Staff-change and tenant-turnover rekeying
Confirm who can approve the work, which doors need help, and when access is needed.
Emergency locksmith help across Philadelphia
Commercial locksmith help for Philadelphia storefronts, offices, managed properties, rekeying, master keys, and exit hardware.

Commercial locksmith service helps businesses with lockouts, rekeying, staff keys, storefront doors, master keys, and panic bars. We first confirm who can approve the work and how each door is used.
Tell us what happened and what the key, lock, door, or vehicle is doing now. You do not need to know the name of every lock part.
A clear photo may help us understand the hardware. For a vehicle, share the year, make, model, and key type. For a building, include the unit, entrance, and any manager or front desk rules.
Confirm who can approve the work, which doors need help, and when access is needed.
Review door use, current hardware, key control, and exit requirements.
Separate urgent repairs from planned security improvements.
Label and test keys, record the completed work, and confirm that every opening works.
Confirm who can approve the work, which doors need help, and when access is needed.
Review door use, current hardware, key control, and exit requirements.
Separate urgent repairs from planned security improvements.
Label and test keys, record the completed work, and confirm that every opening works.
Choose the problem closest to what is happening. You will see what to do, what to prepare, and what happens during service.
Commercial helpFor a business lockout, call with the company name, exact door, manager or owner contact, opening time, alarm steps, and proof that the caller can approve entry.
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Commercial helpCommercial rekeying keeps business locks that are in good shape but changes which keys open them. Start with a door list, current key holders, staff roles, and a manager who can approve the work.
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Commercial helpA master key system lets selected keys open several planned door groups. The safest design starts with roles and doors, then gives each person only the access they need.
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Commercial helpA panic bar should open with a normal push, and the door should close and latch on its own. If it sticks, slams, or stays open, the bar and the full door need to be checked together.
See clear next stepsChoose your area for local information about buildings, entrances, parking, and nearby neighborhoods.
Simple answers about access, proof, service options, and what to do next.
Yes, when an owner or manager approves the work. The business should also decide who needs keys now and which doors each key should open.
Many mechanical panic bars can be checked and repaired. The full door should also be tested to make sure it opens easily from inside, closes fully, and locks as intended.
Scheduling depends on the location, work, building access, and availability. Explain when the door can be taken out of service and who will meet the locksmith.
Call with your location and a short description of the problem.