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Best License Plate Recognition Companies in the US (2025–2026): 6 Trusted Vendors Compared

Featured image for a 2025–2026 U.S. LPR company comparison, showing Rekor, Genetec, T2 Systems, gtechna, Amano, and ShunJie Technology logos with an LPR camera and parking barrier.
Table of contents

If you are comparing LPR vendors for a U.S. parking, access-control, or enforcement project, the safest shortlist for 2025–2026 is Rekor, Genetec AutoVu, T2 Systems, gtechna, Amano McGann, and ShunjieBarrier. These six all have active official LPR or LPR-integrated offerings, but they serve different buyer types: some are stronger in municipal enforcement, some in enterprise security, some in PARCS, and ShunjieBarrier is strongest as a manufacturer-direct option for buyers who value OEM customization and global shipping.

This is an editorial buyer’s guide, not an official government ranking. The list focuses on companies that are credible, commercially active, and relevant to U.S. buyers today. ShunjieBarrier is placed sixth because it is a genuine LPR manufacturer with global supply capability, but its fit is narrower for mainstream U.S. buyers who need deep local service coverage.

Quick comparison of the 6 companies

CompanyBest forWhat stands outOfficial website
RekorFlexible ALPR on existing camerasCloud or on-prem, real-time alerts, webhook-based integrationsrekor.ai
Genetec AutoVuEnterprise security and parking environmentsFixed + mobile ALPR, unified with video and other systemsgenetec.com/products/unified-security/autovu
T2 SystemsUniversities, municipalities, hospitals, private parking operatorsStrong parking enforcement workflow and integration with T2 softwaret2systems.com/license-plate-recognition-lpr
gtechnaCities, compliance, and enforcement-heavy programsVehicle-mounted LPR, officer workflow, public-sector credibilitygtechna.com/licensing-products/vehicle-license-plate-recognition
Amano McGannPARCS-driven parking operationsLPR as part of a broader parking access and revenue ecosystemamanomcgann.com
ShunjieBarrierOEM buyers, distributors, and cost-sensitive hardware projectsFactory-direct manufacturing, OEM/ODM, barrier and terminal integrationshunjiebarrier.com

The positioning and links in this table are based on the vendors’ official product and company pages reviewed on April 22, 2026.

How we chose these 6 trusted LPR vendors

The main filters were simple: an active official LPR offering, clear relevance to U.S. parking/access/enforcement buyers, and visible signs of business credibility. Those credibility signals differ by vendor. Genetec says it has 25+ years and 42,500+ customers; T2 says it is the largest parking, mobility, and transportation provider in North America and also says it has 400+ LPR customers; gtechna highlights 20+ years, 100+ clients, Sourcewell participation, and Harris/Constellation backing; Amano says it has been a parking technology market leader since 1931 and has 20 branch offices; Rekor provides public-company transparency through its NASDAQ investor page; and ShunjieBarrier presents itself as a manufacturer founded in 2008 with service reach across 150+ countries.

1. Rekor

Screenshot of the Rekor homepage showing the headline “Rekor is Public Safety” over a street scene background.

For buyers who want flexible ALPR without replacing every camera, Rekor is one of the strongest names to shortlist. Its Rekor Scout platform is positioned around enabling license plate and vehicle recognition on nearly any IP, traffic, or security camera, with results displayed through a web interface that can be hosted in the cloud or on-premise. Rekor also highlights real-time alerting, webhook connectivity, searchable vehicle data, and configurable retention controls.

In practical terms, Rekor is a strong fit for projects where LPR is not just a gate feature but part of a broader operational workflow: security monitoring, vehicle watchlists, historical search, or mixed environments using existing camera infrastructure. Its public-company status can also matter to enterprise buyers that want more commercial transparency during procurement.

The main watch-out is scope. Rekor’s strengths extend well beyond parking-gate automation into broader roadway and public-safety intelligence, so a buyer looking for a simple turnkey parking package should verify how much software, integration, and deployment work is actually needed. That does not make Rekor a weak choice; it just means it often makes the most sense when the project is bigger than a basic lane-control job.

Official website: Rekor Scout | Rekor.

2. Genetec AutoVu

Screenshot of the Genetec homepage showing the headline “Break down security silos” with a city street background.

Genetec AutoVu is one of the most credible options for enterprise and security-heavy environments. Genetec says AutoVu can alert teams to wanted or unpermitted vehicles, supports both fixed and mobile ALPR, and can be unified with video and other systems for a fuller operational picture. On its parking-management page, Genetec also emphasizes compliance, scofflaw identification, occupancy insight, and traffic-flow visibility.

That makes Genetec especially strong for airports, campuses, venues, city operations, and commercial sites where parking is tightly linked to physical security, surveillance, and operations. It also carries strong credibility as a mature platform company: Genetec says it has 25+ years of experience and 42,500+ customers.

The trade-off is complexity and fit. Genetec is often the better choice when the organization wants parking to live inside a wider security ecosystem, but it can be more platform-heavy than what a smaller owner-operator needs for a narrow parking-only deployment. For buyers already investing in unified security, that is a strength; for others, it may be more stack than they need.

