Security & Cameras
Smart Locks Explained: Keypads, Deadbolts, and Retrofit Options
Smart locks come as keypads, full deadbolt replacements, or retrofits over your existing lock. Learn how each type works and which suits your door.
Security & Cameras
Smart locks come as keypads, full deadbolt replacements, or retrofits over your existing lock. Learn how each type works and which suits your door.
A smart lock is one of the few home upgrades you interact with every single day, which is exactly why the wrong choice becomes a daily irritation rather than a convenience. After installing dozens of them on my own doors and for friends and family, I've learned that the biggest decision isn't which brand to buy first. It's which type of lock actually fits your door, your habits, and how much you want to change about your front entry.
Almost every smart lock on the market falls into one of three categories, and understanding them upfront saves you from buying something that won't physically mount on your door.
Most single-family homes in North America are working with a standard cylindrical deadbolt, which means you'll be choosing between the first two families. Let me walk through each.
Retrofit locks are the gateway drug of home automation. The August Wi-Fi Smart Lock is the classic example: it clamps over the thumb-turn on the inside of your door and motorizes it. The outside of your door looks untouched, so anyone with a physical key can still let themselves in the old-fashioned way.
The catch is that retrofits depend on your existing deadbolt being in good shape. If your current lock is stiff, misaligned, or the door has to be lifted or shoved to throw the bolt, the little motor inside a retrofit will struggle. I've seen retrofits fail to lock reliably not because the lock was bad, but because the door needed a strike-plate adjustment first. Fix the mechanical problem before you automate it.
Retrofits also don't add a keypad to the outside by default. Some brands sell a separate keypad accessory that sticks near the door, but it's a second device to mount, power, and pair. If keyless entry from the outside is your main goal, a retrofit is a roundabout way to get there.
When people picture a smart lock, they're usually picturing this: a sleek keypad on the outside, a motorized bolt, and no key needed. Brands like Schlage, Yale, Kwikset, and Level dominate here.
The obvious cost is the install. You're removing the entire deadbolt and fitting a new one, which means the new lock has to match your door's dimensions precisely. It's not hard, but it's more involved than a retrofit, and a mistake here means a lock that doesn't seat properly.
There's also the key question, literally. Some replacement locks are keypad-only with no physical keyway, relying on a backup 9-volt battery terminal if the internal batteries die. Others keep a traditional keyhole as backup. I generally prefer keeping a physical key backup, because a dead battery at the worst possible moment is a real scenario, not a hypothetical one.
This is the section people skip, and it's the one that causes the most returns. Before you order any full-replacement lock, check three measurements on your door.
For retrofit locks, the measurement that matters instead is your existing thumb-turn shape and size, because the retrofit has to grip it. Most kits ship with a few adapters, but odd or oversized thumb-turns occasionally won't fit. A quick photo compared against the manufacturer's compatibility checker saves a lot of grief.
A smart lock that only works when you tap it isn't much smarter than a dumb one. The value shows up when it connects to the rest of your home, and there are a few competing ways it does that.
Matter is the interoperability standard that's slowly making the "which ecosystem?" question less painful. A Matter-certified lock is designed to work across Apple Home, Google Home, Amazon Alexa, and SmartThings without you picking a side at checkout. It's genuinely promising, and I'd weight it heavily on a new purchase.
That said, be honest about your setup. Matter support is still maturing, and some locks advertise it while lagging on firmware. If you already run a specific hub, the safest move is still to confirm that this exact lock model is on that platform's supported-device list today, not on a roadmap. I've been burned by "coming soon" more than once.
The unglamorous details are what separate a lock you love from one you resent.
One caveat on auto-lock: if your door tends to stick or your alignment is slightly off, auto-lock can jam against the frame and report itself locked when the bolt hasn't fully thrown. Test it obsessively for the first week before you trust it.
A smart lock is only as strong as the door and frame it's mounted in. The fanciest motorized deadbolt still pulls out of a frame with a short strike-plate screw and a good kick. When you install, swap the stock strike-plate screws for 3-inch screws that bite into the wall stud, not just the door jamb. It's a two-dollar upgrade that does more for real-world security than most of the electronics.
On the digital side, use a unique passcode you don't share with your other accounts, enable two-factor authentication on the lock's app if it's offered, and delete guest codes promptly when you no longer need them. Rotate the codes you hand out to service people every so often.
Here's how I'd steer people based on the most common situations:
Whichever route you pick, do the boring prep first: adjust a sticky door, measure your dimensions, and upgrade those strike-plate screws. A smart lock rewards a well-hung door and punishes a neglected one. Get the mechanical basics right, match the type to how you actually live, and the lock disappears into the background exactly the way good technology should.
Keep reading
After a year with Ring, Nest, and Eufy doorbells, here's how they compare on video quality, alerts, subscriptions, and everyday reliability.
Your security cameras capture more than intruders. Learn what footage reveals about your household and how to lock down access, storage, and sharing.