prison sentences and substantial fines. In practice, security forces have used this law to arrest individuals who filmed protest dispersals, checkpoint operations, and military activities, even where the filming occurred in public spaces.
Filming Protests: The Practical Reality
Human Rights Watch and the Committee to Protect Journalists have documented numerous arrests of journalists who filmed protests or police operations in Egypt. One freelance photographer was arrested while broadcasting live footage of protests from his own apartment balcony. Two journalists were arrested in Alexandria for filming without a license while working on a news story. Between May 2023 and May 2024, reports documented 367 violations against journalists and media workers, including 36 cases of renewed detention pending investigation.
Photography Restrictions in Sensitive Locations
Prime Ministerial Decree No. 2720 of 2022 prohibits photographing military installations, security institutions, and government buildings under any circumstances. This prohibition is absolute and applies to both Egyptians and foreigners. Separately, the Anti-Terrorism Law creates a broad overlay that can be invoked any time security forces deem filming to interfere with an operation or contradict official accounts.
Rule-of-Law Caveat
Reporters Without Borders ranked Egypt 169th out of 180 countries in its 2026 World Press Freedom Index and describes the country as one of the world's biggest jailers of journalists. Egypt's legal framework formally protects private communications but places no equivalent protection on the act of recording state conduct. The gap between the written law and enforcement practice is significant. People who film police or security forces, even in technically permissible circumstances, face real risks of arrest and prosecution under broadly drafted statutes.
Media Regulation Law 180/2018
Law No. 180 of 2018, the Law Regulating the Press, Media, and the Supreme Council for Media Regulation (SCMR), governs who may lawfully distribute recorded or live content in Egypt and under what conditions.
Licensing for Content Distribution
Any company or entity that distributes recorded or live content in Egypt, whether through satellite broadcast or the internet, requires a license from the SCMR. The licensing fee is EGP 500,000 for the company and an additional EGP 50,000 per website. Organizations that operate without this license risk blocking of their platforms and potential prosecution.
Website Blocking and Account Restrictions
The SCMR has the authority to block journalistic web pages, social media accounts, or personal web pages that have more than 5,000 followers, on broad grounds including content deemed contrary to national security or social values. Media outlets and online publishers must retain all content they issue for a minimum of 12 months.
Foreign Correspondents
Every foreign correspondent in Egypt requires accreditation from the State Information Service or the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and must join the Press Syndicate, before filming or conducting journalism in the country. Foreign journalists who record interviews, protests, or government operations without proper SIS accreditation face arrest and equipment confiscation.
Bloggers and Online Journalists
Law 180/2018 introduced Egypt's first legal framework for regulating websites. A journalist is defined under the law as any person listed as a member of the Journalists Syndicate. Individuals who publish news or video content online outside this licensing framework, including independent bloggers and social media personalities with substantial audiences, operate in a legally precarious position.
Deepfake and AI-Generated Content
As of May 2026, Egypt has not enacted a dedicated deepfake or synthetic media statute. No law specifically addresses AI-generated audio, video, or images that mimic real people.
However, existing laws extend to cover the most common harmful uses of deepfake technology:
- Unauthorized image capture or distribution: Penal Code Article 309(bis) prohibits photographing a person in a private place without their knowledge. Article 309(bis)(A) extends this to the distribution of any recording or likeness obtained through prohibited means. A deepfake image created from privately obtained photos or videos falls within this framework.
- Sharing without consent: Anti-Cybercrime Law Article 25 prohibits posting videos, photos, or texts of another person online without their consent and in violation of their privacy. Courts have interpreted "texts" broadly to include any content that identifies or portrays a person in a harmful way.
- Blackmail using synthetic media: A deepfake video used to threaten or extort someone triggers both Article 309(bis)(A) (up to 5 years) and Article 327 of the Penal Code (threats in writing or electronic form).
- Platform liability: If a website or social media page knowingly hosts deepfake content targeting an individual, its administrators may face liability under Article 27 of the Anti-Cybercrime Law.
The legislative gap means that AI-generated content that does not directly portray a specific identifiable person, or that is created from publicly available images, may fall outside any current prohibition. Egyptian courts have not yet published clear guidance on how existing statutes apply to AI-generated content specifically. This area of the law is developing. Individuals or businesses operating in Egypt who create, distribute, or host AI-generated content involving real people should proceed with caution and consult Egyptian legal counsel.
Cross-Border Recording and Foreign Visitors
Calls Between Egypt and Other Countries
When a phone call involves one party in Egypt and one party abroad, Egyptian law's all-party consent requirement applies to the Egyptian party's conduct. If someone in Egypt records the call without consent, they face criminal exposure under Article 309(bis). Whether the foreign party's recording of the same call violates Egyptian law depends on where that recording takes place and whether Egyptian courts assert jurisdiction over it.
