OKC Insider
Free home security consultation in Oklahoma City
34% of Oklahoma City home break-ins skip the front door entirely — and most modern alarm systems miss those weak points by default. A vetted local installer walks the home with you, identifies actual gaps, and quotes a system sized to YOUR layout, not a packaged bundle.
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Serving: Edmond, Norman, Yukon, Moore, Mustang, Bethany, Bricktown, Plaza District, Nichols Hills, Midtown OKC, Deer Creek, Piedmont, and all of greater Oklahoma City, OK.
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Frequently asked questions
How much does a home security system cost in OKC?
Equipment costs $300–$1,500 for a typical OKC single-family system (door/window sensors, motion, 2–4 cameras, smart lock, hub). Monitoring is $20–$50/month for professional 24/7 response. DIY systems (Ring, SimpliSafe, Arlo) skip the install fee but you handle the camera placement.
Professional monitoring or self-monitoring?
Professional monitoring guarantees a human dispatches OKC police within 30–90 seconds of an alarm; insurance often discounts your premium 10–20% for monitored systems. Self-monitoring saves $20–$50/month but you're responsible for noticing and responding. For most OKC homeowners, monitoring pays for itself in 2 years via the insurance discount.
How many security cameras do I need?
A typical OKC single-family home needs 4–6 cameras: front door (doorbell), driveway, back door, side gates, and any blind corner. Coverage gaps matter more than total count — a vetted installer maps your property and shows you exactly what each camera sees before installing.
Will my OKC homeowners insurance discount me for an alarm?
Most major Oklahoma insurers (State Farm, Allstate, USAA, Farmers) discount 5–20% for a monitored alarm system with a central-station certificate. Smoke + monitored fire often adds another 3–5%. Bring the certificate to your insurer; the discount usually applies at next renewal.
Do I need a permit for an OKC alarm system?
Yes — Oklahoma City requires an alarm permit ($20/year as of 2026) for any monitored alarm system that dispatches police. Most installers handle the permit paperwork at install. Unpermitted alarms get billed $50–$100 per false-alarm response after the third event.