Baby monitors are one of the highest-density RF sources in an infant's sleeping environment — placed as close as 30cm from the head, running continuously for 8–12 hours every night, from birth.
When Rishi Bagga held his phone above Aaryan's cot searching for EMF guidance, he was doing something most parents do unconsciously every day: bringing an RF-emitting device within centimetres of a sleeping infant. What he noticed — the contradiction of the search itself — became the founding moment of Ova. But the phone was the obvious one. The one sitting permanently on the shelf, always on, always transmitting, was the baby monitor.
What does a baby monitor actually emit?
Modern baby monitors use one of three wireless technologies: DECT (Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications), Wi-Fi, or analogue RF. DECT and Wi-Fi monitors are continuous emitters — they transmit a signal constantly, whether the baby is moving or not. Analogue monitors emit only when they detect sound above a threshold, making them far lower exposure devices in practice.
DECT operates in the 1.9 GHz band and is typically a strong, continuous emitter. Wi-Fi monitors use 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz — the same frequencies as your home router. Both are non-ionising, and at typical power levels, both fall below the ICNIRP reference level of 2,000 μW/m² for continuous public exposure.
What we measured
Using a calibrated Ova Meter, we measured 12 popular UK baby monitors at 30cm and 100cm distance, logging for 60 seconds each to capture peak and average levels.
What to actually do
1. Move it further away. Doubling the distance reduces RF exposure by roughly 75%. Moving from 30cm to 100cm drops a 142 μW/m² DECT monitor to approximately 16 μW/m².
2. Use audio-only, not video. HD video monitors transmit far more data and emit significantly more than audio-only equivalents.
3. Turn it off when you're in the room. The monitor exists to alert you when you can't hear the baby. If you're present, it doesn't need to be transmitting.
4. Consider a wired solution. A simple audio-only wired monitor emits nothing. Less convenient — zero RF exposure.