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Vacant Home Security Risks Intensify as Millions of U.S. Properties Sit Unoccupied

By Advos
Security experts warn that vacant properties face heightened risks of crime and damage, prompting a shift toward live monitoring and patrol services.

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Vacant Home Security Risks Intensify as Millions of U.S. Properties Sit Unoccupied

As housing transitions, investment property ownership, estate settlements, foreclosures, and seasonal vacancies leave millions of homes unoccupied across the United States, security professionals are raising alarms about the growing vulnerability of these properties. According to industry reports, vacant and abandoned properties experience higher rates of property crime, trespassing, vandalism, and unauthorized entry, along with weather-related damage, plumbing failures, and fire hazards that can escalate quickly without detection.

"Many owners don't realize how vulnerable an unoccupied property becomes after just a few days or weeks without regular monitoring," said Assia Payne, CEO of Fast Guard Security Services. "A vacant home can quickly become a target for theft, vandalism, illegal occupancy, or even maintenance issues such as water leaks and electrical failures that may go unnoticed for extended periods."

Property owners often assume that locked doors and standard alarm systems provide sufficient protection, but security experts say these measures fall short because vacant properties lack the daily activity that naturally deters criminals. In response, many owners are turning to remote monitoring technologies and professional patrol services to maintain oversight of their assets.

Fast Guard Security Services, a nationwide security company specializing in residential and commercial property protection, has seen increased demand for vacant-property security solutions. The company provides a combination of live-monitored surveillance cameras, mobile patrol inspections, remote monitoring services, alarm response, and on-site security personnel designed specifically for unoccupied properties. Unlike conventional systems that rely on owners to review alerts after an incident, live-monitored systems can identify suspicious activity in real time and coordinate immediate response.

Security concerns are particularly acute for real estate investors managing vacant rental properties, owners of second homes and seasonal residences, financial institutions overseeing REO and foreclosure inventories, estate executors responsible for inherited properties, homeowners relocating before selling, and property management companies with vacant units. "Prevention is always less expensive than recovery," Payne added. "A single break-in, vandalism incident, copper theft, or water leak can result in thousands of dollars in damages. The goal is to identify problems before they become major losses."

Security professionals recommend that owners of vacant properties implement a comprehensive protection strategy that includes regular property inspections, live video monitoring, perimeter security assessments, alarm verification procedures, mobile patrol services, and emergency response planning. As housing market conditions continue to evolve and vacancy rates fluctuate across regions, experts expect vacant-property security to remain a growing concern for homeowners, investors, lenders, and property managers alike.

Advos

Advos

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