A+ Handyman Services
Springfield, MO 65807-5638
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Handyman, Electrical Contractors, Locksmith ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
Locksmith for Rental Properties for rental properties in Kansas City — durable finishes, tenant-friendly scheduling, and between-tenant turnaround. Browse 61 contractors who understand the landlord's priorities.
Typical cost in Kansas City
$100–$400 / service
61 contractors in Kansas City
Springfield, MO 65807-5638
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Handyman, Electrical Contractors, Locksmith ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
9017 E 35th St , Kansas City, MO 64129-1606
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Locksmith, Key Duplication, Keys ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
115 N Chester Street , Olathe, KS 66061
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Locksmith, Security Cameras, Security Systems ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
2631 E 6th St , Kansas City, MO 64124-2405
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Car Locksmith, Locksmith, Key Duplication ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
120 Abbie Ave , Kansas City, KS 66103
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Locksmith, Key Control Systems
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
Gladstone, MO 64119-1954
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Locksmith, Key Duplication, Mobile Locksmith ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
Kansas City, MO 64134-3621
BBB Accredited A rated. Locksmith, Mobile Locksmith, Car Locksmith
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
Bonner Spgs, KS 66012-1114
BBB Accredited A rated. Locksmith, Roadside Assistance, Interlock Devices ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
310 NE State Route 291 , Lees Summit, MO 64086-2503
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Locksmith, Key Control Systems
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
1149 E Meadow Ln , Olathe, KS 66062-5745
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Locksmith, Access Control Systems, Roadside Assistance ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
313 SW 5th St , Topeka, KS 66603-3104
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Locksmith, Hardware Sales, Locksmith Supplies ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
56 NW 58th Ln , Lamar, MO 64759-9414
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Locksmith, Safe Movers, Safes ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
Kansas City has no specific state locksmith licensing requirement — Missouri is an unlicensed state for the locksmith trade. This means pricing, quality, and legitimacy vary significantly across the KC metro market. The costs below reflect what legitimate, established Kansas City locksmiths charge; scam operations (documented by the Missouri Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division) frequently advertise far lower prices and then add unexpected charges upon arrival.
| Service | Typical KC Price |
|---|---|
| Residential lockout (standard deadbolt pick/bypass) | $75–$150 |
| Automotive lockout (standard vehicle, slim jim or decode) | $75–$175 |
| Automotive lockout (high-security transponder key vehicle, VATS) | $125–$275 |
| Car key duplication (standard blade key) | $25–$75 |
| Car key programming (proximity/transponder key, dealer-level equipment) | $150–$400 |
| Rekey — single lock (same keying, new wafer set) | $25–$60 |
| Rekey — whole house (4–6 locks, 1 key fits all) | $100–$225 |
| Deadbolt installation (customer-supplied hardware) | $75–$150 |
| Deadbolt installation (locksmith-supplied Grade 1 hardware) | $150–$350 |
| Smart lock installation (Schlage Encode, Yale, Level) | $100–$300 + hardware |
| Master key system (commercial/multifamily, per door) | $50–$150 setup/door, plus hardware |
| High-security lock upgrade (Medeco, Mul-T-Lock, ASSA) | $250–$600/door installed |
| Safe opening (combination reset or emergency bypass) | $150–$500+ depending on safe type |
| Commercial lockout (office, business) | $100–$250 |
| Emergency after-hours service | Standard rates + $50–$100 emergency surcharge |
Service call / dispatch fee: Most Kansas City locksmiths charge a $25–$65 dispatch/service call fee in addition to the service price — this is standard. Clarify whether the quote you receive is all-in or if a dispatch fee is added upon arrival.
After-hours pricing: Kansas City locksmiths operating 24/7 typically charge standard rates for business-hours calls and add a $50–$100 emergency surcharge for calls between 9 PM and 7 AM. Clarify your after-hours rate before confirming dispatch.
Automotive key programming: Modern Kansas City vehicles (most post-2005) require transponder key programming that links the key's immobilizer chip to the vehicle's ECU. This requires specialized locksmith programming equipment (Autel IM508, Xhorse Condor XC-MINI) and is priced accordingly at $150–$400. Dealerships charge equivalent or higher for the same service. A locksmith with appropriate automotive key cutting and programming equipment is a legitimate lower-cost alternative to the dealer.
