Usually a rekey is just as secure and a fraction of the cost. Here's when replacement is actually the right call.
The most common locksmith question we get is some version of: "I just moved in / lost a key / had someone leave who had a key โ do I need new locks?" The answer is almost always no โ but most people assume replacement is the only option. Understanding rekeying helps you make the right (and usually much cheaper) call.
A lock cylinder contains a series of spring-loaded pins of varying heights. A key works because its cuts align these pins exactly, allowing the cylinder to rotate. Rekeying means removing the cylinder, replacing the pin set with a different combination of heights, and cutting a new key to match the new combination. The lock hardware stays exactly the same โ only the internal pin configuration changes.
The result: every key that previously worked on that lock no longer works. The security level is identical to having a new lock โ the cylinder simply recognizes a different key now.
In Tampa Bay in 2026:
For a typical 3-exterior-door Tampa home, a full rekey runs $120โ$150. Full lock replacement on the same home with quality hardware runs $450โ$900. For the most common use cases (moving in, lost key, tenant change), rekeying delivers identical security at a fraction of the cost.
If you're not sure which situation you're in, call us. We'll tell you honestly over the phone whether rekeying or replacement makes more sense โ and why.