You've just closed on a new home or you're watching the builder put up the framing. Either way, this is the single best time to get your security system right. We've been installing security systems in Florida homes since 1967, and the biggest mistake we see new homeowners make is waiting until after they've moved in to think about security.

Whether you're buying new construction or a resale home, this guide covers the entire process: what to plan during the build, which components to prioritize, how much everything actually costs, and what matters specifically if you're in Florida.

Why New Homeowners Need Security Before Move-In Day

The first few weeks in a new home are when you're most vulnerable to break-ins, and most people don't realize it.

New construction sites are targets for theft because builders leave materials, appliances, and tools on site before the home is occupied. After you close, there's usually a window of days or weeks where the house is unoccupied while you're packing, cleaning, and coordinating your move. During that gap, your new home is sitting empty with brand-new appliances and no security system.

Even after you move in, the risk stays elevated. Boxes piled on the curb from new TVs, electronics, and furniture advertise exactly what's inside. Your routines aren't established. You don't know your neighbors yet. And in new developments where dozens of homes are still under construction, there's constant foot traffic from workers, subcontractors, and delivery drivers that makes it hard to tell who belongs and who doesn't.

Having your home security system active on move-in day eliminates this vulnerability window entirely.

New Construction vs. Existing Home: Two Different Approaches

How you approach security depends on whether your home is being built from scratch or you're buying an existing property.

New Construction: The Pre-Wire Advantage

If your home is still being built, you have an opportunity that homeowners in existing homes don't: the walls are open. Running low-voltage cable for security cameras, sensors, and your control panel is fast and inexpensive when there's no drywall in the way. Once the walls are closed up, the same job becomes significantly more time-consuming and disruptive.

The key is getting your security company involved during the rough-in electrical phase, after framing but before insulation and drywall. This is when your builder's electrician is already running wire throughout the house, so adding security cable to the plan is straightforward.

Existing Home: Wireless Is Your Best Friend

If you're buying a previously owned home, you likely won't have the luxury of open walls. The good news is that modern wireless security systems have eliminated most of the reasons you'd need to run wire. A professional wireless installation takes 2 to 4 hours and doesn't require any drilling through walls or fishing cable through attics.

If the previous owner had a security system, check whether the existing wiring and sensors can be reused with a new panel. A hybrid takeover module can convert old wired sensors to work with a modern wireless system, saving you money on equipment.

New construction interior showing low-voltage security wiring being installed before drywall
Pre-wiring during construction saves thousands compared to retrofitting security cables after the walls are finished.

What to Pre-Wire During New Construction

If you're building, here's exactly what to have your builder run cable for. Even if you don't install every component right away, having the wiring in place means you can add devices later without tearing into walls.

Camera Locations (Cat6 Ethernet Cable)

Run Cat6 cable to each planned camera location. Cat6 carries both the video signal and power to the camera (called PoE, or Power over Ethernet), so you only need one cable per camera.

Recommended camera locations for a typical Florida home:

  • Front door area: Covers the main entry, porch, and driveway approach
  • Back yard/patio: Covers the lanai, pool area, and rear entry points
  • Garage (exterior): Covers the driveway and side yard
  • Side yard: Covers gate access and any secondary entry points

Terminate each cable run at a central location (utility closet, garage, or structured media panel) where your network video recorder (NVR) or camera hub will sit.

Security Panel Location (Power + Low-Voltage)

Your security panel should be mounted near your main entry point, usually by the front door or in the entryway. Run a dedicated power outlet and a Cat5e or Cat6 cable to this location. The panel needs power and a network connection for the Alarm.com cloud platform.

Door and Window Sensor Locations (Optional Pre-Wire)

Modern door and window sensors are wireless and battery-powered, so pre-wiring for these is optional. However, if you want hardwired sensors (which never need battery replacement), have your builder run 22-gauge, 4-conductor alarm wire to each exterior door and every accessible window on the first floor.

Pre-wiring during construction saves you a substantial amount of labor on the exact same infrastructure. Even if you only pre-wire for cameras and skip the sensor wiring (since wireless sensors work great), the savings are significant.

Essential Components for a New Home Security System

Here's what a complete security system for a new home should include, listed from must-have to nice-to-have.

