★★★★★ Rated 4.9/5 by 1,000s of customers City & Guilds Accredited Locksmiths Near You
✓ DBS Checked ✓ No Call-Out Fee ✓ 12-Month Guarantee
Home  /  Advice & Guides  /  Emergency Help
Emergency Help

What To Do When You're Locked Out (and What Not To Do)

Team LocksmithLocal8 July 20256 min read
What To Do When You're Locked Out (and What Not To Do)

In this guide

  1. First: three quick questions
  2. The four lockouts, and what each means
  3. What not to do (and why it fails)
  4. What a good locksmith will actually do
  5. Make the next one impossible

Every lockout feels the same from the doorstep — but to a locksmith, there is no such thing as a generic lockout. Keys left on the kitchen table, keys lost on a night out, a key snapped in the cylinder and a uPVC handle that suddenly will not lift are four different problems, with different levels of urgency, different solutions and very different costs if you handle them badly. This guide walks through each one, and through the things people try in the first ten minutes that turn a quick, cheap job into a damaged door.

First: three quick questions

The four lockouts, and what each one means

Keys locked inside. The best version of the problem. Your keys are safe, nobody else has them, and once a locksmith opens the door non-destructively you are done — no lock change needed. Tell the locksmith what kind of door it is (wood or uPVC, key or latch) and whether it was locked or just pulled shut.

Keys lost or stolen. Entry is only half the job here, and it is the half people focus on. If your keys are out in the world — especially with anything carrying your address — the cylinder should be changed the same visit. It is a small extra cost, and it is the difference between an inconvenient evening and lying awake wondering who might have your keys.

Key snapped in the lock. Stop turning. The deeper the stub gets worked in, the harder the extraction — and a worn or forced cylinder is usually why the key gave way in the first place, so budget mentally for a possible replacement cylinder along with the extraction.

The door will not lock or open (uPVC handle jammed). This one is mechanical, not a key problem at all. Multipoint mechanisms — the strip of hooks and rollers along the door edge — fail with wear, heat expansion or a dropped door. Do not force the handle: a snapped gearbox turns a modest repair into a bigger one. Lift gently, try while pulling or pushing the door into the frame, and if it still refuses, leave it for someone with the right tools.

What not to do (and why it fails)

What a good locksmith will actually do

A professional starts with non-destructive entry — picking, bypassing or manipulating the lock so that nothing needs replacing. On most domestic doors that is exactly how it ends: door open, lock intact, often inside the hour. Drilling is a last resort for genuinely high-security cylinders, not an opening move.

You can protect yourself with three questions on the phone: the full price before anyone travels (one figure, including the call-out — ours is always free), who is coming (a named local locksmith, not a dispatch centre passing the job to whoever bids), and how they will open it ("non-destructive first" is the answer you want). The rogue end of this trade advertises a low price, arrives, drills immediately and presents a very different bill. Anyone vague about price or pushy about drilling has answered your question for you.

Need this sorted today?

A named, vetted master locksmith covers your area — no call-out fee.

Find Your Local Locksmith →

Make the next one impossible

Written by

Team LocksmithLocal

City & Guilds Accredited Master Locksmiths|NCFE-Certified|DBS Checked|Trained at MPL Locksmith Training

Written and reviewed by our team of master locksmiths trained by the industry experts at MPL Locksmith Training. Everything in our guides comes from real jobs on real doors — no theory, no rehashed manuals.