A home intruder is scary to even think about, but spending a few minutes of time recognizing and fixing ways that your home is vulnerable can pay off in the long run. Here are nine ways you may be mistakenly exposing your home to burglars:
Social media
Don’t talk about getting the latest expensive gadget on Facebook or other public sites, and never announce you’re going on holiday either; it’s just asking for trouble.
Similarily, don’t put a calendar up where it can be seen from the street; a burglar will know when you plan to be out of the house and may return then.
Rundown front door
Your front door is the first place burglars will look, and a dilapidated front door signals that your home is an easy target. A clean, painted front door gives the impression that the entire home is well-cared for and harder to breach.
Single lock
Burglars look to see what kind of locks they will have to navigate to enter and when they see only the standard cylinder lock, they are more likely to have a go than if there is also a padlock visible. In short, doubling up on locks makes your door physically more difficult to break into and your home less appealing to burglars.
Enticing trash
The discarded boxes and bags from all your big-ticket purchases are like advertisements to burglars of the valuables inside your home. Prevent thieves from getting as excited over your new flat screen TV box as you are with your new TV by keeping this type of garbage inside until trash pickup day.
Dark exteriors
Burglars don’t like to risk being seen, so when you create a barrier of light around your home using motion sensor-activated and basic exterior lights, you are creating a barrier around your home through which they are not likely to penetrate. Pay special attention to vulnerable areas like front and back doors and walkways.
Welcoming landscaping
When planted beneath windows, bushes and shrubs are not only pretty, but they are also an obstacle to climbing into windows. Burglars are especially deterred by the kind of greenery that has thorns or makes loud snapping noises. For trees reaching up to second-storey windows, be sure to clean up lower branches so they can’t function as a ladder.
Overflowing mailbox
Piles of mail are a sign that you are out of town and primed for a robbery. If you are going away for a while, use the ‘Request Hold Mail’ service to stop delivery to your house. For shorter periods, you can tell a trusted neighbour to help pick up your deliveries.
Visible interiors
You don’t want burglars to get a peek at all the goodies you have inside your home, so shut the curtains, pull the shades, put a giant houseplant in front of a street-facing window – do whatever you have to do to keep unwanted eyes out. Be especially mindful at night when the dark sky and lit interior combine to create a fishbowl effect in your home.
Empty house
Encountering the resident is way more than most burglars are bargaining for. If they think you are in the house, they are staying out of it, so make it look like someone is home by turning on a light or two and even leaving on a TV or radio to make some noise. For prolonged periods away, you can use electronic timers to turn them on and off automatically.
Non-existent alarm system
They take a bit of financial investment, but a quality alarm system is a huge burglar deterrent and a necessary one if you live in a high-crime neighbourhood. Do your research and pick a reputable alarm company – thieves know the bad and bogus alarm system signs – and consider high-tech options, such as alarms with a camera that allows you to monitor your home from anywhere.
Source: popsugar.com