Published 2026-04-10 • Price-Quotes Research Lab Analysis

Most homeowners spending $45–$60 per month on professionally monitored security will flush $2,700–$3,600 down the drain over five years — when a DIY system with identical protection costs a fraction of that. That's not a rough estimate. That's arithmetic. According to Price-Quotes Research Lab's analysis of five-year total ownership costs, DIY systems like SimpliSafe and Ring Alarm deliver professional-grade monitoring at roughly one-third the price of legacy providers like ADT, Vivint, and Brinks. The gap isn't narrowing. In 2026, it's a canyon.
This article cuts through the marketing noise. You'll find verified pricing on hardware, monthly monitoring, installation fees, contract terms, and the often-ignored insurance discount variable. By the end, you'll know exactly what a home security system costs in 2026 — and which path actually makes financial sense for your property.
Price-Quotes Research Lab aggregated data from nine major security brands, verified pricing against manufacturer websites and retailer listings as of April 2026, and calculated five-year total costs including hardware, monitoring fees, installation (if applicable), and estimated insurance premium reductions. Every stat in this article links to its source. We didn't trust the marketing materials. We crunched the spreadsheets.
Before diving into brand-by-brand breakdowns, here's the five-year cost comparison that should guide your decision:
The pattern is brutal for traditional providers: DIY systems consistently save $1,200–$2,000 over five years compared to professionally installed alternatives with comparable monitoring coverage.
SimpliSafe earns its crown through aggressive simplicity. Hardware costs range from $230 for the base kit (base station, one entry sensor, one motion sensor, keychain remote) to $500+ for the Haven package with glass break sensors, smoke detector, and panic button. Monthly monitoring starts at $20/month for the Standard plan and $28/month for the Interactive plan, which adds app control, smart home integration, and 30-day camera recording history.
The five-year math is straightforward: $300 hardware + ($20 × 60 months) = $1,500 at the low end, or $1,278 if you catch promotional pricing. Wirecutter and PCMag both rate SimpliSafe The Essentials as best overall value for monitored DIY security. The catch? SimpliSafe's camera lineup lags competitors, and the system lacks native HomeKit support — a dealbreaker for Apple Home ecosystem users.
Installation requires zero tools. The magnetic sensors stick to doors and windows. The base station plugs in. You're operational in under 30 minutes. No appointment scheduling, no technician cancellation drama, no $200 installation fee waived "if you sign a 36-month contract."
Ring Alarm Pro's hardware kit (second-generation 8-piece) runs $329 on Amazon. Monthly subscription options include $10/month for Ring Protect Basic (video storage for one camera), $20/month for Ring Protect Plus (unlimited cameras, 24/7 professional monitoring, and cellular backup), or $0/month for self-monitoring with no professional response.
The Ring Alarm Pro's secret weapon is the built-in eero WiFi 6 router. At $200+ standalone, this effectively subsidizes the alarm system's hardware cost. For Ring doorbell and camera users already invested in the Amazon ecosystem, Alarm Pro integrates seamlessly with Alexa routines — automatically announcing front door activity, turning on lights when motion triggers, and locking smart deadbolts.
The five-year cost: $329 hardware + ($20 × 60 months) = $1,529. Subtract the eero value ($200), and you're at $1,329 all-in — competitive with SimpliSafe. CNET's analysis confirms Ring Alarm Pro delivers professional monitoring at roughly half the cost of Vivint or ADT.
Abode positions itself as theDIY system for smart home purists. The iota All-in-One kit ($280) includes a 1080p camera, motion sensor, siren, and hub supporting Zigbee, Z-Wave, and — critically — Apple HomeKit. No other DIY system offers this trifecta natively. That matters if you're running HomeKit Automations, SmartThings routines, or Z-Wave locks and sensors from multiple manufacturers.
Abode's pricing structure rewards self-monitorers: $0/month for local storage and push notifications, $6/month for the Pro Plan (30-day cloud recording, cellular backup, and extended smart home integrations). Professional monitoring through Noonlight costs $20/month on top — bringing the total monitored cost to $26/month.
Five-year cost with professional monitoring: $280 hardware + ($26 × 60) = $1,840. Self-monitored five-year cost: $280 hardware only. For homeowners deeply invested in cross-platform smart home ecosystems, Abode's flexibility justifies the premium over simpler systems.