PDPL Extraterritorial Scope
The Personal Data Protection Law applies extraterritorially. Businesses located outside Egypt that process personal data of individuals based in Egypt, including through recorded calls, video surveillance of Egyptian visitors, or cloud-stored voice recordings, are subject to the PDPL's requirements. The law reaches any controller or processor who handles data about Egyptian residents or nationals regardless of where that controller is located.
Practical Guidance for Foreign Visitors and Businesses
Foreign visitors to Egypt should be aware of the following:
- Recording any private conversation in Egypt, including with another foreigner, falls under Article 309(bis) if the conversation occurs in a private setting.
- Recording police, military, or security personnel, or filming protests, carries serious legal risk regardless of the recorder's nationality.
- Photography of Egyptian citizens in personal settings requires written consent under Decree No. 2720 of 2022.
- International businesses receiving calls from Egypt should ensure their call-recording consent disclosures explicitly cover callers in all-party consent jurisdictions, including Egypt.
- Data transferred out of Egypt must go only to countries that provide equivalent or greater data protection under the PDPL, or under approved transfer mechanisms.
Civil Liability for Illegal Recording
Beyond criminal prosecution, victims of illegal recording in Egypt have a civil law remedy. Egypt's Civil Code No. 131 of 1948 provides the foundational framework for tort liability.
A victim must establish three elements: the unlawful act (the illegal recording), the harm suffered, and the causal link between the two. Damages available include compensation for actual economic losses, lost profits, and moral (non-economic) harm. Egyptian courts treat moral harm as a legitimate category of damages, recognizing that illegal recording causes psychological and reputational injury even when direct financial loss is difficult to quantify.
The prescription period for civil claims is three years from the date the victim learned of both the unlawful act and the identity of the person responsible. An absolute limitation bar applies after 15 years from the date the unlawful act was committed, regardless of when the victim discovered it. Crucially, the civil claim may proceed independently of and concurrently with any criminal prosecution.
Public Spaces and Photography Rules
Egypt's rules on photography and recording in public places were significantly updated in 2022. Prime Ministerial Decree No. 2720 of 2022 established new guidelines that apply throughout Egyptian territory.
What Is Permitted
Egyptians, foreign residents, and tourists may take personal photos in most public places using any type of camera, including smartphone cameras and personal video cameras, without obtaining prior permission from Egyptian authorities. No permits or fees are required for personal photography.
Restrictions
The decree imposes several important limits:
- Photographing military installations, security institutions, and government buildings is prohibited
- Photographing children requires written permission
- Photographing Egyptian citizens requires their written consent
- Taking or sharing photographs that "damage the country's image" is forbidden
- Professional photography equipment (studio lighting, tripods that block roads, etc.) requires a separate permit
- Foreign journalists and television crews must obtain permits from the State Information Service before filming in public places
Relationship to Recording Laws
The 2022 decree addresses photography and video in public spaces, but it does not override the Penal Code's protections for private conversations. Recording someone's words in a public park, for example, may not violate the photography decree but could still violate Article 309(bis) if the conversation was private in nature.
Workplace Recording and Employee Monitoring
Egyptian labor law does not contain specific provisions governing workplace recording. Instead, workplace surveillance falls under the broader framework of the Constitution, the Penal Code, and (as of November 2025) the PDPL.
CCTV in the Workplace
Employers may install security cameras in common areas such as lobbies, hallways, and production floors. However, the PDPL now requires that any CCTV system capturing identifiable individuals in spaces accessible to the public must be licensed by the PDPC. Cameras in areas where employees have a reasonable expectation of privacy, such as restrooms, changing rooms, or private offices, are prohibited under both the Penal Code and constitutional privacy protections.
Audio Recording at Work
Recording workplace conversations without the consent of all parties remains a criminal offense under Article 309(bis). An employer cannot secretly record meetings, phone calls, or private discussions among employees. If an employer needs to record calls for quality assurance or training purposes, it must obtain explicit consent from all parties to the conversation.
PDPL Compliance for Employers
Under the PDPL executive regulations, employers who process employee personal data (including through monitoring systems) must:
- Obtain explicit consent for data collection
- Appoint a Data Protection Officer
- Register with the PDPC
- Implement data breach notification procedures (72 hours to the PDPC, three working days to affected individuals)
- Delete surveillance footage once its stated purpose has been fulfilled
The November 2026 compliance deadline applies to workplace surveillance systems alongside all other data processing activities.