Must-Have Components

  • Smart security panel: The hub of your system. Look for a touchscreen panel with built-in cellular communicator, Wi-Fi, battery backup, and Alarm.com compatibility. This is your control center for arming, disarming, and managing every device.
  • Door/window sensors: Install sensors on every exterior door and every accessible first-floor window. These are the first line of detection for any intrusion.
  • Motion detectors: Place at least one motion detector in the main hallway or living area to detect intruders who bypass a door or window sensor. Pet-immune models are available if you have dogs or cats.
  • Outdoor cameras: Minimum two: one covering the front door/driveway and one covering the back yard. Security cameras with night vision, motion-activated recording, and cloud storage.
  • 24/7 professional monitoring: A siren alone won't protect you. Professional monitoring means trained operators verify the alarm and dispatch police, fire, or EMS when you can't respond yourself.
Modern security system touchscreen panel mounted on wall near the front door of a new home
A smart security panel near your front door gives you one-touch control over your entire home security system.

Recommended Additions

  • Doorbell camera: See and speak to anyone at your front door from your phone, whether you're home or not. A doorbell camera deters package theft and provides video evidence of every visitor.
  • Smart locks: Lock and unlock your doors remotely, give temporary codes to guests or contractors, and set automations like "lock all doors when I arm the system."
  • Glass break detectors: Add one per room with large glass doors or windows. These detect the specific sound frequency of breaking glass and trigger the alarm instantly.
  • Smoke and CO detectors: Connected smoke and carbon monoxide detectors that trigger professional monitoring response, not just an audible alarm. These can save lives when you're asleep or away.
  • Water leak sensors: Place near water heaters, washing machines, and under sinks. Water damage is the most common homeowner's insurance claim in Florida, and early detection prevents thousands in damage.

Smart Home Upgrades

  • Smart thermostat: Control your AC remotely and set automations based on whether the alarm is armed (home/away mode). In Florida, this alone can meaningfully reduce your energy bills.
  • Smart lighting: Set lights to turn on automatically at sunset or when motion is detected outside. Random lighting patterns when you're on vacation make the house look occupied.
  • Smart garage door: Open and close your garage from your phone, get alerts if it's left open, and set it to auto-close after a set time.

All of these devices connect through the Alarm.com smart home platform, so you control everything from one app on your phone.

Building or buying a new home in Florida?

Get a free security consultation. We'll review your floor plan and recommend the right system for your property, whether it's new construction or a resale home.

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Step-by-Step: Setting Up Security When You Move In

Whether your home is new construction or a resale property, here's the timeline for getting your security system operational by move-in day.

6 to 8 Weeks Before Move-In

  • Choose your security company and schedule a consultation
  • If new construction: provide the floor plan and coordinate with the builder for pre-wiring
  • If existing home: schedule a site assessment so the installer can plan equipment placement
  • Finalize your component list and monitoring plan

2 to 4 Weeks Before Move-In

  • Confirm installation date (ideally 2 to 3 days before you move in)
  • If new construction: verify pre-wire is complete and tested before drywall goes up
  • Order any additional smart home devices (locks, thermostat, doorbell camera)

Installation Day (2 to 3 Days Before Move-In)

  • Professional installation of panel, sensors, cameras, and all connected devices
  • System programming and testing of every sensor and zone
  • Monitoring center activation and signal verification
  • App setup on your phone with login credentials and user codes
  • Walk-through with the installer to learn how to arm, disarm, and use the app

Move-In Day

  • System is live and monitored from the moment you start moving furniture in
  • Set your entry/exit delay times (how long the system waits before triggering when you open the front door)
  • Create user codes for family members
  • Test the system by triggering each sensor and confirming the monitoring center receives the signal

What a New Home Security System Looks Like in Practice

Here's a realistic breakdown of what a complete security system for a new home looks like in practice. These setups reflect what we see across our installations in Sarasota, Tampa, and Fort Lauderdale.