Cove strips away the complexity and the contracts. The basic Secure package (touchscreen panel, three entry sensors, one motion sensor, yard sign, stickers) costs $199 after promo codes that seem perpetually available. Monitoring runs $17.99/month — among the lowest in the industry — with no long-term commitment.
The trade-off: no cameras in the base offering. Cove doesn't manufacture its own camera hardware, and the partner camera options lack the integration depth of Ring or SimpliSafe. No HomeKit. No Z-Wave. No Zigbee. Cove is a pure alarm system for homeowners who want sensors and sirens without the smart home complexity.
Five-year cost: $199 hardware + ($17.99 × 60) = $1,279 — actually competitive with SimpliSafe on price. The catch is the ecosystem ceiling. As your home evolves, you'll hit Cove's walls faster than competitors.
Frontpoint charges $35–$50/month for monitoring — the highest among major DIY providers — while shipping hardware that's essentially rebranded Alarm.com equipment. The Premium package (front door sensors, motion detector, glass break sensor, indoor camera, touchscreen keypad) runs $349.
Five-year cost: $349 hardware + ($50 × 60) = $3,349. That's Vivint territory for a system you install yourself. Frontpoint's 2026 rating of 3.0/5 reflects this value disconnect. No HomeKit. No free monitoring tier. No cameras included. You're paying for the brand, not differentiated technology.
ADT's name recognition is its primary product. Six million customers and 151 years in business don't translate to competitive pricing. The company's self-setup option (ADT Self Setup) offers Google Nest cameras and Ring-like DIY hardware, but monthly monitoring runs $28.99–$45.99 depending on plan tier. Equipment costs $0–$299 upfront depending on promotions.
Traditional ADT professional installation? Expect $99–$199 installation fees, mandatory 36-month contracts at $45–$60/month, and early termination fees reaching $75–$100% of remaining contract value. ADT's three-year cost of $1,169 in monitoring fees alone dwarfs comparable DIY alternatives at $515.
The one legitimate advantage: insurance carriers recognize the ADT brand name. Some underwriters offer marginally better discounts for ADT-monitored systems versus lesser-known DIY brands. We'll quantify this below.
Vivint packages its systems through door-to-door sales consultants who walk your property, design a "custom" solution, and present pricing on tablets with dramatic pauses. The average Vivint customer spends $2,000–$2,500 on equipment before any monitoring fees. Monthly monitoring runs $25–$50 depending on package depth, with no self-monitoring option available.
The three-year total: $2,000+ equipment + ($50 × 36 months) = $3,800. Five-year projection: $4,100–$4,500. Alarm Reviews calculates Vivint costs $2,000 more than Ring over three years for comparable protection.
Vivint's legitimate strengths: seamless smart home integration, professional installation ensuring clean wiring and optimal sensor placement, and an equipment quality that justifies some premium. But the sales pressure, 36–60 month contracts, and aggressive financing make the $2,000+ entry point a red flag for financially savvy homeowners.
Brinks charges $1,440 over three years ($40/month monitoring) with a mandatory contract. No self-monitoring alternative. Equipment costs extra — typically $299–$599 for basic packages. Early termination fees equal 75–100% of remaining contract balance, making Brinks one of the most expensive commitments in residential security.
The math is unfavorable before you factor in the opportunity cost of capital. That $1,440 in Brinks monitoring fees buys you $1,440 in SimpliSafe or Ring monitoring with zero contract, superior app UX, and no sales haggling.
Alder Security representatives still work neighborhood canvassing routes — a sales approach that peaked in the 1990s. Monitoring runs $30–$50/month on 36–60 month contracts. The door-to-door model raises privacy and pressure concerns that Price-Quotes Research Lab flags as legitimate: you're committing to a multi-year contract with a company that used aggressive in-person sales tactics to close you.
Professional installation fees range from $99 (ADT Self Setup) to $199+ (Vivint, traditional ADT). Some providers waive installation fees when you sign monitoring contracts — which is really a $99–$199 rebate on your first year of monitoring overpayment. Run the five-year math before accepting "free installation" as a genuine gift.
