Are Old Garage Door Remotes a Security Risk for Your Home?
Many homeowners spend thousands of dollars investing in smart deadbolts, outdoor security cameras, and window sensors, while completely ignoring the single largest physical entry point to their home: the garage door. If your garage door opener system is more than twenty-five years old, it could serve as an open invitation for tech-savvy burglars.
Here is an analytical look at the security vulnerabilities of legacy remote control systems and how to secure them.
The Fatal Flaw of Fixed-Code Dip Switches
If your garage door remote has a row of 9 to 12 tiny physical switches inside the battery compartment used to set your code, your home is highly vulnerable to a security exploit known as Code Grabbing.
Fixed-code remotes broadcast the exact same digital key every single time you arrive home. An intruder sitting in a vehicle down the street can use a basic, inexpensive handheld RF receiver to log your signal from up to 100 feet away. Once recorded, they can replay the signal after you leave for work, opening your garage in seconds without leaving a single trace of forced entry.
Modern Alternatives: Security+ 2.0 and Smartphone Integration
If you want to ensure your garage is secure, your system should utilize one of two modern standards:
- Encrypted Rolling Codes: Systems built after 1997 use a rolling code that alters the digital key out of billions of variations every time the button is clicked. A captured code is completely useless to an intruder because that specific code is instantly blacklisted by the motor unit.
- App-Based Monitoring: Shifting to smart garage controllers lets you completely disable physical RF frequencies when you go on vacation. You receive instant push alerts on your phone the second your garage door is opened, regardless of whether it was triggered by a wall panel, remote, or manual release cord.
Instant Security Audits You Can Do Today
If you cannot upgrade your entire motor assembly right now, you can instantly secure your garage by taking your remotes out of your car when parking outside in the driveway. A broken car window gives a thief instant access to your visor remote, allowing them direct entry into your main residence through the interior garage firewall door.