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⚠️ Security Alert — Ottawa Homeowners

How Thieves Break Into Homes Through Garage Doors — And Exactly How to Stop Them

Real Canadian cases. 6 methods burglars use right now. Cheap fixes that actually work. If you have an attached garage in Ottawa, this affects you.

📅 Updated April 2026⏱️ 8 min read📍 Ottawa, Ontario🔒 Security & Prevention
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Ottawa Garage Doors & Openers — Security Team

Over 15 years securing Ottawa homes. Licensed garage door technicians serving Kanata, Barrhaven, Orleans, Nepean and all Ottawa neighbourhoods. Call (613) 627-3028.

16 secTime to open most garage doors without a key
9%Of all home break-ins enter through the garage
40%Of Canadian break-ins involve NO forced entry
90 secResidential break-in frequency in Canada

Here’s something most Ottawa homeowners don’t know: a determined burglar can open your garage door in under 6 seconds — with nothing more than a wire coat hanger — and leave zero evidence of forced entry.

Your garage door isn’t just a convenience. If your home has an attached garage, it’s the single weakest point in your entire home’s security — and most people treat it like it’s invisible. No alarm sensor on the door itself. The interior door between the garage and house? Often hollow-core with a basic passage knob.

In this post, we’re going to show you exactly what’s happening in Ottawa neighbourhoods right now, the real cases that made news, and the specific fixes that make burglars move on to an easier target.

"The garage door is the new front door — for burglars."

— Ottawa Police Service Crime Prevention Unit

🔴 Real Cases: When It Happened to Canadian Homeowners

These aren’t hypothetical scenarios. These are real incidents reported to police and covered by Canadian and American media — representing the exact methods being used in residential neighbourhoods across Ontario right now.

📰 REAL CASE

Case #1 — The Vacation Break-In (Utah, 2023 — Widely Reported in Canada)

Blake and Tina Brown left for vacation. While their car sat at the airport, a thief broke in, found the garage door remote clipped to the visor, and grabbed the vehicle registration from the glovebox. They had everything they needed: the remote and the home address. They drove to the house, opened the garage, and spent hours looting the home — stealing over $20,000 worth of property. No broken windows. No kicked-in doors. Zero signs of forced entry.

⚠️ The Lesson: Your garage remote is a key to your home. Never leave it in your car — especially at airports, shopping malls, or any location where your car sits unattended for hours.
📰 REAL CASE

Case #2 — The Des Peres Neighbourhood Wave (Pattern Repeated Across Canada)

In a single St. Louis neighbourhood, a wave of burglaries swept through within weeks. The method was identical every time: thieves went through unlocked cars in driveways at night, stole garage door openers, then returned the following day when homeowners were at work. Police installed "Lock It or Lose It" signs throughout the area. This pattern — car break-in by night, home entry by day — is now documented by Ontario police as an active threat in Canadian suburbs.

⚠️ The Lesson: Even locking your house means nothing if your garage remote is in an unlocked car. Thieves are patient. They grab the remote tonight, case your house the next morning.
📰 REAL CASE

Case #3 — Ottawa Westboro Residential Break-In Series (Ottawa, 2020)

Ottawa Police investigated multiple residential break-ins concentrated in the Westboro area. Officers noted that entry through attached garages was a consistent pattern, with the interior garage-to-house door being the final breach point. Ottawa Police Crime Prevention issued specific guidance warning residents about garage access doors and the importance of treating the interior door as a true security barrier — not a convenience door.

⚠️ The Lesson: Getting into the garage is step one. Getting into your house from the garage is step two — and most homeowners make step two embarrassingly easy.
📰 REAL CASE

Case #4 — South American Theft Groups Active in Ottawa (2025)

In late 2025, the Ottawa Police Service issued an active public warning about South American Theft Groups (SATGs) — organized crime-tourist crews entering Canada legally and committing coordinated residential break-ins across Ottawa, the GTA, Montreal, and Vancouver. These professional teams specifically target homes with attached garages, greenbelts at the rear, and signs of owner absence. Ottawa arrests confirmed their activity in residential neighbourhoods. This is not random opportunistic crime — it's organized, skilled, and specifically targets common garage vulnerabilities.

⚠️ The Lesson: Modern home burglary in Ottawa is increasingly professional. These groups scout targets, know exactly what vulnerabilities to exploit, and move fast. Amateur security won't stop professionals.

🕵️ The 6 Methods Thieves Are Using Right Now

After 15+ years of seeing the aftermath of garage break-ins across Ottawa, here are the exact methods being used — from the completely low-tech to the surprisingly sophisticated.

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Method 1: The Coat Hanger Trick (6-Second Entry)

Works on virtually every standard garage door in Canada

⚠️ Most Common

A burglar bends a wire coat hanger into a hook, slides it through the small gap at the top of your closed garage door, fishes it toward the emergency release cord, hooks it, and pulls. The door disengages from the opener and lifts freely by hand in under 10 seconds. No noise. No visible damage. No evidence.

