
Why this matters right after you move
When you get the keys to a new home, it feels like the property is finally yours. What you do not know is how many copies of those keys may still be out there.
Previous owners, tenants, contractors, cleaners, pet sitters, babysitters, neighbors, and real estate agents may have had access at some point. Even when nobody means any harm, unknown key access is still a security gap.
That is why one of the first questions to ask after moving is not just, “Do I have my keys?” It is, “Who else might still have one?”
If you are settling into a home in Killeen, near Fort Hood, or elsewhere in Central Texas, this is one of the easiest ways to start fresh with real peace of mind. Brock’s Lock & Key already highlights rekeying as a smart choice when you have just moved or when a key is unaccounted for.
Rekeying vs. replacing: what should you choose?
A lot of homeowners assume they need all-new hardware. Sometimes you do. Many times, you do not.
