Home Alarm Installation is an independent home security comparison and lead-referral service for the Las Vegas metro. We are not affiliated with any security provider. Every installer we route leads to holds an active Nevada Private Investigators Licensing Board (PILB) license under NRS 648. Editorial standards: every regulatory claim is sourced to a statute or municipal code; equipment recommendations account for Mojave Desert operating conditions; we never accept pay-for-placement in editorial content.
Home Alarm Installation helps Las Vegas-area homeowners and businesses compare monitored security systems, smart-home options, surveillance equipment, and installation providers. We are an editorial-and-referral service, not an installer. When you request a quote through our site, we route your inquiry to a vetted local installer who handles the rest.
Our editorial recommendations are made on the basis of consumer reviews, equipment quality, contract terms, installer track record, and Nevada-specific regulatory compliance — not on advertising spend or referral commissions. Where we recommend a specific brand or provider, we say so explicitly.
Every home security installer we route leads to must hold an active license issued by the Nevada Private Investigators Licensing Board (PILB) under NRS 648 (Private Investigators, Patrolmen, Process Servers, Repossessors, Dog Handlers, Polygraphic Examiners, and Intern Polygraphic Examiners). Specifically, alarm installers in Nevada must hold a Class C license under NRS 648.085 for "intrusion prevention" or related installer categories.
The four-step verification we perform on every installer in our network:
We do not route leads to installers whose Nevada PILB license is in any status other than "Active." Suspended, revoked, expired, denied, voluntarily surrendered, or "under review" statuses are categorically ineligible. We re-verify license status periodically; if an installer's status changes, their listings are suspended immediately pending re-verification.
Every regulatory claim on this site is sourced to a specific statute or municipal code. Where we discuss alarm permits, we cite the relevant Las Vegas Metro Police Department, Henderson PD, Boulder City PD, North Las Vegas PD, or Nye County Sheriff's Office ordinance. Where we discuss installer licensing, we cite NRS 648 and the specific NAC (Nevada Administrative Code) sections that govern it. Where we discuss HOA rules, we link to the specific master-association ARC standards.
Home Alarm Installation is YMYL-adjacent content (Your Money or Your Life — content that affects financial well-being and physical safety). We hold ourselves to elevated editorial standards because home security decisions affect both the financial and physical safety of consumers. Specifically: we do not publish content that recommends bypassing alarm permits, evading insurance disclosures, or installing equipment in ways that violate manufacturer specifications or local code.
Our editor is John Quigley, former owner of the Las Vegas Business Journal. His full biography and credentials are on the editor profile page.
If you identify a factual error or out-of-date information on this site, email leads@homealarminstallation.com with the URL and the specific issue. We commit to reviewing and (if confirmed) correcting all factual errors within 5 business days. Major corrections are noted at the bottom of the affected page.
When a visitor submits a quote request, we may share that inquiry with a vetted local installer. The installer pays us a per-lead referral fee. This is our primary business model. We disclose this on every page that contains a quote form. This payment structure does not influence editorial recommendations.
See our Privacy Policy for details on how we collect and handle your information.
Home Alarm Installation is not a licensed security installer or alarm monitoring company. We do not install equipment, monitor alarms, or dispatch responses. All actual security services are provided by licensed third parties.
Editorial standards last updated: May 2026. Compliant with Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 648 and Clark County Title 9 (alarm permit code).
No pressure, no obligation. Licensed Nevada PILB installers respond within one business hour with a free in-home site survey.