Penalties Summary
Egyptian law imposes a range of penalties for recording violations, depending on which statute is invoked:
| Offense | Law | Penalty |
|---|---|---|
| Unauthorized recording (civilian) | Penal Code Art. 309(bis) | Up to 1 year imprisonment |
| Unauthorized recording (public employee) | Penal Code Art. 309(bis) | 3 to 15 years imprisonment |
| Blackmail using recordings | Penal Code Art. 309(bis)(A) | Up to 5 years imprisonment |
| Written/electronic threats involving recordings | Penal Code Art. 327 | Imprisonment (variable by severity) |
| Sharing recordings online without consent | Anti-Cybercrime Law Art. 25 | Min. 6 months prison + EGP 50,000-100,000 fine |
| Hosting/facilitating illegal recording platforms | Anti-Cybercrime Law Art. 27 | Min. 2 years prison + EGP 100,000-300,000 fine |
| Negligent platform security enabling crime | Anti-Cybercrime Law Art. 29 | Min. 1 year (or 6 months if negligent) + EGP 20,000-200,000 fine |
| Unlicensed CCTV/data processing | PDPL (Law 151/2020) | EGP 500,000 to 5 million fine |
| Failure to appoint DPO | PDPL (Law 151/2020) | EGP 200,000 to 2 million fine |
| Data breach mishandling | PDPL (Law 151/2020) | EGP 300,000 to 3 million fine |
| Civil damages for illegal recording | Civil Code No. 131 of 1948 | Court-assessed compensation including moral harm |
Multiple statutes can apply to a single incident. Someone who secretly records a conversation and then posts it on social media could face charges under Article 309(bis), the Anti-Cybercrime Law, and the PDPL simultaneously.
Business Compliance Checklist
Organizations operating in Egypt should take the following steps to comply with the country's recording and surveillance laws:
- Audit existing CCTV systems and apply for PDPC licensing before the November 2026 deadline; budget EGP 1,000 per location for a 3-year license
- Post visible signage at all locations where surveillance cameras operate
- Obtain explicit consent before recording any phone call for business purposes
- Appoint a Data Protection Officer and register with the PDPC
- Draft a data retention policy specifying how long surveillance footage and call recordings are stored
- Implement breach notification procedures to meet the 72-hour reporting deadline to the PDPC and three-day deadline to affected individuals
- Train employees on recording laws, particularly the prohibition against recording colleagues without consent
- Review cross-border data transfers if surveillance footage or call recordings are stored on servers outside Egypt
- Obtain SCMR licensing if your organization distributes recorded or live content in Egypt via broadcast or internet
- Ensure foreign employees and visitors understand the restrictions on recording police, public officials, and sensitive locations
- Consult local legal counsel to ensure compliance with both the PDPL executive regulations and any sector-specific requirements
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Egypt a one-party or all-party consent jurisdiction for recording?
Egypt is an all-party consent jurisdiction. Article 309(bis) of the Penal Code prohibits eavesdropping on, recording, or transmitting conversations that take place in private settings or over the telephone without the consent of all participants. The only recognized exception is when the recorded conversation itself constitutes a crime, such as verbal harassment or threats, in which case courts have ruled that the recording does not violate constitutional privacy protections.
What happens if I record a phone call without consent in Egypt?
Recording a phone call without the other party's consent is a criminal offense under Article 309(bis) of the Penal Code, punishable by up to one year in prison. If you then share that recording online, the Anti-Cybercrime Law (Law 175/2018) adds a separate offense carrying a minimum of six months in prison and a fine between EGP 50,000 and EGP 100,000. If you are a government employee who made the recording while acting in an official capacity, the penalty jumps to 3 to 15 years in prison.
Can I take photos and videos in public places in Egypt?
Under Decree No. 2720 of 2022, personal photography is permitted in most public places without a permit. However, you cannot photograph military sites, security institutions, or government buildings. Photographing Egyptian citizens requires their written consent, and photographing children requires written parental permission. Professional equipment such as studio lighting or tripods that block public roads requires a separate permit. Foreign journalists must obtain authorization from the State Information Service.
Do businesses in Egypt need a license to operate security cameras?
Yes. Under the Personal Data Protection Law (Law 151/2020) and its November 2025 executive regulations, any CCTV system deployed in a space accessible to the public must be licensed by the Personal Data Protection Centre (PDPC). The fee is EGP 1,000 for a three-year license or EGP 500 for an annual permit. Operators must also post a visible sign at each camera location. Private residences are exempt if camera coverage stays within property boundaries. Organizations have until November 1, 2026, to obtain their licenses. Fines for operating unlicensed surveillance systems range from EGP 500,000 to EGP 5 million.