Component Essential Setup Complete Setup Premium Setup
Security Panel Included Included Included
Door/Window Sensors 3 doors All doors + windows All doors + windows
Motion Detectors 1 2 3-4
Outdoor Cameras 0 2 4+
Doorbell Camera No Yes Yes
Smart Locks No 1 (front door) 2-3
Smart Thermostat No No Yes
Environmental Sensors No Smoke detector Smoke + water leak + CO

The most popular choice for new homeowners is the Complete setup. It covers all the essentials (full sensor coverage, cameras, doorbell camera, smart lock, and monitoring) without the premium add-ons that you can always add later.

Security camera professionally installed under the eave of a modern Florida home exterior
Professional camera placement under the eave protects equipment from Florida rain while providing clear coverage of the entry approach.

Florida-Specific Considerations for New Home Security

Florida's climate, weather, and building patterns create specific security needs that homeowners from other states may not anticipate.

Hurricane Preparedness

Your security system needs to function when a hurricane knocks out power, internet, and sometimes cellular towers. Here's what matters:

  • Cellular monitoring is non-negotiable. Systems that rely on your home internet connection for monitoring go silent when the cable goes out. Cellular communicators (standard on professional systems) use the cell network to reach the monitoring center independently of your home internet.
  • Battery backup: Your panel should have at least 24 hours of battery backup. Professional panels from Alarm.com-connected dealers have this built in.
  • Hurricane-rated cameras: Outdoor cameras in Florida need to handle sustained winds, driving rain, and debris. Look for cameras rated IP66 or higher with reinforced mounting brackets.
  • Surge protection: Florida has more lightning strikes than any other state. Install whole-home surge protection and use individual surge protectors on your security panel and NVR.

New Development Considerations

Florida's construction boom means many new homeowners are moving into developments where homes are still being built around them. This creates unique security dynamics:

  • Construction traffic: Workers, subcontractors, and delivery vehicles moving through the neighborhood daily. Cameras and an active alarm help distinguish between legitimate visitors and potential threats.
  • Unfinished lots: Empty lots and incomplete homes adjacent to yours create blind spots and access points. Position cameras to cover these areas until the neighborhood fills in.
  • Temporary landscaping: New homes often have minimal landscaping, meaning fewer natural barriers. Your security system compensates for the lack of established hedges, fences, and trees.

Humidity and Heat

Florida's climate is tough on electronics. High humidity can cause condensation inside camera housings, and extreme heat shortens battery life. Choose outdoor equipment specifically rated for subtropical climates, and ensure cameras are mounted under eaves or in shaded locations whenever possible.

Smart Home Integration from Day One

One of the biggest advantages of setting up security in a new home is building your smart home automation around the security system from the start, rather than bolting it on later.

When your security panel runs on the Alarm.com platform, it becomes the central hub for your entire smart home. Everything connects through one app:

  • Security + locks: "When I arm the system to Away mode, lock all doors."
  • Security + thermostat: "When I disarm the system, set the thermostat to 74."
  • Security + lighting: "Turn on the porch lights at sunset and off at sunrise."
  • Security + cameras: "Record a 30-second clip and send a notification when motion is detected at the front door."
  • Security + garage: "Close the garage door and arm the system when I leave the geofence around my home."

Setting all of this up during installation, rather than adding pieces over months or years, means your automations work from day one and you get the full value of every device immediately.

Common Mistakes New Homeowners Make with Security

After decades of installing systems in new homes across Florida, here are the mistakes we see most often.

1. Waiting Until After the Move

Once you're unpacking boxes and settling in, security drops down the priority list. Meanwhile, your home is at its most vulnerable: full of new possessions, unfamiliar routines, and no alarm system. Schedule installation before move-in day, not after.

2. Skipping the Back of the House

Homeowners often focus on the front door and forget that most break-ins happen through back doors, sliding glass doors, and side windows that face away from the street. Cover every entry point, especially those hidden from neighbor view.

3. Choosing DIY to Save Money

DIY security kits seem budget-friendly, but the savings often disappear when you factor in the time spent installing, troubleshooting, and the reality that self-monitored systems depend entirely on you seeing and responding to alerts. Professional installation with 24/7 monitoring is a modest monthly difference for dramatically better protection.

4. Not Pre-Wiring During Construction

If your home is still being built and you skip the pre-wire, you're leaving thousands of dollars on the table. Even if you're not ready to install cameras immediately, run the cable now while it's cheap. You'll thank yourself later.