Kansas City has significant neighborhood-by-neighborhood variation in property crime rates. For residents in or near higher-crime corridors (portions of the urban core, Westport area, neighborhoods adjacent to the Troost corridor), high-security lock upgrades provide meaningful resistance to bump and pick attacks:
| Lock Brand | Security Class | Resistance | Installed Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medeco M3 | ANSI Grade 1 | Pick, bump, drill, key duplication (restricted keyway) | $350–$550/door |
| Mul-T-Lock MT5+ | ANSI Grade 1 | Pick, bump, drill, key duplication (patented keyway) | $300–$500/door |
| ASSA Abloy CLIQ | ANSI Grade 1 | Pick, bump, restricted key; electronic audit trail option | $400–$700/door |
| Schlage B60N (Grade 1) | Entry-level Grade 1 | Basic pick resistance; standard residential | $150–$250/door |
Standard residential deadbolts (including many Schlage and Kwikset Grade 2 locks) can be bumped open with a bump key in seconds. Grade 1 locks with security pins resist this attack. For Kansas City homeowners in higher-crime areas, a $400–$600 per-door upgrade to a Medeco or Mul-T-Lock is a meaningful security investment relative to the cost of a home burglary.
Missouri does not require locksmiths to hold a state license, unlike states such as Texas, Louisiana, California, Alabama, and Illinois which mandate locksmith licensing and background checks. In Missouri, anyone can operate as a locksmith without any credential, background check, or skill verification. This regulatory gap creates significant consumer protection concerns — and it's why verifying credentials voluntarily is essential in Kansas City.
The Missouri Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division has documented locksmith scam operations active in the Kansas City metro — a nationally widespread pattern that is particularly prevalent in states without locksmith licensing requirements.
The scam pattern:
How they stay visible on Google: Scam locksmith companies create dozens of fake Google Business listings with local Kansas City addresses (often UPS Store or virtual office addresses in Overland Park, Lee's Summit, or downtown KC) and local phone numbers that forward to a central dispatch — creating the appearance of a local company while operating through out-of-state or foreign dispatch centers.
The Missouri AG's recommended verification steps:
In the absence of Missouri state licensing, the Associated Locksmiths of America (ALOA) provides the most credible voluntary certification system:
| Credential | Qualification |
|---|---|
| CRL (Certified Registered Locksmith) | Passes written examination on basic locksmithing principles |
| CPL (Certified Professional Locksmith) | Passed comprehensive written and practical examinations |
| CML (Certified Master Locksmith) | Highest ALOA certification; tests across all locksmith disciplines |
| CMST (Certified Master Safe Tech) | Specialty: safe opening, combination changes, electronic safe service |
| AHC (Automotive Certified) | Verified automotive key programming and lockout proficiency |
Verify an ALOA member's credential at aloa.org/member-search. A Kansas City locksmith holding a CPL or higher has voluntarily subjected themselves to skill verification — a meaningful differentiator when Missouri provides none by default.
Transparent phone quoting: Legitimate Kansas City locksmiths provide clear price ranges over the phone before dispatch — including the dispatch/service fee — and don't claim they can't quote until they see the lock. While exact pricing reasonably depends on what they find, a legitimate operator will quote a service range ($75–$150 for a residential lockout) and confirm any dispatch fee upfront.
Verifiable local address: Ask for the company's physical address and look it up. A legitimate KC locksmith operates out of a real shop, a commercial office, or a registered home-based business — not a virtual mailbox or shared workspace listed at 100+ other businesses.
Identification upon arrival: A legitimate Kansas City locksmith technician will present identification, confirm your name and the service, and provide a written service authorization before starting work. Technicians who proceed immediately with drilling (rather than attempting to pick the lock first) are using a more profitable method that destroys your lock unnecessarily.
Insurance and bonding: Request proof of general liability insurance and surety bond. A legitimate locksmith business carries GL insurance (protects against property damage during service) and is typically bonded (protects against theft by the technician). Bonding in Missouri is a voluntary practice — its presence indicates a more established, accountable operation.
