961 security installers across 51 states

Map the installer to the risk, not just the city.

Compare local alarm, camera, access-control, and smart-home security providers by detected service signals, review evidence, weekly hours, and direct contact details.

Open installer grid
Security system installers961
States51
Stories22
CCTV CCTV Camera coverage and video surveillance installers SMARTHOME Smart home Alarm systems that connect to apps and home automation ALARMMONITORING Monitoring Alarm monitoring and response workflows ACCESSCONTROL Access control Keypads, card readers, gates, and small-business doors
Directory method

Security pages should answer the first-call questions.

Blue Storm is built for the moment before a homeowner, property manager, or small-business operator calls an installer. A generic business listing can tell you a company exists; a useful security installer directory should show whether public sources mention cameras, monitored alarms, smart-home platforms, access control, residential installs, commercial systems, weekly hours, phone details, and review evidence.

The directory does not sell leads or certify providers. It turns scattered public information into call-prep notes, then points readers back to the installer to confirm the current license, supported equipment brands, monitoring terms, permit requirements, cancellation rules, and warranty coverage before signing.

Evidence model

What gets surfaced

Detected signals come from visible service language: CCTV, alarm monitoring, smart-home integration, keypads, card readers, low-voltage wiring, camera storage, residential panels, commercial security, and after-hours support. Missing evidence is left visible instead of padded with promotional filler.

Reader checklist

What still needs a call

Ask for the state license number, who runs the monitoring center, whether equipment is leased or owned, which brands are supported, what happens during an outage, and whether city alarm permits are included in activation. Those answers decide whether a listing fits the actual job.

Verified signal picks

Installers with richer evidence.

State coverage

Alaska Alabama Arkansas Arizona California
Before hiring

Licensing, monitoring, and integration details matter more than the sales pitch.

Security work is local and regulated. Some states require a burglar-alarm, low-voltage, or electrical contractor license; many cities require an alarm permit before monitored dispatch is activated. Blue Storm keeps those questions close to the installer profiles so readers do not confuse a strong profile with a guarantee.

For camera and smart-home projects, the right installer also depends on the technology stack. A provider that supports cloud cameras may not configure an on-premise NVR; a smart-lock installer may not support the hub already in the building; a residential alarm dealer may not design multi-door commercial access control. Use the directory to narrow the field, then confirm scope directly.