BRIMBANK NORTH WEST
Home » News » Keeping your home safe these holidays

Keeping your home safe these holidays

Keeping your home safe while away on holidays is an important issue to keep in mind during the 2023 festive period.

Neighbourhood Watch has some tips for residents via its online ’How Safe Is My Place’ tool, which asks a series of questions to get you thinking about the security of your home, coupled with advice to reduce the risk of your home being broken into.

Here are some top Neighbourhood Watch hints for keeping your house safe while you are away:

Get to know your neighbours

Intruders are more unlikely to go after a home if they think they’re being watched.

• Keep a spare key with a trusted neighbour, not hidden somewhere near the house.

• Don’t leave keys, wallets, mobile phones and electronic devices in plain view, them in a secure place out of sight.

Install a home security system

Homes without a security system are three times more likely to be broken into than homes with one.

• If you can’t afford a Home Security System, consider installing alarms that, once set, emit a loud noise whenever someone opens a door or breaks a window.

• A cheaper idea would be to place a generic sticker to the effect that “This home is protected by Home Security” in different windows around your home.

• It might not deter all intruders, but it may cause some to reconsider making you a target.

• Keep the outside of your house tidy.

• Regular home maintenance keeps your home looking like it’s occupied.

• Mowing lawns, and trimming shrubs and trees, can help.

• Also, planting thorny bushes near windows can be a deterrent and act as an evidence collection tool in the event of a home intrusion.

Keep the outside of your house well-lit

• Put lighting on a timer to light the outside of your house so neighbours can see a suspicious person near your home and light your front door and other entry point areas.

• If you have tall trees around your home, you might also consider installing timed floodlights in their branches that come on at night for additional security.

Rubbish

Intruders might “window shop” your home to check for any new item cardboard boxes.

• Cut up the boxes so they fit in the recycle bin.

• Secondly, don’t throw away any bills or bank statements without shredding them first.

Securing doors

Doors are a home’s first point of entry, so consider strengthening their security with the following measures:

• Make sure the hinges of all entry doors are on the inside of the home. If hinges are on the outside, intruders can break them off to get in.

• Replace the strike plate which is the metal rectangle on the inside of the door that the deadbolt or door latch inserts into when the door closes. When intruders kick in a door, the strike plate is often the part that gives first, particularly in older homes where they can be worn or loose.

• Install security film on glass panes. Doors with lots of glass panes are easy to compromise.

• Check to see if your doors fit the frame snugly. Intruders can insert crowbars in the gap between the door and the frame to pry it open.

• French doors are easy to kick open so buy a kit to help reinforce them.

• Sliding glass doors often have ineffective locking mechanisms. Add a lock which is vertical and bolts into the floor and the top frame or put a wooden dowel in the bottom track to prevent the door from sliding open. Because sliding doors also typically have a lot of glass, you may consider covering it with security film as well.

• Install and use deadlocks to all external doors and have peep-holes to identify visitors.

• Always remember to lock your doors and windows when you leave your home, even if only for a few minutes.

• Always lock your front door when at the rear of your home or in the back garden.

• Ensure all external doors are locked overnight.

Securing windows

• Always lock windows. Intruders typically don’t like to break glass, so keep your windows locked.

• Consider security film. The film makes the glass harder to break through, increasing entry time and noise that will bring attention.

• Consider security bars. If you don’t care too much about aesthetics and live in a particularly high risk area, you might consider installing security bars on your windows.

• Use shutters and curtains to prevent ‘snooping’.

Securing the garage

• Keep your garage door closed unless you are outside working.

• Make sure to lock access doors. The doors that go into your garage and from the garage into your home should be secured just as much as your front door. Keep them locked and reinforce if necessary.

• If you park in the driveway, take the garage door opener inside with you.

Information: nhw.com.au/holiday or nhw.com.au/prevent-crime/residential-burglary

Digital Editions


  • Total fire ban declared

    Total fire ban declared

    Residents across Brimbank are being urged to remain vigilant today, with a total fire ban declared for Victoria’s Central District amid hot, dry and windy…

More News

  • From the archives

    From the archives

    Star Weekly looks back at the pages of our predecessors… 40 years ago 26 February, 1986 Angry Deer Park residents have slammed the federal government’s $6 million Kororoit Creek beautification…

  • Eagles looking for consistency

    Eagles looking for consistency

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 520809 Sunshine Eagles know they need to be on their A-grade game for the rest of the Baseball Victoria summer league premier 1 first…

  • Ambulance response times up

    Ambulance response times up

    Ambulance response times in Brimbank increased slightly during the last quarter, according to the latest data released by Ambulance Victoria (AV). In the October to December period, Brimbank patients waited…

  • Blood donation pop-up

    Blood donation pop-up

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532439 Locals are being invited to roll up their sleeves and give blood as Lifeblood hosts a blood donation popup in Sunshine early next…

  • Love is in the air

    Love is in the air

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 533993 Couples at Doutta Galla Aged Care facility in Sunshine were treated to a romantic lunch date on Thursday 12 February ahead of Valentine’s…

  • My place

    My place

    Wasi Abidi grew up in Melton before moving to St Albans. Benefitting from a western scholarships program through Western Chances, Mr Abidi told Jack O’Shea-Ayres about home life, education and…

  • Georgies top flight return

    Georgies top flight return

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 534346 It was a day almost eight years in the making for Caroline Springs George Cross on Saturday. The Georgies made their return to…

  • Aussie kids salt risk

    Aussie kids salt risk

    Research from Deakin University has suggested most Australian children are at risk of developing high blood pressure at a younger age due to eating too much salt. In a new…

  • Finalists announced for AFL community venue award

    Finalists announced for AFL community venue award

    The 2025 finalists have been announced for the AFL’s Ken Gannon Football Facilities Award, recognising the projects that set the benchmark in best-practice design and development to help the continued…

  • New toolkit to help women report abuse in sport

    New toolkit to help women report abuse in sport

    Australian women face significant risk when disclosing gender-based violence in sport and quite often receive inadequate or harmful responses according to new research from La Trobe Univeristy. The research project,…