A motorcycle dash cam is one of those things that feels optional until you need it — and then you really need it. After putting 10,000 km (6,200 miles) on my 2024 Indian Pursuit, including multi-day tours through Ontario, New Brunswick, and Quebec, here's what I've learned about what actually works for Canadian touring riders.
Canadian summers can push 35°C (95°F) on asphalt. Canadian springs and falls can hit 3°C (37°F) on a morning departure. That 30+ degree swing is brutal on electronics, especially anything mounted in direct sun on a black fairing. Most consumer dash cams are rated to 60–65°C internal — that sounds like a lot until you factor in solar gain on a mounted unit sitting in the sun for six hours.
Vibration is the other killer. Motorcycles — especially V-twins like the Indian PowerPlus 108ci — transmit significant vibration through the frame at idle and low RPM. A dash cam not designed for this will develop loose mounts, corrupted files, and premature storage failure within one riding season.
Front-only coverage is the bare minimum. If someone rear-ends you — and it happens more than you'd think on longer tours — a front cam has no record of it. A front/rear setup gives you complete coverage for insurance and legal purposes. Most good motorcycle dash cam systems now offer dual-channel recording in a single unit or as an add-on rear cam.
VIOFO MT1 (Best Overall): Motorcycle-specific, dual-channel front/rear, 2K resolution, supercapacitor design handles extreme temps, solid rubber mount system. This is the benchmark for touring riders in 2026.
Garmin Dash Cam Tandem (Best for Integration): If you already run Garmin navigation on the bike, the Tandem integrates neatly. 180-degree dual lens captures front and interior/rear simultaneously. Not as rugged as the MT1 but excellent software integration.
INNOVV K5 (Best Budget Option): Waterproof, 1080p, decent night vision, straightforward install. Not as feature-rich as the MT1 but solid entry-level for riders who just want basic coverage.
The Pursuit's full fairing makes for a clean front camera mount — you can run cables internally along the fairing edge and keep the whole install invisible. The rear mount goes on the fender area or luggage rack depending on your setup. I'd recommend hiring a shop for the wiring if you're not comfortable with motorcycle electrical — a poor connection on a bike that sees rain is a problem waiting to happen.