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What to Do After a Break-In: Locksmith Priorities in the First 24 Hours
A break-in is one of the most disorienting things that can happen to a homeowner — and the decisions made in the first 24 hours have the biggest impact on whether it happens again. Police reports, insurance claims, and physical security all happen on parallel tracks, and the locksmith is usually a same-day call, not a “next week” call.
This guide walks through exactly what to do, what to fix first, and how to think about security upgrades after the immediate emergency. For 24/7 dispatch, see our 24/7 Emergency Car Locksmith service.
Quick answer: the right order
Police first. Documentation second. Locksmith third — same day. Insurance and security upgrades happen after. Doing the locksmith call before documentation can complicate the police report and the claim.
The first 24 hours, step by step
A clear sequence makes the next day calmer and the insurance claim cleaner.
Step 1 — Safety and police report
If anyone is in the home, get out and call 911 from a safe location. Even after the scene is clear, file a report — the report number is required by most insurers.
Step 2 — Document everything before cleaning
Photos of the entry point, broken locks or windows, missing items, damaged frames. A report and photos protect the insurance claim and any later legal step.
Step 3 — Call a locksmith for same-day rekey or replacement
Once the police have the scene, the immediate goal is to lock the home tonight. Rekey if the existing hardware survived, replacement if any lock was forced or damaged. A licensed residential locksmith can usually be on site within hours.
Step 4 — Insurance claim
File with the police report number and the locksmith invoice. Most homeowner policies cover lock changes after a break-in.
Three security tiers after a break-in
Different break-ins call for different responses. Most homes need tier 2 — a security pass, not just a quick patch.
Tier 1 — Single-point rekey
If only one entry was used and the hardware wasn’t damaged, a rekey at that point may be enough — combined with a strike plate upgrade.
- Best for: attempted entry, no successful break-in, hardware still intact.
- Common addition: reinforced strike plate, longer screws.
Tier 2 — Full-perimeter rekey or replacement
The most common scenario: rekey or replace every exterior lock so any copy that’s out there no longer works. Plus repair any damaged hardware.
- Best for: successful break-in, lost trust in existing keys, or unknown copies.
- Common addition: deadbolt grade upgrade, smart lock conversion.
Tier 3 — Full security audit and upgrade
Goes beyond locks: review of all entry points, secondary doors, garage, sliding glass, and consideration of smart access for the future.
- Best for: repeated incidents, high-value contents, or homes with weak hardware throughout.
- Common addition: smart deadbolt, video doorbell, secondary security plate on sliding doors.
What’s worth paying for (and what’s not)
After a break-in, it’s tempting to upgrade everything. A licensed locksmith helps separate must-haves from nice-to-haves.
Worth it
- Grade 1 or Grade 2 deadbolts on exterior doors — significantly harder to kick or pry.
- Reinforced strike plates with 3-inch screws — the cheapest upgrade with the biggest impact.
- Door frame reinforcement — the frame fails before the lock in most break-ins.
- Smart deadbolt with auto-lock — eliminates “did I lock the door” failures.
Often overrated
- Triple-cylinder deadbolts — overkill for most homes, and a fire safety risk.
- “Bump-proof” sales pitches on standard hardware — most modern Grade 1 cylinders already resist bumping.
- Replacing every lock with smart locks — interior locks rarely need it.
Why “wait and see” is the most expensive choice
Postponing the locksmith for a few days is the most common mistake — and the most costly.
Common consequences of delay
- Repeat break-in within days — burglars often return knowing the home is vulnerable.
- Insurance claim issues — claims can be reduced if the home wasn’t re-secured promptly.
- Higher emotional cost — the family sleeping in a home with the same locks as the break-in night.
- Missed evidence — repairs done before documentation can complicate the police report.
How to compare locksmith quotes after a break-in
Stress is high, but four questions still apply.
Can you do this same day?
“Tomorrow” is not the right answer in this scenario. A real local shop dispatches today.
Will you inspect every entry point or only the broken one?
A real audit covers all exterior locks, plus secondary entries (garage door, sliding glass).
Is rekey or replacement included for damaged hardware?
If a lock was forced, replacement should be in the quote — not an add-on at the end.
Can you provide an itemized invoice for insurance?
Yes is the only acceptable answer.
FAQ
Common post-break-in questions from homeowners across St. Lucie and Martin counties, FL.
Should I rekey or replace after a break-in?
If the lock was forced or damaged, replace. If it survived intact and you simply want to invalidate any copies that might exist, rekey. A licensed locksmith inspects and recommends the right scope on site.
Do I need new locks even if nothing was stolen?
Often yes. Even an attempted break-in can damage the cylinder or frame in ways that aren’t visible. The same hardware might fail completely on a second attempt.
Will my insurance cover the new locks?
Most homeowner policies cover lock changes after a documented break-in, with a police report and an itemized invoice. Confirm with your insurer.
Can a locksmith come the same day?
Yes — same-day service is standard for break-in response in Port Saint Lucie. After-hours and weekend dispatch is available 24/7.
What about windows and sliding doors?
A locksmith handles primary entry locks. Sliding doors usually benefit from a secondary security pin, which can be installed during the same visit. Window glass repairs are a separate trade.
Is a smart lock safer after a break-in?
It can be — auto-lock eliminates ‘forgot to lock’ incidents, and remote access lets you grant temporary access without sharing a key. The deadbolt grade still matters more than ‘smart’ or ‘dumb’.
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Just had a break-in in Port Saint Lucie?
If you’re in Port Saint Lucie, FL and the home isn’t fully secure right now — call a licensed local locksmith. Same-day rekey or replacement, itemized invoice for insurance, real ETA on the phone.
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