The San Francisco Police Department issued a public warning about this exact method. Phoenix police confirmed it's been used for 20+ years. The terrifying part: this works on almost every residential garage door in Ottawa regardless of how new or expensive your opener is.

✅ How to Fix It:
  • Free fix: Thread a zip-tie through the hole in the emergency release lever — prevents it being pulled by a wire from outside while letting you break it manually in a real emergency
  • $20–$50: Install an emergency release shield (hardware stores) — blocks external access entirely
  • Best: Ask your garage door tech to install a shield during your next service — 15 minutes, permanent fix
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Method 2: Stealing the Remote from Your Car

The #1 method used in Canadian suburban neighbourhoods

⚠️ Rising Fast

Most people clip their garage remote to the visor. Most people keep their vehicle registration in the glovebox — which has their home address. Thieves know this.

The playbook: break into your car → grab the remote → read the registration → wait for you to leave for work → drive to your house → press the button → walk in. Your alarm never triggers. Your neighbours see nothing unusual. This is actively used in Kanata, Barrhaven, Orleans, and Nepean.

✅ How to Fix It:
  • Never leave your remote in your car — bring it inside with your keys
  • Switch to a keypad or smartphone app and eliminate the physical remote entirely
  • Enable vacation mode on your opener before any trip — disables all remotes
  • If your remote is stolen: call (613) 627-3028 immediately to wipe all programmed remotes
  • Keep your vehicle registration in your wallet, not the glovebox
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Method 3: Signal Hacking — RollJam & Code Grabbers

Tech-savvy burglars targeting fixed-code and older rolling-code openers

🔴 Tech Threat

A $32 device called RollJam — demonstrated at the DEF CON security conference — can defeat the rolling-code security used in most garage openers including LiftMaster and Genie. When you press your remote, RollJam jams the signal. You press again. It jams that too but captures the first code. Third press works. The thief now has an unused valid code on their device to use any time.

Older fixed-code openers (pre-1993, common in Ottawa homes built in the 80s and 90s) are even more vulnerable — a basic code grabber can clone your signal in seconds.

✅ How to Fix It:
  • Upgrade to a modern myQ opener (LiftMaster, Chamberlain) — time-sensitive encrypted rolling codes RollJam cannot capture
  • If your door didn't open on the first press but did on the second — pay attention. Known RollJam symptom.
  • Any opener over 15 years old should be replaced — the security technology is genuinely obsolete
  • Smart WiFi openers give you activity alerts and remote monitoring from your phone
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Method 4: The Unlocked Interior Garage-to-House Door

The mistake 60%+ of Ottawa homeowners make daily

⚠️ Very Common

This isn't about getting into the garage — it's about what happens once someone is in. The interior door connecting your garage to your home is typically the weakest door in the building. Most Ottawa homes have a hollow-core interior door with a basic passage knob. Many homeowners don't lock it at all.

Once a burglar is in your garage, they're in a private, hidden space with unlimited time to work on your interior door, completely invisible from the street. Ottawa Police specifically flags this vulnerability.

✅ How to Fix It:
  • Always lock the door between your garage and house — even when you're home
  • Replace a hollow-core interior garage door with a solid-core or steel door
  • Install a Grade 1 deadbolt on this door (our locksmith partners can do this same day)
  • Add a door reinforcement kit to make the frame kick-proof
  • Consider a smart lock so you get notifications if this door opens unexpectedly
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Method 5: Leaving the Door Open

40% of Canadian break-ins involve zero forced entry

⚠️ Most Preventable

This is statistically the most common entry method. 40% of Canadian home break-ins involve no forced entry whatsoever. Opportunistic thieves drive slowly through residential streets looking for open garage doors. They pull up, grab bikes, tools, sports equipment, and leave in under 60 seconds. More brazen thieves check whether the interior door is unlocked.

One Arizona homeowners association enforced a keep-doors-closed rule. Break-ins dropped 50%.

✅ How to Fix It:
  • Install an auto-close timer on your opener — door closes automatically after 5–10 minutes
  • Smart openers (LiftMaster, Chamberlain) send a phone alert if your garage stays open too long
  • Add a door sensor to your home alarm system tied to the garage door
  • Treat the garage door like a car door — never leave it open and unattended
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Method 6: Physical Force on Old or Damaged Doors

Bent tracks, broken springs, and warped panels invite forced entry

🔴 Ottawa Winter Risk

Ottawa's freeze-thaw cycle damages garage door panels, warps tracks, and corrodes hinges over time. A door with a bent panel or slightly misaligned track can often be pried open with minimal force. Older wooden doors are particularly vulnerable — panels that have swollen, cracked, or separated create gaps thieves can exploit.

A door that doesn't sit flush against the ground — common in Ottawa after frost heave — can sometimes be lifted from the outside by hand.

