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Home Security

Top tips and advice on protecting your home with alarms, locks, CCTV systems and security upgrades.

Home Security

Protect Your Home From Carbon Monoxide

Carbon monoxide is one of the biggest risks to a person’s health within the home. It is estimated that nearly one person a week tragically loses their life to carbon monoxide poisoning in the UK, and many more suffer from serious illness as a result of it. One of the reasons that CO is such a dangerous hazard is because it doesn’t smell of anything and it is colourless, which means that it is hard to detect.

Carbon monoxide is one of the biggest risks to a person’s health within the home. It is estimated that nearly one person a week tragically loses their life to carbon monoxide poisoning in the UK, and many more suffer from serious illness as a result of it. One of the reasons that CO is such a dangerous hazard is because it doesn’t smell of anything and it is colourless, which means that it is hard to detect.

What causes carbon monoxide?

Carbon monoxide can build up in the home as the result of poor ventilation, faulty appliances, or both. Some people think that only gas appliances produce carbon monoxide. However, while faulty gas boilers are the most common culprits, CO can be created when gas, oil or solid fuels (e.g. wood or coal) are burnt incompletely. The most common sources of CO are:

  • Woodburning stoves or open fires
  • Tobacco smoke
  • Faulty appliances
  • Idling vehicles
  • Faulty water heater or boiler
  • Blocked chimney.

Why is CO so dangerous?

Carbon Monoxide is so dangerous because when we breathe it in, the gas reduces the amount of oxygen that is present in the blood. This means that not enough oxygen is carried to vital parts of the body. If CO is present in large quantities, it can have a huge impact very quickly. The oxygen deprivation can cause nausea, brain damage, loss of consciousness or, in the most extreme cases, suffocation.

What are the signs of CO poisoning?

If you notice that the flame on your appliance (e.g. fire, boiler, gas hob) is burning with a yellow or orange flame rather than a blue or purple one, then you should switch the appliance off, leave the house and call a gas safe engineer immediately. Similarly, if your pilot light keeps going out, or you notice more condensation than normal, or dark marks around appliances, you could have a CO problem. Get it checked out straight away.

The physical signs of CO poisoning are nausea, tiredness, a cough, sore throat or headaches. These can be hard to identify, particularly in the winter months, as the symptoms are not dissimilar to cold and ‘flu symptoms. If you are worried about anyone’s health or safety, call 999 immediately.

Preventing CO poisoning

Carbon monoxide is a killer. To reduce exposure of those in your home to the risks, it is important that you get your gas boiler serviced annually by a gas safe engineer, and your chimney swept at least once a year too. If you live in a rented home, your landlord should arrange for those checks for you. Regardless of how often you get your appliances checked, you should install at least one CO monitor in your home. You need a CO alarm as well as a smoke alarm, and make sure that you replace the batteries regularly.

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Looking for more home security advice?

Find clear, practical answers to common home security questions, helping homeowners understand everyday issues, know what checks they can carry out safely, and when it is best to contact a qualified professional.

  • What home security measures do insurance companies recommend?

    Most insurers want to see five-lever mortise deadlocks on external doors, key-operated window locks, and ideally a monitored alarm - some require these as a condition of cover. CCTV and smart doorbells are increasingly valued too.

    Check your policy documents or speak to your insurer directly - inadequate security can affect both your premiums and whether a claim gets paid out.

  • Should I get a CCTV system or a smart alarm installed professionally?

    Off-the-shelf systems are sold as DIY-friendly, but professional installation gets you proper camera positioning for actual coverage, everything integrated correctly, and reliable connectivity.

    If your alarm needs to meet insurer requirements or NSI/SSAIB standards, professional installation is usually a must. A good installer will also assess your property's specific weak points rather than just fitting a standard kit.

  • Does having a visible alarm box actually deter burglars?

    Yes - consistently, according to research. A dummy box offers some deterrent, but a working monitored system with a visible bell box is significantly more effective. Burglars mainly target properties that look easy to enter quickly and quietly - anything that signals risk or delay helps. Combine a visible alarm with motion-activated lighting and CCTV and you're covering the main things that make a property look like a harder target.

  • What is the most effective burglar deterrent for a UK home?

    A combination of things working together is what really makes the difference. A visible alarm, motion lighting, and CCTV remove the cover burglars rely on.

    Strong door and window locks matter too - most break-ins involve forcing a door or window, not anything sophisticated. When you're away, timer-controlled lights that make the house look occupied are simple but genuinely effective.

  • What should I do immediately after a break-in?

    Don't touch anything until the police have been - you want to preserve the scene. Call the police and get a crime reference number, which you'll need for your insurer. Report it to your insurer as soon as you can.

    Photograph any damage before anything gets moved. Once the police have attended, get a locksmith or security professional out to make the property secure - especially if any doors or windows were damaged.

  • Should I upgrade to a smart lock and are they more secure than traditional locks?

    Security-wise, it depends more on the lock's mechanism than whether it's smart or not. Most smart locks use the same deadbolt mechanisms as conventional ones and just add keypad, fingerprint, or app control on top.

    The real benefits are practical - you can give temporary access without cutting keys, see who's come and gone, and set it to auto-lock. Look for Sold Secure or BSI Kitemark accreditation, and make sure it's properly installed - a good lock fitted poorly doesn't offer much.

  • How often should I change the locks on my home?

    There's no set schedule, but there are clear triggers: moving into a new property, losing a set of keys, a relationship breakdown where someone had a key, or after a break-in. Outside of those situations, a quality lock will last many years without needing replacement unless it's showing signs of wear.

    Stiffness or keys becoming difficult to turn are worth getting looked at rather than ignoring.

  • Can uPVC door locks be repaired or do they need replacing?

    Often repaired, actually. The most common problem - a multipoint lock that won't engage properly with the frame - is usually down to the door dropping slightly on its hinges. Adjusting the hinges often sorts it without touching the lock at all. The euro cylinder (the part the key goes into) can be replaced cheaply and quickly on its own if that's the issue. A full mechanism replacement is only needed if the internal gearbox has failed. A locksmith can work out which part's the problem and fix just that.

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