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locksmith business for Sale

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Established Locksmith Business - Commercial & Residential Services photo
All Non-Classifiable Establishments
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Established Locksmith Business - Commercial & Residential Services

ID, US

This established locksmith business, proudly serving the community since 1935, has built a longstanding reputation as a reliable, full-service provider for both in-store and mobile locksmith needs. Catering to residential and commercial clients alike, the business offers a comprehensive array of services, including key cutting, lockouts, rekeying, lock repairs, padlock sales, deadbolt installations, high-security systems, master keying, automotive lock services, safe sales, and keyless entry solutions. Renowned for its professional, timely, and trustworthy service, this shop has remained a cornerstone in the community, providing a one-stop destination for all security and locksmith services. With its decades-long legacy, this business represents an exceptional opportunity for anyone ready to step into a well-established and trusted enterprise.

$265,000
$268,900Revenue
$70,173Cash Flow
Phoenix Valley Mobile Locksmith Home-Based photo
Locksmith

Phoenix Valley Mobile Locksmith Home-Based

Phoenix, AZ, US

Home-based mobile locksmith business serving the entire Phoenix Valley. Revenue is generated by established relationships with two major warranty companies that provide a steady flow of service calls with no marketing effort. The sale includes a fully-equipped 2009 Ford Van, customized for the trade and featuring rear A/C, plus the seller's on-hand inventory and specialized equipment. This is perfect for an owner-operator seeking flexibility, as you can work as much or as little as you want.

$70,000
$60,000Revenue
$50,000Cash Flow

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for locksmith business businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$533k
Median cash flow$95k
Median sale price$275k
Multiple range1.6x - 4.6x

A variety of factors can cause businesses to trade outside this range, including earnings quality, operational transferability, key-person risk, growth trajectory, and geography, so a listing priced above or below the typical multiple usually reflects real differences in the underlying business.

What to know about locksmith business acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating locksmith business acquisitions.

Commercial recurring relationships beat one-time consumer work

Commercial access control and master-key contracts are the asset. A locksmith who installs and services access control systems for office buildings, retail chains, schools, and apartment complexes has recurring service revenue, predictable expansions, and customer relationships measured in years. A locksmith doing one-off lockout calls for distressed consumers has unpredictable revenue and high acquisition cost (Google Ads, lead generation services). The commercial book is the durable value.

Automotive locksmith work is technical and high-margin

Modern car keys are a programming problem. Today's automotive keys involve transponder chips, electronic immobilizer systems, and proximity fobs that require specialized programming equipment. A locksmith who's invested in current automotive programming tools (often $20K–$60K of equipment) and has trained on current vehicle systems commands $200–$500+ for a key replacement that takes 30–60 minutes. This is a real margin business; verify the equipment age and the staff capability.

Online lead generation has gotten brutally competitive

Look at customer acquisition channel by channel. Many locksmiths source residential lockout calls through online ad spend and lead-aggregation services. Customer acquisition costs have climbed substantially over the past decade — and "locksmith" is a Google Ads category notorious for fraud (overseas lead-buyers undercutting legitimate operators). A business heavily dependent on paid leads has compressed margins and quality control issues; one with strong direct relationships, organic SEO, and word-of-mouth referrals has a more durable position.

Safe and vault work is a specialty niche

A locksmith who works on safes is rare and valuable. Safe work — opening locked safes, drilling combinations, repairing damaged units, scheduled service on commercial safes — is technical, expensive, and lightly competed. A locksmith business that includes a senior safe technician has a high-margin niche that's hard to replicate. Verify what safe work the business does and whether the technician will stay through transition.

Licensing and bonding vary widely by state

Verify state requirements. Some states require locksmiths to be licensed, fingerprinted, and bonded (California, Texas, Illinois, others); some don't. Where licensing exists, it typically attaches to individual locksmiths, not the business entity. Verify what credentials the business holds, who holds them, and what's required for the buyer to take over operationally. Insurance and bonding requirements are separate and also state-specific.

Inventory of keys, blanks, and equipment matters

A real locksmith shop carries substantial inventory. Key blanks (often thousands of SKUs for different lock manufacturers and vehicle makes), locks (residential, commercial, padlocks, deadbolts), access control hardware, programming equipment, and tools. Inventory can be $50K–$200K+ for an established shop. Verify what's actually in stock, what's been deadstock for years, and what the manufacturer return programs look like.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Owner-operator residential locksmiths with limited equipment typically trade in the Tier 1 range (under $500K), often $50K–$250K. Mid-size businesses with commercial accounts, automotive programming capability, and 3–10 employees usually trade in the Tier 2 range ($500K–$2M). Larger operators with regional reach, access control installation businesses, or significant commercial recurring revenue can reach Tier 3 ($2M+).