✅ How to Fix It:
  • Annual spring maintenance inspection to catch panel damage and alignment issues caused by Ottawa winters
  • Replace damaged panels before they become security liabilities — not just cosmetic issues
  • Install a garage door defender — a floor-mounted steel bar that physically prevents the door from being lifted
  • Ensure the bottom seal sits flush — frost heave is common in Ottawa and creates dangerous gaps

🍁 Ottawa-Specific Security Risks You Need to Know

Ottawa's geography and climate create unique garage security risks that don't apply the same way in other Canadian cities:

  • South American Theft Groups (SATGs): Ottawa Police issued an active 2025 warning about organized international crime crews specifically targeting Ottawa homes with attached garages. These are professional operations, not opportunistic teens.
  • Winter damage creates summer vulnerabilities: Freeze-thaw cycles damage door seals, panels, and tracks September–April. Homeowners discover the damage in summer — often after a break-in.
  • Airport remote theft: Ottawa International Airport parking sees regular reports of car break-ins targeting garage remotes. If you park at the airport, take your remote inside or enable vacation mode.
  • Cottage season (May–September): Ottawa families leaving for Calabogie, Rideau Lakes, or Gatineau are prime targets. Homes sitting empty for weekends are easy prey for professional crews who scout in advance.

Ottawa Police non-emergency: 613-236-1222 | Report a break-in attempt: 613-236-1222 ext. 7300

✅ Your Garage Security Checklist — What to Do This Weekend

A complete action list sorted by cost and effort. Most of these take under an hour and cost under $50.

Fix Cost (CAD) Difficulty Blocks Which Threat
Zip-tie the emergency release cord$05 min / EasyCoat hanger trick
Lock the interior garage-to-house door$0Habit changeInterior access after garage entry
Never leave remote in your car$0Habit changeStolen remote break-in
Enable vacation mode before trips$02 min / EasyStolen remote + hacking
Emergency release shield$20–$5020 min / EasyCoat hanger trick
Motion-activated exterior lights$30–$8045 min / EasyGeneral deterrent
Deadbolt on interior garage door$80–$150Professional installInterior access
Garage door defender bar$60–$12030 min / EasyPhysical forced entry
Smart opener upgrade (myQ / LiftMaster)$300–$600Professional installSignal hacking + remote theft + auto-close
Replace pre-2000 opener$450–$950Professional installSignal hacking + code grabbing
💡 Pro Tip from Our Ottawa Technicians:Start with the free fixes today — the zip-tie and locking the interior door. Then book an annual spring tune-up where we inspect your door for physical vulnerabilities and install an emergency release shield in 15 minutes while we're there.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions About Garage Door Security in Ottawa

Ottawa Police document garage entry as one of the primary methods in residential break-ins. In Canada overall, there is a residential burglary every 90 seconds, and 9% of burglars specifically use the garage as their entry point. Ottawa’s Westboro and suburban areas (Barrhaven, Kanata, Orleans) have all seen targeted garage-access break-ins. The 2025 Ottawa Police warning about South American Theft Groups specifically flagged attached garages as preferred targets.

Only if you’ve specifically added a sensor to the garage door and the interior garage-to-house door. Most standard home alarm packages cover entry doors and windows — but not the garage door itself. When a thief opens the garage via coat hanger or stolen remote, there’s often no alarm trigger at all. Ask your alarm company whether your garage is covered. If not, add a garage door tilt sensor ($20–$60) and ensure the interior door is on the system.

Act fast: (1) unplug your opener or use your wall panel to enable vacation/lock mode — this disables all remotes; (2) call us at (613) 627-3028 to come and wipe all programmed remotes and reset the opener codes; (3) consider upgrading to keypad entry to eliminate physical remotes entirely. If the thief also had access to your address, file a police report and call Ottawa Police at 613-236-1222 ext. 7300.

Yes — for the coat hanger trick specifically, a zip-tie through the emergency release lever hole is highly effective. It prevents the lever from being rotated or pulled by a wire from outside. In a real emergency where you need to manually operate the door, you simply break the zip-tie from inside with one firm pull. It’s a $0 fix that solves the most common break-in method. We still recommend an emergency release shield for the most secure solution, but the zip-tie is a great immediate free fix.

Modern myQ-compatible openers (LiftMaster, Chamberlain) use time-limited encrypted rolling codes that are significantly harder to exploit. Older openers — especially fixed-code systems from the 1980s and 90s, common in Ottawa’s older neighbourhoods — are genuinely vulnerable to code grabbing. If your opener is over 15 years old, replacing it is both a security and functionality upgrade. Smart openers also give you phone alerts and remote access so you know immediately if your door opens while you’re away.

Before leaving for a weekend or week away: (1) activate vacation/lock mode to disable all remotes; (2) manually lock the door from inside using a slide bolt or garage defender; (3) ensure the interior garage-to-house door is deadbolted; (4) set your alarm to include the garage door sensor; (5) set exterior lights on a timer or motion sensor; (6) ask a trusted neighbour to keep an eye out. We can install a smart opener before your first cottage trip so you can monitor your garage remotely from wherever you are.

Is Your Ottawa Garage Secure? Find Out — Free.

Our technicians will inspect your garage door system for every vulnerability on this list and tell you exactly what needs fixing.
Most security upgrades take under an hour.

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