Secure Your Car Lot: Automotive Dealership Video Security
Motor vehicle theft is a major problem everywhere we find cars and trucks. The speed and ease of the crime—combined with the large potential payout for the thief—means vehicles go missing at an alarming rate. Thieves especially target locations with a large number of vehicles, such as dealerships and car lots. For dealership owners, security needs to be a top priority. Start with these strategies, especially automotive dealership video security.
Auto Theft by the Numbers
Let’s take a closer look at what your dealership has at stake.
While motor vehicle theft trended down after 1990, the crime has been on the rise since 2019. Why? It’s hard to say for certain, but the increase in used car value over the past few years isn’t helping.
Stealing a car can be very lucrative. According to the FBI, Americans lost $7.4 billion to vehicle theft in 2020. The average loss per theft was $9,166.
Luxury vehicles will, of course, attract attention, but the top ten most stolen vehicles are garden varieties. Chevrolet pickup trucks, Ford pickup trucks, Honda Civic, Honda Accord, and Hyundai Sonata are the five most popular targets. (And the Sonata only cracked the top 5 recently thanks to the Kia Boyz social media trend.) According to the National Insurance Crime Bureau, full-sized pickup trucks accounted for 25% of stolen passenger vehicles in 2023.
The United States has a large, booming auto market. In 2020, motor vehicle and parts revenue topped $1.2 trillion. That only reflects legitimate sales at dealerships and doesn’t include the bustling (and sometimes shady) secondary market. There were nearly 15 million passenger vehicles sold in the US in 2021. Again, that’s only counting legitimate sales. And with 229 million licensed drivers in the US alone, there are plenty of buyers who are hungry for cheap cars and parts, whether or not they’re obtained legally.
It’s big numbers, big money, and big risks. As an auto dealership owner, you need to secure your entire lot and each car. Protect your lot, protect your inventory, protect your business.
Essential Security Tips for Dealerships
Your dealership is an attractive target. Picture it from the perspective of a car thief: You have dozens, maybe hundreds of new vehicles sitting around, plus privately owned cars waiting for service and repairs. And all those parts in your service department. Thieves see possibilities and dollar signs.
Security is about limiting access, increasing risk, and eliminating opportunities.
Thieves can and will make off with entire vehicles, but they might also target expensive tires, rims, and catalytic converters. A comprehensive security plan protects the vehicles and their parts.
Adequate Lighting
An auto dealership covers a lot of ground. The last thing you want to do is leave some areas of it dark or out of sight from passers-by. Would-be thieves look for the cover of night and protection from prying eyes when selecting a target. Don’t give them either.
The easiest improvement to your dealership’s security is providing adequate lighting both inside and outside. A well-lit showroom and lot are big disincentives. Floodlights—especially motion-activated ones—throw a literal spotlight on criminals trying to avoid attention.
Specialty Automotive Dealership Video Security & Alarms
Additionally, you’ll want several well-placed business security cameras at entry points and sections of your property not easily seen from the road. Basically, put a camera anywhere you need an extra set of eyes.
Automotive dealership video security is a powerful deterrent—possibly preventing the crime before it happens. It also provides invaluable video footage to assist law enforcement should a theft occur. You’ll be glad to have evidence during the investigation and insurance claim process.
Automotive dealership live video surveillance adds an extra layer of protection. With this service, a trained professional is watching your property when no one else is around.
And if trouble strikes, a high-decibel alarm triggered by unauthorized entry is sometimes all it takes to scare off intruders.
So light it up, get it on camera, and make some noise.
Strong Access Control
Fences, gates, sturdy locks, and keycards are mighty tools in controlling who has access to vehicles, spare parts, keys, financial records, and other confidential information. They keep your inventory and data in while keeping ne’er-do-wells out.
Both access control and territorial reinforcement are pillars of crime prevention through environmental design, a system of design strategies to make a property as unappealing as possible to criminals. Giving your property unmistakable boundaries that are difficult to cross discourages illegal behavior.
What’s more, fences and locks make it abundantly clear that an area is not a public space. Few things stick out more than someone climbing over a fence or cutting through a lock. Thieves don’t want to stick out. They want to blend in. Don’t let them.
Key Security
Having lots of vehicles means having lots of keys or fobs. Understandably, it can be easy to misplace or lose them. It can also be easy for troublemakers to steal them.
To combat these problems, implement a sign-in-sign-out system to track all vehicle keys and fobs. And keep them in a safe, locked location both during and after business hours.
A key left hanging on an unsecured peg board, out on a counter, or in an unlocked office—or worse, left in the corresponding vehicle—is an open invitation to car thieves. Don’t make it that easy to drive off with a new car.
Vehicle Security
It sounds obvious, but make sure every vehicle on the lot is locked. If present, activate the vehicle alarm every night.
Consider using additional measures like steering wheel, tire, and pedal locks. Anti-theft devices are plentiful these days.
Many new cars and trucks arrive with factory-installed GPS trackers, third-party services like LoJack, or remote kill switches. These allow law enforcement to track and recover stolen vehicles with relative ease.
Finally, use strategic placement and parking practices for the vehicles on the lot. Box expensive models in, turn all wheels sharply to the right or left (to make towing that much more difficult), and engage parking or emergency brakes at the end of the day.
Consider Using Security Guards
Security guards can be potent crime-stoppers. Static or mobile security personnel on-site can deter criminals, engage with them as necessary, and assist police after the fact.
Hiring security guards can also be very expensive, of course. And the larger your lot, the more guards you’ll need. But when a single theft can cost you $10,000 or more, it might be worth it. Can your business sustain that kind of loss?
It’s up to you and your budget to determine whether the expense should be part of your security plan.
Best of the Rest
Car dealership security is not a one-and-done situation. It’s ongoing and proactive.
To that end, remember to:
- Perform thorough background checks on current and prospective staff
- Periodically change alarm codes and passwords
- Keep the lot and showroom tidy and well-maintained
- Create and enforce an end-of-day closing routine to ensure nothing gets overlooked
The Deep Sentinel Solution: Automotive Dealership Video Security
Deep Sentinel is proud to offer auto dealership security with video monitoring, a comprehensive solution for car dealers.
Wireless or Power-over-Ethernet business security cameras with 2-way audio and high-decibel sirens are just the beginning. What sets Deep Sentinel apart from other security providers is the system’s unique combination of predictive AI and live surveillance guards. The trained professional guard team has eyes on your dealership every time someone steps foot on the property, well before any criminal activity starts.
How? By integrating digital and traditional security practices.
- As soon as motion activates a camera, the onsite AI processor evaluates the situation and dismisses animals, passing cars, and every other non-threat activity.
- The system alerts the Deep Sentinel guard team about suspicious or unknown behavior, allowing the guards to assess the situation.
- Surveillance guards intervene via 2-way audio. This is often enough to prevent a crime and send intruders away.
- As necessary, guards can notify the police of a crime in progress in as little as 30 seconds, staying on the line to provide real-time updates.
Cameras detect. Guards watch and engage. Law enforcement gets notified only if necessary and never for a false alarm. All that, plus the fastest response time in the industry at a fraction of the cost of hiring security personnel. Real guards, real eyes, real protection. See Deep Sentinel’s automotive dealership video security solution in action at a Cleveland car lot.
Car theft is a modern problem, and it requires a modern solution. Let Deep Sentinel be that solution.
Need a Solution that Prevents Crime?
Deep Sentinel is the only security technology that delivers the experience of a personal guard on every customer’s home and business. Visit deepsentinel.com/business or call 833-983-6006.