We install smart locks on a dozen or more homes a month across San Diego County, and we see every brand fail in every way they can fail. Here’s what we actually recommend when a homeowner calls and asks which smart lock to buy.
Quick heads-up: the best smart lock for you depends on how you want to use it. A short-term rental host has different needs than a working parent with three kids who keep forgetting keys. This guide covers the top picks for the four most common use cases, plus the brands we tell people to avoid.
The quick recommendations
- Best overall keypad lock: Schlage Encode Plus ($350)
- Best for Airbnb / short-term rentals: Yale Assure Lock 2 ($280)
- Best budget option: Kwikset Halo ($180)
- Best retrofit (keeps your existing lock): Level Bolt ($330)
- Best if you want Apple Home Key: Schlage Encode Plus ($350) or Level Lock Plus ($380)
- Avoid: any no-name smart lock on Amazon under $100
The features that actually matter
Ignore half of the marketing. These are the four features that separate a good smart lock from a bad one:
1. Mechanical reliability
The motor that extends and retracts the bolt is the most failure-prone part of any smart lock. Cheap motors labor when the strike plate is even slightly out of alignment — which burns batteries and eventually fails entirely. The reliable brands (Schlage, Yale, Level, August) use gear-driven motors that handle minor misalignment gracefully. The bad ones (most no-name Amazon locks) use direct-drive motors that bind on the first sticky strike.
2. App quality and ongoing support
A smart lock without a working app is just a slow keypad. The brands with the best apps are the ones with the most customers — Schlage, Yale, and August are updated regularly and likely to stay supported. No-name brands disappear from the App Store after 2-3 years, and then your $80 lock becomes just a keypad that nobody can remotely manage.
3. Battery life
A well-aligned Schlage Encode runs 9-12 months on 4 AA batteries. A poorly aligned cheap lock can drain in 3-4 months. The difference is real: the bad case means you’re spending $20-40 a year on batteries and inviting lockouts, and the good case is set-and-forget for a year.
4. Physical override key
Every smart lock we recommend has a physical key cylinder as backup. When batteries die at 3am, or the Wi-Fi outage lasts longer than your charging patience, the override key opens the door. Smart-lock-only designs with no physical key are a mistake — we’ve had to drill more than one when the battery died on a door where the owner didn’t have a key.
Top pick: Schlage Encode Plus
Price: $350
Best for: Homeowners who want a reliable keypad deadbolt with modern tech
The Schlage Encode Plus is what we install on our own homes. It’s a traditional deadbolt form factor, a lighted keypad, built-in Wi-Fi, a physical override key, 9-12 month battery life, and Apple Home Key support — you can unlock with your iPhone or Apple Watch by tapping it against the lock.
The app is solid, codes can be scheduled (e.g., “dog walker only gets in Monday-Wednesday from 2-4pm”), and you can see the entry log remotely. Zero proprietary hub required — it joins your Wi-Fi directly.
Downsides: priced at the high end, only available in a limited color range, and the keypad is visibly larger than a traditional deadbolt (some people don’t love the aesthetic).
Best for rentals: Yale Assure Lock 2
Price: $280 (add $80 for Wi-Fi module)
Best for: Airbnb / VRBO hosts, parents with teenagers, anyone who manages guest codes frequently
The Yale Assure Lock 2 has the best app for managing time-limited and recurring codes in the industry. You can generate a code for a guest that only works during their check-in window, with automatic expiration — perfect for short-term rentals. The app also integrates cleanly with Airbnb to auto-generate codes when new bookings are made.
The Wi-Fi module is an extra cost ($80) but enables remote code management — without it, you have to be physically present (or on Bluetooth range) to add codes. Skip the Wi-Fi only if you’re adding codes in person every time.
Downsides: the physical key override is hidden behind a cover that some users dislike, and the Wi-Fi module occasionally needs a reboot after firmware updates.