5. Ignoring Environmental Sensors

A security system doesn't just protect against break-ins. Connected smoke detectors, water leak sensors, and CO detectors protect against the other threats that can damage your home while you're away. Water damage alone is the number one insurance claim in Florida.

Timeline: When to Start Planning Security for New Construction

If you're building a new home, here's when each security decision should happen relative to the construction timeline.

Construction Phase Security Action
Design / Blueprints Consult with security company, review floor plan, plan camera and panel locations
Framing Complete Finalize pre-wire plan and coordinate with builder's electrician
Rough-In Electrical Run all low-voltage security cable (Cat6 for cameras, alarm wire for sensors)
Pre-Drywall Inspection Verify all cable runs, test continuity, photograph wire locations before drywall covers them
Drywall + Paint Complete Schedule security system installation for trim-out phase
Final Walk-Through Install panel, sensors, cameras; activate monitoring; test all zones
Move-In Day System is live. Set user codes, configure automations, test everything.

How to Choose the Right Security Company

The equipment matters, but the company behind it matters more. Here's what to look for when choosing a security provider for your new home.

  • Local presence: Choose a company that operates in your area and can provide same-day or next-day service if something goes wrong. National chains often subcontract local service to third parties.
  • Own monitoring center: Companies that own and operate their monitoring facility have more control over response quality. Ask whether monitoring is in-house or outsourced.
  • UL-Listed monitoring: UL listing means the monitoring center meets strict safety and operational standards. This is the gold standard in the industry.
  • Alarm.com integration: The Alarm.com platform is the industry standard for smart home security integration. Make sure your system runs on it.
  • Transparent pricing: The upfront quote should include equipment, installation, and monthly monitoring with no hidden fees. If the pricing structure feels complicated, it probably is.
  • Track record: Check Google reviews, BBB rating, and how long the company has been in business. In the security industry, longevity matters.

Frequently Asked Questions

When should I start planning security for a new construction home?

Start planning during the design phase, before drywall goes up. This lets your builder run low-voltage wiring for cameras, sensors, and a security panel at a fraction of the cost of retrofitting later. Ideally, your security company should review the floor plan before framing is complete.

Do I need a wired or wireless security system for a new home?

For most new homes, a wireless system with pre-wired camera locations is the best approach. Wireless panels and sensors are faster to install, easier to expand, and integrate with smart home devices. Pre-wiring camera and panel locations during construction gives you wired reliability where it matters most.

What security features should I prioritize for a new home?

Start with door and window sensors on every entry point, a smart security panel with cellular backup, at least two outdoor cameras covering the front door and back yard, and 24/7 professional monitoring. From there, add motion detectors, a doorbell camera, smart locks, and environmental sensors based on your budget.

Is it worth pre-wiring a new construction home for security?

Absolutely. Pre-wiring during construction is dramatically cheaper than retrofitting later because the walls are still open. Even if you don't install a full system right away, having the wiring in place saves you significant time and money down the road.

What is the best security system for a new home in Florida?

The best security system for a Florida home includes cellular monitoring that works during hurricanes and power outages, hurricane-rated outdoor cameras, a smart panel with battery backup, and integration with the Alarm.com platform for remote control. Look for a local company with its own monitoring center rather than a national chain that subcontracts monitoring.

The Bottom Line

A new home is a fresh start, and your security system should be part of it from day one. Whether you're building new construction or buying an existing home, the best time to plan security is right now, before you move in.

If you're building, get your security company involved during the design phase. Pre-wire for cameras and sensors while the walls are open. You'll save thousands compared to retrofitting later.

If you're buying an existing home, schedule your security installation 2 to 3 days before move-in day. A professional wireless system can be installed in a few hours and gives you full protection from the moment you start carrying boxes through the front door.

At Dehart Alarm Systems, we've been protecting Florida families and businesses since 1967. We're one of the top 100 security companies in the nation, and we run our own UL-Listed monitoring center right here in Florida. No hidden fees and no pressure. Just straightforward advice and professional installation from people who've been doing this for over 55 years.

Contact us for a free consultation and we'll review your floor plan, recommend the right system, and give you a transparent quote. Or call us at (941) 308-7831 to talk to someone today.