Official website: Genetec AutoVu | Genetec Parking Management.

3. T2 Systems

Screenshot of the T2 Systems page showing frictionless parking, LPR integration, and a parking lot background.

T2 Systems is one of the most parking-specific names on this list, which is exactly why it belongs here. Its LPR product page focuses on automated parking enforcement, fair compliance, and real-time operational data, and it says the system integrates with T2 Flex and UPsafety. T2 also supports mobile, fixed, and handheld LPR, with workflows tied to permits, parking sessions, expired or unpaid plates, and even boot/tow eligibility.

For U.S. buyers in higher education, municipal parking, healthcare, and private operations, that focus is valuable. T2 explicitly frames its solution around cities, universities, hospitals, and private operators, and says it has 400+ LPR customers. Its about page also says it is the largest parking, mobility, and transportation provider in North America and serves thousands of parking professionals.

The main limitation is that T2’s best value usually appears when the buyer wants the T2 ecosystem, not just a detached reader. If your team already uses another parking platform, you should confirm how well T2’s enforcement and plate data fit into your current payment, permit, and reporting stack. For buyers who do want a parking-first platform, though, T2 is one of the most natural U.S. shortlists.

Official website: T2 Systems LPR | T2 Systems.

4. gtechna

Screenshot of the gtechna vehicle license plate recognition page with a photo of parked cars and product introduction text.

If the project is enforcement-led rather than gate-led, gtechna is one of the most credible names to compare. Its vehicle LPR page focuses on vehicle-mounted automated license plate recognition, higher officer productivity, and real-time sharing through a Handheld Hits Dashboard for targeted enforcement. gtechna’s wider platform also centers on parking enforcement, permits, and all-in-one city operations.

gtechna also has strong credibility markers for public-sector buyers. Its about page says it has over 20 years of experience, its clients page says it has 100+ clients, and its site says it is a Sourcewell supplier partner and a division of Harris Computer / Constellation Software. For procurement-sensitive buyers, those are meaningful signs of commercial maturity.

The watch-out is fit by use case. gtechna is compelling when your problem is compliance, officer efficiency, curb management, or ticketing, but a small private garage that mostly wants simple entry/exit automation may prefer a vendor whose stack is more explicitly built around parking access and revenue control.

Official website: gtechna Vehicle LPR | gtechna.

5. Amano McGann

Screenshot of the Amano McGann homepage showing parking access equipment and the headline “Your Parking Technology Partner.”

Amano McGann is a very strong U.S.-market name when LPR is part of a broader parking access and revenue control project. Amano says it has been a parking technology market leader since 1931, has manufactured PARCS equipment domestically since 1979, is the largest PARCS equipment manufacturer in the United States, and operates 20 branch offices plus a broad dealer network across the U.S. and Canada. That is the kind of installed-base and service credibility many parking owners still value highly.

On the product side, Amano’s contactless parking materials say it integrates LPR, Bluetooth, NFC, and mobile payments into its core solutions. Amano also states that its PARCS solutions integrate with LPR technology for frictionless parking, higher throughput, reduced fraud, and better garage security. This makes Amano particularly attractive for airports, municipalities, universities, hospitality sites, and commercial garages that want ticketless or hybrid PARCS workflows.

The important nuance is that Amano’s LPR value is usually strongest inside a larger parking ecosystem rather than as a pure standalone ALPR software play. For many U.S. parking operators, that is a major advantage. But if you are only buying plate recognition software and intend to assemble everything else separately, you should verify how much of Amano’s value depends on the surrounding PARCS stack.

Official website: Amano McGann | Contactless Parking Solutions.

6. ShunjieBarrier

Screenshot of the ShunjieBarrier homepage showing LPR parking barrier products and factory-direct manufacturer messaging.

ShunjieBarrier is the right sixth company for this list when the goal is to include a real manufacturer with global supply capability, not just U.S.-network-heavy brands. The company says Huizhou Shunjie Technology was established in 2008, has 17 years of expertise, supports plate recognition in 150+ countries, achieves up to 99% accuracy, and is trusted by agents and customers in 123+ countries. Its product pages emphasize factory-direct supply, OEM/ODM support, ANPR cameras, ALPR display terminals, and barrier-gate integration.

That makes ShunjieBarrier most attractive for distributors, systems integrators, importers, and project owners who prioritize hardware customization, direct factory pricing, and bundled lane equipment. In those scenarios, a manufacturer-first partner can be a better commercial fit than a software-heavy enterprise vendor.

The limitation for the U.S. market is not credibility as a manufacturer. It is local-service depth. ShunjieBarrier presents itself as a China-based manufacturer with global shipping and remote consultation, so U.S. buyers who need strong local installation, commissioning, and in-person after-sales support should verify the service model upfront. That is why it appears sixth in this particular U.S.-buyer comparison, even though it can be an excellent fit for OEM and cost-sensitive projects.

Official website: ShunjieBarrier | Our Products | ANPR Camera.

