Picture this: you’re standing at your front door after a long day, and it hits you — that door frame is the only thing between your family and the outside world. If you’ve ever wondered about How to Make a Door Frame More Secure, you’re already thinking the right way. After a decade as a locksmith and years on the martial arts mat, I’ve learned that real security isn’t about fear — it’s about preparation. Most residential door frames in Phoenix get kicked in not because the lock failed, but because the frame itself gave way in seconds. The good news? That’s completely fixable, and it doesn’t take a contractor or a big budget to get it done right.
Why Door Frames Fail Under Force
Standard door frames in most Phoenix-area homes — whether you’re near the Biltmore corridor, out in Gilbert, or tucked into a North Scottsdale subdivision — are built for looks and weather, not force. The striker plate is usually held by half-inch screws that bite into soft door casing, not the structural framing behind it. One solid kick transfers all that energy to a tiny surface area, and the wood splits before you can react. Understanding this is step one. Fixing it is step two, and it’s simpler than most people expect.
The Best Upgrades to Reinforce a Door Frame

Notice how the weakest link is almost always the hardware, not the door itself. Here’s where to focus your effort:
- Heavy-duty strike plate with 3-inch screws. Replace that factory plate with a steel strike plate — a quality one runs $15–$40 — and drive 3-inch screws directly into the stud behind the frame. This single upgrade is the highest-impact, lowest-cost move you can make for a kick-in-proof door frame.
- Door frame reinforcement kit. Products like Door Armor or similar steel-wrap systems (typically $80–$150) sleeve the entire door frame edge in 16-gauge steel. They’re designed specifically to distribute kick force across the full frame rather than one tiny point. Installation takes about an hour with basic tools.
- Hinge bolts or security hinges. If your door swings outward — common in some Phoenix and Chandler townhomes — the hinge side is your exposure. Security hinges with non-removable pins, or hinge bolts ($10–$25 per pair), close that gap completely.
- Door security bar or floor brace. For an interior layer of protection, an adjustable security bar braced under the knob and angled to the floor costs $30–$60 and essentially makes the door immovable from outside. Great for renters or anyone who wants a door frame security upgrade without permanent changes.
- Solid-core or steel door. If your door is hollow-core wood, no frame reinforcement fully compensates for a door that can be punched through. Budget $300–$800 installed for a solid-core wood or steel replacement — worth every dollar.
The frame and the lock have to work together. A Grade 1 deadbolt in a compromised frame is like a heavy-duty padlock on a screen door — the chain is only as strong as its weakest link.
If you’re also thinking about access control beyond the physical frame, our guide on embracing keyless door locks pairs perfectly with these upgrades — you strengthen the frame and modernize who gets in.
What a Professional Door Frame Security Upgrade Actually Costs

If you’re a homeowner in Paradise Valley, Old Town Scottsdale, or anywhere along the I-17 corridor in North Phoenix, you’re probably weighing DIY versus calling a professional. Here’s an honest range:
- DIY strike plate and screws: $15–$50, about 30 minutes
- DIY full frame reinforcement kit: $80–$180 in materials, 1–2 hours
- Professional installation of frame reinforcement + hardware upgrade: $150–$350 labor, depending on the door configuration and what’s already in place
- Full door and frame replacement with professional hardware: $500–$1,200+ depending on door grade and lock set
Most homeowners in the Mesa and Tempe area find the sweet spot is a pro-installed strike plate and frame kit alongside a deadbolt rekey — especially if someone who shouldn’t still has a key. Speaking of which, our rekey service is one of the smartest moves you can make the same day you reinforce the frame. New hardware on a compromised access situation is only half the answer.
The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) grades residential locksets and deadbolts from Grade 1 (highest security) to Grade 3 — always look for Grade 1 hardware when upgrading your entry door system. It’s a standard worth knowing before you buy anything.
When to Call a Locksmith Instead of Going It Alone
Imagine walking up to your front door tomorrow and feeling completely confident in what’s behind it — not because nothing bad could ever happen, but because you’ve done the smart, practical work. That’s the mindset. Some installs are genuinely DIY-friendly. Others — like a frame that’s already been damaged, a misaligned door that isn’t sitting flush, or a multi-point lock system — really do need trained hands and the right tools to get right the first time.
Our residential locksmith services cover the full picture: frame assessment, hardware upgrades, deadbolt installation, and rekeying — all in one visit across Phoenix and the greater Maricopa County area. No callbacks, no half-finished jobs.
Call Sundial Locksmith at (480) 525-7778 and let’s get your door frame where it needs to be — solid, secure, and built to hold. Get your free security assessment scheduled today.
Some content on this site is AI-assisted and may not reflect exact current details — please verify with Sundial Locksmith at (480) 525-7778. Learn more.






