Commercial Keypad Access Control Systems in Dallas
We install keypad and PIN entry systems for DFW businesses. Every employee gets their own code, every entry gets logged, and firing someone no longer means changing the locks.
Texas DPS Licensed #B19875 · Serving Dallas-Fort Worth commercial properties since 2010
Keypad & PIN Entry at a Glance
Stop Relying on Keys and Shared Door Codes You Cannot Control
Most Dallas businesses that call us about keypads already have one. It has one code, everyone knows it, and it has not changed since the day it was installed. The delivery drivers know it. Two rounds of former employees know it. Somebody wrote it on the breakroom whiteboard in 2023.
A shared code is barely better than no lock. When something goes missing, the entry log, if the keypad even has one, tells you the door opened. It cannot tell you who opened it, because everyone has the same four digits. And changing the code means catching thirty employees before their next shift, so it never happens.
“A commercial keypad access control system works differently. Each employee enters a unique PIN, so the log shows names and times — not just ‘door opened.'”
The residential keypads from hardware stores make this worse. They hold a handful of codes, they are rated for a front porch rather than a door cycling three hundred times a day, and most have no log, no schedules, and no way to manage them without standing at the door. Codes are added or killed from software in seconds — a terminated employee’s PIN dies before they reach the parking lot, and nobody else’s code changes. That is the difference between a door code and door control.
Our Keypad and PIN Entry Systems Services
This page covers one thing we do a lot of: keypad and PIN based door access. Here is what an installation from us actually includes.
For a single storage room or back door, a commercial-grade standalone keypad is often the right call, and we will say so instead of overselling you a networked system. For multiple doors or multiple sites, we install networked keypads tied to a central controller, managed from one dashboard. Both come in weatherproof and vandal-resistant housings for exterior doors, loading docks, and gates that take Texas heat and rain.
We configure a unique code per employee, which is what makes entry logs mean something. On top of that: temporary codes for contractors that expire on a date you set, one-time codes for deliveries, and duress codes that open the door normally while silently alerting your alarm monitoring that someone was forced to enter.
Codes can work only during assigned shifts, so a 9-to-5 code fails at midnight. Lockout rules disable a keypad after repeated wrong attempts, which stops code guessing cold. Alerts hit your phone for propped doors, failed attempts, or entries at odd hours, and the timestamped log is exportable when your insurer, auditor, or a police report needs it.
A keypad only controls a door if the locking hardware behind it is right. We install and wire the maglocks, electric strikes, request-to-exit devices, and door contacts that complete the opening, matched to your door type and fire egress code. We also install keypad and card reader combo units for businesses that want PIN entry as a backup when a card is forgotten, or PIN-plus-card together on high-security doors.
When Your Business Needs Keypad and PIN Entry Systems
You do not need a keypad on every door. You need it when one of these situations shows up:
Nobody can say how many copies exist, and rekeying after every departure is a recurring bill.
One shared PIN that half the neighborhood knows is the most common problem we replace.
Hiring, terminations, and role changes take seconds in software instead of a locksmith visit.
Warehouse staff get the dock door, office staff get the front, and only two people get the server room.
Inventory cages, records rooms, labs, and executive offices deserve individual codes and their own logs.
A code that works Tuesday evenings only, then expires, beats a key you hope comes back.
Unique employee PINs turn “someone got in” into a name and a timestamp for audits and investigations.
A denied PIN at the cash office can flag the matching camera clip and arm-state automatically.
You run multiple locations? Supported networked systems put every site’s keypads, codes, and logs in one dashboard. If two or more of the above describe your building, the free assessment will pay for itself in the first conversation.
Our Keypad and PIN Entry Systems Process
Five steps from first call to a fully working door — no surprises, no unfinished commissioning.
A technician walks your facility and looks at every entry point: door and frame construction, traffic levels, weather exposure, and which areas need restriction. We ask how access should work by role, department, shift, and operating schedule, because a keypad plan built around your actual staffing beats a generic spec every time.
We select the keypads, controllers, door hardware, and software that fit what we found, including user capacity, PIN management features, and any camera or alarm integration points. You get an itemized quote. If a standalone unit covers a door for a third of the cost of a networked one, the quote says so.
