Brock's Lock Blog Connection
Graduation, Guests, and Summer Plans: Is Your Home Ready for a Busier Season?
Why May is the month homeowners start noticing security gaps
May has a different rhythm in Central Texas. School is wrapping up. Families are planning graduations. Visitors start dropping by more often. Summer trips move from “maybe” to “booked.”
That extra activity changes how you use your home.
A front door that used to be the main entry may get replaced by the garage door. A spare key that felt harmless suddenly matters more. A patio door that rarely gets checked may start seeing more traffic during parties and family visits.
This is not about being alarmed. It is about noticing that busier seasons create more access points, more routines, and more chances for small security issues to get ignored.
The question most homeowners cannot answer clearly

Ask yourself one simple question:
Who can get into your home right now?
Most people can name everyone in the household who has a key. Fewer can confidently name everyone else who might still have access.
That list may include:
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a former babysitter
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a pet sitter
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a contractor
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a previous owner or tenant
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a neighbor holding an old spare
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a family member who copied a key years ago
None of that automatically means a problem. It does mean access can get unclear over time.
And unclear access is not the same as secure access.
The most common pre-summer security issues people ignore

The same patterns show up in busy households every year.
One family realizes the garage entry door is now the most-used entrance, but it still has older hardware and no keypad option.
Another homeowner starts planning a graduation party and notices the back door, patio door, or side gate has not been checked in months.
Then there are the households making summer travel plans who suddenly remember too many people already have spare keys.
These are not dramatic problems. They are normal life situations. That is exactly why they get pushed aside until something becomes inconvenient at the wrong time.
A simple pre-summer home security review
You do not need a complicated checklist to get real value. A quick walk-through of the main access points can tell you a lot.
Front door
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Make sure the lock turns smoothly
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Check for loose hardware
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Confirm the deadbolt throws fully
Garage entry
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Test the deadbolt and handle
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Decide whether keypad access would help
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Check whether this is now your true main family entry
Back and side doors
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Confirm they latch cleanly
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Look for weak alignment or dragging
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Make sure key access is still controlled
Patio doors and gates
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Check that locks engage properly
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Make sure side access is not being overlooked
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Look at any entry point guests may use during events
Spare keys and codes
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List who has a key
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Remove hidden outdoor spares
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Delete or reset any access that no longer makes sense
This kind of review helps you catch quiet problems before summer gets even busier.
Why rekeying makes sense before the season changes

If your household is about to get more active, rekeying is one of the easiest ways to reset access.
Rekeying changes the internal pins of the lock so old keys stop working. In many cases, you keep the existing hardware and still get a clean security reset. Brock’s own site already explains rekeying as a practical solution when you want old keys to stop working without replacing the whole lock.
That can be especially useful if:
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you are not sure who still has a spare
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visitors or helpers have come and gone over time
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you recently moved
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a lock still works, but access history is unclear
For many households, this is the fastest way to start summer with better control.
Why smart locks fit busy families so well
This is also the time of year when keypad and smart lock options start making more sense.
If older kids are coming home at different times, relatives are visiting, or a pet sitter may need entry while you travel, physical keys can get messy fast.
A keypad or smart lock can help you:
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create temporary access without making copies
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remove access when it is no longer needed
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avoid hiding spare keys outside
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make daily entry easier for busy families
That lines up with the client’s own smart lock content, which positions keyless entry and smart lock options as useful home security upgrades for Central Texas homeowners.
Why local homeowners call Brock’s Lock & Key
Brock’s Lock & Key is a veteran-owned and operated mobile locksmith company serving Killeen, Fort Hood, and nearby Central Texas communities, including Belton, Copperas Cove, Harker Heights, and Nolanville. The site lists residential locksmith service, contact number 254-423-1149, and Texas locksmith license #B18916.
That local experience matters when you want practical advice, not a one-size-fits-all pitch.
Start summer with more confidence
May is not just the end of spring. It is the start of a busier season for your household.
If your home is about to see more guests, more activity, and more shared access, now is the right time to make sure your locks and entry points are ready for it.
For help with rekeying locks in Central Texas, home security upgrades near Fort Hood, or a residential locksmith in Killeen, TX, call 254-423-1149 for mobile service in Killeen and surrounding Central Texas communities.