Locksmith services span a wide range — from tasks any homeowner can handle to professional work requiring specialized tools, training, and automotive equipment. The key is knowing which is which, and understanding that in Kansas City's unlicensed market, "professional" doesn't automatically mean qualified.
| Service | DIY | Professional |
|---|---|---|
| Standard deadbolt replacement | DIY-feasible; standard bore door prep; 20–45 minutes | Professional adds installation accuracy and hardware sourcing |
| Rekeying a lock (changing the pins to fit a new key) | DIY possible with a rekey kit ($20–$30 for Kwikset SmartKey or Schlage); not possible for all lock brands | Professional can rekey any lock; provides new keys cut on professional equipment |
| Smart lock installation | DIY-accessible for most Schlage/Yale/August products | Professional needed for multi-door integration, older door prep modifications |
| Home lockout | No viable DIY — you're locked out | Professional locksmith required |
| Automotive lockout | Slim jim tools are available but damages risk is high on modern vehicles | Professional with proper tools does not damage door panels or window seals |
| Car key duplication (standard blade) | Hardware store key duplication — acceptable for standard keys | Professional cuts on calibrated machines; better accuracy for high-tolerance keys |
| Transponder key programming | Not DIY-possible without OBD-II programming equipment | Professional locksmith with Autel IM508 or equivalent |
| High-security lock installation (Medeco, Mul-T-Lock) | DIY purchase and installation technically possible | Professional installation recommended — restricted keyways require dealer sourcing |
| Safe opening | Not viable without damaging the safe | Professional safe technician (CMST credential); non-destructive entry for most models |
| Master key system | Not feasible — requires pin differential calculations and special hardware | Professional with commercial locksmith training |
Rekeying a lock after moving into a new Kansas City home — especially a previously rented home or a purchase where key history is unknown — is the single highest-ROI security action a homeowner can take, and it's DIY-accessible for many common locks.
Kwikset SmartKey: Kwikset's SmartKey technology allows the homeowner to rekey the lock without removing it from the door, using the included tool and a new key. Takes 5 minutes per lock; costs $0 if you already have a SmartKey lock or $20–$30/lock for the SmartKey version. This is genuinely DIY-accessible and a legitimate security improvement.
Standard Kwikset/Schlage pin tumbler rekey: Requires a rekey kit ($20–$35 on Amazon) that includes a follower tool, pinning tray, and replacement pins. Takes 20–40 minutes per lock for a first-timer. Not difficult for mechanically inclined homeowners. Cannot be done without removing the lock cylinder from the door.
Professional rekeying value: A locksmith rekeying 4–6 locks to operate on one key in a Kansas City home typically charges $100–$225 — multiple locks, new keys cut, and the guarantee of correct pin depth. For the convenience and certainty, many KC homeowners opt to hire this out even though DIY is technically possible.
Smart lock installation (Schlage Encode, Yale Assure, Kwikset Halo, August Smart Lock Pro) is one of the most DIY-accessible locksmith tasks — and one that homeowners increasingly handle themselves in Kansas City.
When DIY works: Standard deadbolt door prep (the bore hole, the strike box, the backset) matches the new smart lock's dimensions. Schlage Encode and Yale Assure both include comprehensive installation guides. Battery-powered models require no wiring. 30–60 minute installation for most models.
When professional is better: Door prep modifications are needed (older KC housing stock from the 1950s–1970s sometimes has non-standard bore depths or backsets); Z-Wave or ZigBee integration into a whole-home system needs professional programming; commercial-grade electronic readers with access control systems.
Security note for KC homeowners: Smart locks retain the deadbolt's core security rating. A Schlage Encode over a Grade 1 Schlage B60N deadbolt is significantly more secure than an August retrofit over an older Grade 3 deadbolt. The electronics are an add-on — the mechanical lock rating remains primary.
In Kansas City, if you are locked out of your vehicle with a child or pet inside, call 911 immediately — not a locksmith. KCPD and KC Fire respond quickly to vehicle entrapment situations and can access the vehicle faster and at no charge. Do not lose time calling a locksmith for a child/pet-in-vehicle lockout — the interior temperature risk is severe.
Similarly, if you witness a locksmith technician engaging in the "scam pattern" (claiming only drilling is possible, dramatically increasing their quoted price, demanding cash), photograph the technician and their vehicle, decline to pay the inflated amount, and report to the Missouri Attorney General and the Kansas City Better Business Bureau.
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