Our crew runs power and network cabling, mounts keypads, and installs the maglocks, electric strikes, request-to-exit devices, and door contacts each opening needs. We stage the work so no door sits unsecured during business hours, and we leave clean terminations rather than a ceiling full of loose wire.
We build your user list and configure individual PINs, user groups, access levels, schedules, temporary codes, duress codes, lockout rules, alerts, and remote management. You approve the access rules before they go live, so day one works the way you expect instead of the way a default template expects.
Every keypad, code type, schedule, lockout setting, alert, and integration gets tested while we are on site, with your administrator watching. Then we train your staff to add and revoke codes themselves, hand over full documentation, and leave you the direct number for our Carrollton office.
Why Dallas-Fort Worth Businesses Choose Security in DFW
Texas DPS Alarm License #B19875 is verifiable with the state before you sign anything. A surprising share of keypad installs in DFW are done by unlicensed handymen, which surfaces as a problem exactly when an insurance claim gets reviewed.
Keypad, controller, cabling, maglock or strike, and software, installed by one crew. You skip coordinating an electrician, a locksmith, and an IT vendor, and there is nobody to point fingers at but us.
A two-door law office and a multi-building operation get the same design discipline. We spec controllers and licensing so adding doors or a second location is a work order, not a rip-and-replace.
Unfinished testing is the quiet defect in this industry. Every keypad, PIN, schedule, and alert gets validated on site against a checklist your administrator signs.
Itemized quotes before work starts, as-built documentation at handover, and training that means your office manager adds the next hire’s code without calling anyone.
Our office is on Hebron Parkway. When a keypad takes a forklift hit or you need codes restructured after a reorg, a local tech handles it, with maintenance plans available for scheduled checkups.
Keypad and PIN Entry Systems for Commercial Sectors Across DFW
Every industry on this list has a specific access problem that shared codes make worse and individual PINs solve cleanly.
Weatherproof keypad access on dock doors and cages gives every worker an individual PIN and a named entry log.
Hotels and restaurant groups burn through staff. Individual PINs with instant revocation replace the code everyone knows.
Issue seasonal staff PIN codes that expire automatically at contract end — no physical credential to collect.
Individual PINs with exportable entry logs on vaults and records storage satisfy examiner-expected physical controls.
Schedule-limited PINs give volunteers access to only the rooms and hours they serve, at no rekeying cost.
Teachers move through coded doors while visitors route to a monitored office; a compromised code changes in software.
Zoned PIN access keeps untrained workers out of hazardous areas and gives safety officers real OSHA records.
Per-tenant codes deactivate in one action at move-out, replacing a shared building code that never changes.
Individual staff PINs with timestamped logs on records rooms and med storage satisfy HIPAA’s access expectations.
Keypad and PIN Entry Systems Services Across Dallas-Fort Worth
Our crews run out of Carrollton and cover the full Metroplex. If your building is in North Texas, the assessment visit usually happens within the week.
If you are anywhere in North Texas, call (469) 225-3031 and we will confirm coverage and schedule your assessment.
📞 Call (469) 225-3031Keypad and PIN Entry Systems FAQs
Common questions from DFW business owners before their first assessment.
Get Free Assessment →Ready to Control Who Enters Your Business?
If your door code is older than your newest ten employees, you already know the answer. The assessment is free, takes about an hour, and ends with an itemized quote instead of a pitch. Most keypad installs are completed within two weeks of approval.
Licensed by Texas DPS, #B19875 · Based in Carrollton · Serving all of Dallas-Fort Worth
Our Service Area
- Anna
- Ardmore
- Aubrey
- Bridgeport
- Briar
- Bonham
- Caddo Mills
- Carrollton
- Celina
- Commerce
- Corinth
- Denton
- Keller
- Justin
- Emory
- Farmersville
- Forney
- Fort Worth
- Frisco
- Gainesville
- Granbury
- Lantana
- Lewisville
- Lavon
- Little Elm
- McKinney
- Murphy
- Nevada
- Northlake
- Pilot Point
- Plano
- Princeton
- Quinlan
- Rhome
- Rockwall
- Royse
- Sachse
- Saginaw
- Sanger
- Sherman
- Sulphur Springs
- Sunnyvale
- Terrell
- Van Alstyne
- Prosper
- Wylie
- Weatherford
