Door Security Product Types
The collection covers four approaches to entry point security, all without permanent installation. Door jammers and stoppers wedge under inward-opening doors to prevent forced entry even when locks fail — the mechanical resistance adds a physical barrier that a standard lock doesn't provide. Door knob alarms hang on the door knob and sound a siren when the knob is turned — no tools, no mounting, immediate setup in any room. Door vibration alarms detect movement when a door is touched, opened, or forced — adhesive mounting on the door or frame. Contact sensors use a magnetic pair that triggers an alarm when the door opens — works on doors, windows, cabinets, and drawers.
Door Jammers and Barricade Devices
The Door Stopper Alarm combines a door wedge with a built-in alarm — it both blocks the door mechanically and sounds a siren if the door is pushed. The Door Bull is the heavy-duty option — a reinforced barricade device that mounts to the door hinge side for maximum resistance against forced entry. Both work on inward-opening doors only. For sliding doors, contact sensors are the appropriate alternative since a wedge jammer won't function on a sliding track.
Door Alarms
The Door Knob Alarm hangs on any door knob and triggers a siren when the knob is turned — setup takes seconds with no tools or mounting hardware. The Door Vibration Alarm detects vibration from contact, opening, or forced entry and mounts with adhesive to the door or frame. The Door and Window Alarm and 90dB Window Door Sensors use magnetic contact pairs that trigger when the door opens — versatile enough for windows, cabinets, and drawers as well.
Travel and Hotel Door Security
The door stopper alarm and door knob alarm are the most practical travel options — both pack flat, require no installation, and work in any hotel room or rental with a standard inward-opening door. Hotel room doors are standard inward-opening doors that a wedge stopper fits under immediately. The door knob alarm adds audible deterrence for the same setup. Both together provide layered protection — mechanical resistance plus an audible alert — for under $25 combined.
Door Security Tips
Door jammers work on inward-opening doors only — sliding doors, French doors, and outward-opening doors need contact sensors or vibration alarms instead. Layering a jammer with an alarm provides dual protection: mechanical resistance slows forced entry while the alarm attracts attention. Test alarm batteries monthly and check product descriptions for battery type — most use AAA or 9V. For complete entry point protection, pair door security with window security devices — windows are the second most common entry point after doors.