Home Security & Alarms in Alice, TX
Inland South Texas climate, warmer in summer than Corpus Christi (less Gulf moderation).
For home security & alarms, the service area covers roughly 50 miles from central Alice.
Common reasons to call
- Install monitored alarm system
- Upgrade cameras, doorbell, or smart lock
- Replace old alarm panel or sensors
- Add security for vacation rental or second home
- Set up access control for small office
- Troubleshoot false alarms
- Add flood, smoke, glass-break, or motion sensors
- Need local service after moving into a new house
Typical work
- Alarm panel, keypad, contact, motion, and glass-break install
- Camera and video doorbell installation
- Smart lock and access-control coordination
- Alarm monitoring setup and account transfer
- Sensor testing, battery replacement, and false-alarm troubleshooting
- Low-voltage wiring and wireless device placement
- Small business security and access-control setup
Typical turnaround
Simple installs can often schedule within a few business days. Larger wired systems, commercial access control, and monitoring transfers take more planning.
Materials and equipment
- Alarm panel, keypad, siren, and backup battery
- Door and window contacts, motion detectors, and glass-break sensors
- Cameras, doorbells, NVR, DVR, and network equipment
- Smart locks, access-control readers, and door hardware
- Low-voltage wire, connectors, mounts, and power supplies
- Smoke, heat, flood, and environmental sensors where included
Job sizes
Minor
Battery replacement, sensor add-on, camera adjustment, or basic troubleshooting
Standard
Starter alarm system, video doorbell, camera package, or panel replacement
Major
Whole-home alarm and camera package, access control, or vacation-rental setup
Replacement
Full system replacement with monitoring, cameras, smart locks, network work, and commercial access control
Final pricing comes from the on-call provider after on-site assessment, with a written estimate before any work starts.
What to expect
- ✓DPS-licensed alarm companies and registered installers required for regulated alarm work
- ✓Existing panel, sensors, communication path, and monitoring status checked before replacement
- ✓Camera placement reviewed for privacy, signal, and lighting
- ✓Smart lock reliability checked against door alignment
DPS-licensed alarm company, DPS-registered alarm systems installer, electronic access control device installer credentials, NICET fire alarm credentials where fire scope is involved, general liability insurance.
Common questions
Are alarm installers licensed in Texas?
Yes. Texas DPS regulates alarm companies and installers under Chapter 1702. Ask for the company license and individual registration before work starts.
Can I keep my existing alarm equipment?
Sometimes. The installer checks the panel, communicator, sensors, and whether the system is locked to another provider. Some old panels are better replaced.
Do cameras need wiring?
Wired cameras are more reliable, but wireless can work when signal and power are solid. The installer checks Wi-Fi, walls, attic access, and where recordings will be stored.
Can you secure a vacation rental?
Yes. Smart locks, exterior cameras, noise or occupancy monitoring where allowed, flood sensors, and owner access logs are common for Padre Island rentals.
What causes false alarms?
Loose contacts, weak batteries, bad sensor placement, pets, doors that do not latch, and user error are common. A service visit should test each zone.
Do I need monitoring?
Monitoring is useful when you want dispatch or alerts handled even if you miss a phone notification. Self-monitoring is cheaper but puts the response burden on you.
Can you install smart locks?
Yes, but door fit matters. If the deadbolt drags or the frame is out of square, the smart lock will burn batteries and fail. Fix the door first.
Coastal Bend seasons
Spring (March - May)
Good time for camera upgrades and vacation-rental setup before peak travel.
Summer (June - August)
Travel season and rental turnover increase demand for locks, cameras, and water sensors.
Fall (September - November)
Storm prep often includes battery backups, flood sensors, and remote access checks.
Winter (December - February)
Holiday travel and package theft concerns drive alarm and camera calls.