Best budget pick: Kwikset Halo
Price: $180
Best for: Homeowners who want smart functionality without paying premium
The Kwikset Halo is the cheapest reliable smart keypad deadbolt we install. Built-in Wi-Fi, solid keypad, physical key backup, and the standard Kwikset SmartKey cylinder on the outside — which means it’s rekeyable by a homeowner with the included tool. Battery life is shorter than the Encode Plus (6-9 months typical), and the app is clunkier than Yale, but for under $200 all-in it’s a defensible choice.
Downsides: SmartKey cylinders have a history of bump-vulnerability (older generations could be defeated with a flat-head screwdriver). Current-gen Kwikset has addressed this, but some security-focused homeowners still prefer Schlage’s stock Schlage keyway.
Best retrofit: Level Bolt
Price: $330
Best for: Homeowners who love their existing deadbolt’s look and don’t want to change the exterior hardware
Level makes the cleanest retrofit smart locks on the market. The Level Bolt replaces the interior-only mechanism — the exterior side of your deadbolt stays exactly the same, including your physical key cylinder. From the street, no one can tell your door has a smart lock at all.
This is the right pick if:
- You have a high-end deadbolt (Emtek, Baldwin, or a custom bronze finish) you don’t want to replace
- You live in an HOA that restricts exterior hardware changes
- You want the minimum visual intrusion
Downsides: no keypad (so no code entry without the app or a physical key), and the install requires a more precise fit than standard smart deadbolts — a misalignment that’s invisible on a traditional deadbolt can cause the Level motor to labor.
Brands and models we tell people to avoid
Not every smart lock is worth buying:
- Any lock under $100 from a brand you’ve never heard of. The failure rate is high, the apps stop getting updates within 2-3 years, and there’s no customer support to call when it stops working.
- Locks marketed as “smart” that are really Bluetooth-only. Without Wi-Fi or a hub, you can’t manage codes remotely — you have to be within 30 feet of the lock to change anything. Defeats the point.
- Older August Smart Locks (pre-2020). The retrofit design is fine; the app was sold to Yale and some older models are no longer getting firmware updates. If you’re buying Level-style retrofit now, buy Level.
- Wyze Lock. Wyze pulled out of the lock category. Any existing Wyze locks are approaching end-of-support.
What about Apple Home Key / Google Home / Amazon Alexa compatibility?
If you’re locked into a specific smart-home ecosystem, a few things to know:
- Apple Home Key (iPhone tap-to-unlock) is currently supported by Schlage Encode Plus, Level Lock Plus, and Aqara U100. That’s it — three models, as of April 2026.
- Google Home works with most Wi-Fi smart locks via the brand app. Schlage, Yale, August, Level, and Kwikset all integrate.
- Amazon Alexa works similarly — Schlage, Yale, August, Level, and Kwikset all have Alexa skills for voice unlock (where your setup requires a PIN confirmation for security reasons).
- SmartThings works with Yale and some August models via Z-Wave, but requires a SmartThings hub.
The install is the hardest part
The smart lock you buy matters less than getting it installed correctly. The three things a poor install gets wrong:
- Strike plate alignment. If the bolt doesn’t drop cleanly into the strike, the motor labors every cycle. Fix the strike alignment first.
- Screw torque. Over-tighten and you warp the lock body; under-tighten and the lock rattles. Hand-tight plus a quarter-turn is the target.
- Wi-Fi signal at the door. Smart locks need a stable 2.4GHz signal. If your router is on the other side of the house, you’ll lose the smart features during outages.
A professional install handles all three in 45-60 minutes. A DIY install that skips any of them often results in a 3-4 month battery life and flaky app connectivity.
Looking to install a smart lock in San Diego? Swift Key San Diego installs and pairs smart locks from every major brand. We align the strike, set up your app, add guest codes, and test every feature before leaving. Call (858) 808-6055 for a quote — typical install is 60-75 minutes including setup.