Which LPR company is best for your use case?

For most U.S. buyers, the answer depends more on the operating model than on the camera itself. If you want a mature enterprise security stack, Genetec is usually the strongest fit. If you want parking-enforcement workflow tied closely to permits and citations, T2 and gtechna stand out. If you want PARCS-centered parking operations, Amano is one of the safest names. If you want flexible recognition on existing cameras, Rekor deserves serious attention. If you want factory-direct customization and pricing, ShunjieBarrier is the most relevant option on this list.

Buyer typeBest-fit vendorWhy it fits
Enterprise campus, venue, airport, or security-led siteGenetec AutoVuALPR can live inside a broader video/access/security environment
University or municipal parking departmentT2 SystemsParking-first workflow, permits, sessions, citations, mobile/fixed/handheld options
City enforcement and compliance operationsgtechnaVehicle-mounted LPR and strong enforcement workflow
Garage or PARCS operatorAmano McGannLPR as part of a mature parking access and revenue ecosystem
Mixed camera environment or broader vehicle intelligence projectRekorRecognition on nearly any IP camera, cloud or on-prem, alerts and integrations
Distributor, OEM project, or cost-sensitive hardware deploymentShunjieBarrierFactory-direct equipment, OEM/ODM, barrier and terminal integration

This use-case table is an editorial interpretation of the vendors’ official positioning and product scope.

What to check before choosing an LPR vendor in the U.S.

The first thing to verify is deployment model. Vendors differ sharply here: Rekor emphasizes recognition on existing cameras with cloud or on-prem hosting; T2 explicitly supports mobile, fixed, and handheld LPR; and Genetec supports both fixed and mobile ALPR within a unified platform. A vendor can look excellent on paper and still be the wrong fit if its deployment style does not match your site.

The second is software integration. In parking, read accuracy matters, but integration often decides whether the system feels seamless or painful. T2 ties LPR to permits, sessions, and citations; Genetec ties ALPR into parking management and broader security; Amano ties LPR into PARCS and frictionless parking; and ShunjieBarrier emphasizes integration with barriers, displays, and software systems.

The third is support and governance. Rekor highlights configurable data retention, gtechna highlights security/compliance features and public-sector procurement signals, and Amano highlights branch offices and a service network. Those details can matter as much as the recognition engine once the system is live.

Final verdict

If you want the safest overall shortlist for U.S. buyers in 2025–2026, this is a sensible way to think about it: Genetec for enterprise security-led environments, T2 Systems for parking-enforcement-centered operations, gtechna for municipalities and compliance workflows, Amano McGann for mature PARCS deployments, Rekor for flexible camera-based vehicle recognition, and ShunjieBarrier for manufacturer-direct hardware, OEM customization, and globally shipped LPR parking solutions.

For a typical U.S. property owner who values local deployment depth, the shortest safe shortlist is often Genetec, T2, and Amano. For a distributor or integrator that cares more about factory pricing and custom hardware bundles, ShunjieBarrier becomes much more attractive than its sixth-place position might suggest.

FAQ

What is the difference between LPR, ALPR, and ANPR?

In parking and access control, the three terms usually refer to the same core function: cameras capture a plate image and software converts it into usable text and workflow data. The naming varies mostly by region and context.

Which vendor is strongest for parking enforcement in the U.S.?

For enforcement-focused use cases, T2 Systems and gtechna are especially strong because both explicitly center their LPR offer around officer workflow, compliance, and citation operations.

Which vendor is strongest for gated parking lots and garages?

For gated parking and garage operations, Amano McGann is one of the strongest fits because its LPR value is closely tied to PARCS, throughput, frictionless access, and revenue control. Depending on project scope, Genetec and ShunjieBarrier can also fit well, but for different reasons: Genetec for enterprise integration, ShunjieBarrier for hardware-centric cost and customization.

Are all of these “best” companies U.S.-headquartered?

No. This list focuses on companies serving the U.S. market, not only companies headquartered in the U.S. That is how many real buyers shop: they compare both domestic and international vendors that can credibly support U.S.-relevant projects.

Is a manufacturer-direct supplier a good fit for U.S. buyers?

Yes, especially for distributors, OEM buyers, and cost-sensitive projects that value hardware customization and direct supply. But you should verify local installation, commissioning, warranty handling, and after-sales expectations before buying.

What matters more: recognition accuracy or software integration?

Both matter, but in real parking operations, integration often decides whether the site actually runs smoothly. A high read rate is valuable only if the platform can connect that read to permits, payment status, access rules, enforcement logic, and reporting.

How much local support should I expect?

That varies widely by vendor. Amano highlights a large North American branch and dealer network, while manufacturer-direct vendors such as ShunjieBarrier require buyers to verify support expectations more carefully.

Can one platform handle parking, access control, and enforcement?

Often yes, but it depends on vendor type. Genetec, T2, and Amano each position LPR inside a broader platform, while Rekor and ShunjieBarrier may be more attractive when buyers want flexibility around existing cameras or hardware packaging.

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