Are illegally obtained recordings admissible as evidence in Egyptian courts?
Generally, no. Egyptian courts treat evidence obtained through illegal means as inadmissible. However, the Court of Cassation has established an important exception: when a phone call itself constitutes a crime (such as harassment, threats, or extortion), a victim's recording of that call is admissible without prior judicial permission. The reasoning is that criminal phone calls fall outside the constitutional protection of private communications. Beyond this narrow exception, secretly recorded conversations cannot be used as evidence and may expose the person who made the recording to criminal prosecution.
Is it legal to film police or government officials in Egypt?
Filming police, security forces, or government operations in Egypt carries serious legal risk. The Anti-Terrorism Law (Law 94/2015) prohibits disseminating anything other than official information about security operations and is routinely applied to anyone who films such activity. Prime Ministerial Decree No. 2720 of 2022 also prohibits photographing military installations, security institutions, and government buildings. Human rights organizations including the Committee to Protect Journalists and Human Rights Watch have documented numerous arrests of journalists who filmed protests or police activity. Egypt ranked 169th out of 180 countries in the 2026 RSF World Press Freedom Index.
Are deepfakes or AI-generated recordings illegal in Egypt?
Egypt has not enacted a dedicated deepfake or synthetic media law as of May 2026. However, existing laws cover the most harmful uses: Penal Code Article 309(bis)(A) applies to the unauthorized distribution of images or recordings of a person; Anti-Cybercrime Law Article 25 covers posting content that portrays a person without consent and in violation of privacy; and Article 309(bis)(A) blackmail provisions apply when synthetic media is used to extort someone. The absence of a specific deepfake statute creates uncertainty in edge cases, particularly involving AI-generated content created from publicly available material.
Do Egypt's recording laws apply to foreigners visiting or calling from abroad?
Yes, in key respects. Any person in Egypt (regardless of nationality) who records a private conversation is subject to Article 309(bis). Foreign companies that process personal data of individuals in Egypt are subject to the Personal Data Protection Law's extraterritorial provisions. When a call crosses borders, Egyptian law governs the Egyptian party's conduct; whether it reaches the foreign party depends on where the foreign party is located and whether Egyptian courts assert jurisdiction. Foreign visitors should be aware that all-party consent rules apply to their recordings made in Egypt and that restrictions on filming police and military sites apply regardless of nationality.
Sources and References
- Constitution of the Arab Republic of Egypt (2014, amended 2019) - Articles 57, 99(constituteproject.org)
- Egyptian Penal Code (Law No. 58 of 1937, as amended by Law No. 37 of 1972) - Articles 309(bis), 309(bis)(A), 327(hrlibrary.umn.edu)
- Anti-Cyber and Information Technology Crimes Law (Law No. 175 of 2018) - WIPO Lex - Articles 25, 27, 29(wipo.int)
- Personal Data Protection Law (Law No. 151 of 2020) - ICLG Data Protection Report 2025-2026(iclg.com)
- PDPL Executive Regulations (Ministerial Decree 816/2025) - Clyde & Co(clydeco.com)
- Egypt: Important Data Protection Update - Baker McKenzie (January 2026)(bakermckenzie.com)
- A First Look at Egypt PDPL Executive Regulations - GLA & Company(glaco.com)
- Code of Criminal Procedures (Law No. 174 of 2025) - Library of Congress(loc.gov).gov
- Egypt: New Criminal Procedure Code Violates Human Rights - International Commission of Jurists(icj.org)
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- Egypt Must Reform Its Draft Criminal Procedure Code - Access Now(accessnow.org)
- Egypt: Stop Attacks on Privacy and Reform Draft Criminal Procedure Code - Article 19(article19.org)
- Egypt Parliament Postpones Enforcement of Criminal Procedure Law to October 2026 - Ahram Online(english.ahram.org.eg)
- Law No. 180 of 2018 (Press, Media and Supreme Council for Media Regulation) - WIPO Lex(wipo.int)
- Egypt: 2018 Law on the Organisation of Press, Media and the SCMR - Article 19(article19.org)
- Egypt: Intensifying Crackdown Under Counterterrorism Guise - Human Rights Watch(hrw.org)
- RSF Egypt Country Profile (2026 Press Freedom Index)(rsf.org)
- Recording In-Person or Phone Conversations in Egypt - Andersen Egypt(eg.andersen.com)
- Decree No. 2720 of 2022 on Photography in Public Places - Ahram Online(english.ahram.org.eg)
- Egypt Ministry of Tourism: Photography Rules for Public Places(egymonuments.gov.eg).gov