DIY installation costs: $0. Modern systems are genuinely tool-free. SimpliSafe's magnetic sensors stick without drilling. Ring's Z-Wave sensors pair through the app. SecurityCompassHQ's installation analysis confirms most homeowners complete DIY setup in 15–45 minutes.
The only legitimate cases for professional installation:
Homeowners insurance companies offer premium discounts for monitored security systems — typically 5–15% depending on carrier, location, and system type. For a home insured at $350,000 with an annual premium of $1,800, a 10% discount equals $180/year or $900 over five years.
The critical nuance: self-monitored systems (Ring with no subscription, Abode at $0/month) typically don't qualify for insurance discounts. Insurers require proof of 24/7 professional monitoring — a central station receiving alarm signals and dispatching authorities when you're asleep or abroad.
ADT's brand recognition carries real weight with some underwriters. A monitored SimpliSafe system might qualify for a 5% discount with one carrier but 10% with another simply because the adjuster recognizes the ADT logo on the window sticker. This inconsistency means you should verify your specific insurer's discount eligibility before assuming your $20/month DIY system qualifies for the same break as an ADT-monitored property.
The insurance discount variable can swing the five-year comparison meaningfully:
Suddenly ADT looks competitive. But this assumes maximum insurance discount eligibility, a 10% discount rate, and zero opportunity cost on the contract lock-in. Most homeowners won't hit all three conditions simultaneously.
Professional security companies love 36–60 month contracts because they guarantee monthly revenue while making price increases non-negotiable. When ADT raised monitoring fees 15% in 2024, customers couldn't switch without paying $400+ in early termination fees. That's not protection. That's a hostage situation with your home's security as collateral.
DIY systems offer month-to-month flexibility. SimpliSafe's Standard plan at $20/month can be paused (not just canceled) during extended travel. Ring Protect Plus can be downgraded to the free self-monitoring tier and restored when your budget recovers. This flexibility has genuine monetary value that contract-bound customers can't access.
Vivint's financing arrangements are particularly concerning. Equipment financing over 42–60 months at 9.99–19.99% APR means a $1,500 system might cost $2,200+ when financed. If you move before paying off the equipment, you're either paying early termination fees, continuing payments on hardware you can't take (rentals, HOA restrictions), or defaulting on financed equipment that theoretically remains Vivint's property.
Security systems don't exist in isolation. Your door locks, lights, thermostat, and garage door should integrate with your alarm system for automated routines. Here's how major systems stack up:
If you're already locked into Apple HomeKit (iPhone, HomePod, HomeKit cameras and locks), Abode is your only viable DIY option. The $6/month Pro Plan for HomeKit support alone might justify the upgrade over SimpliSafe.
SimpliSafe's sensors detect entry reliably. Ring's cameras record 1080p video with acceptable night vision. Vivint's outdoor cameras push 4K with color night vision and smart detection. The protection differential between a $300 SimpliSafe system and a $2,000 Vivint system is minimal for most homes. Both systems summon police response on breach. Both send smartphone alerts. Both sound sirens.
Where professional equipment pulls ahead: video analytics, smart detection accuracy, and integration depth. Vivint's AI distinguishes between people, packages, and vehicles with fewer false positives than Ring's basic motion detection. If you're monitoring a large property with multiple cameras, the intelligence gap justifies some premium. For an apartment or single-family home with 2–3 entry points, you'll never notice the difference.
After running the numbers and comparing ecosystems, the decision framework simplifies dramatically:
Price-Quotes Research Lab's analysis confirms what independent reviewers consistently find: DIY systems deliver 90% of the protection at 33% of the cost. SimpliSafe and Ring Alarm Pro cover the needs of 80% of homeowners. Abode fills the Apple ecosystem gap. Vivint, ADT, and Brinks serve customers who value brand prestige and in-person service over spreadsheet optimization.
Your home's security matters. Your retirement account matters too. These aren't competing priorities — SimpliSafe's $20/month Interactive plan protects both. The $40/month you're saving by skipping ADT compounds into meaningful wealth over a 30-year mortgage. That's the real math.
For most homeowners in 2026, the choice is clear: buy the sensors, install them yourself, pay for professional monitoring, and bank the difference. Your future self will thank you. Or, to put it in terms your insurance company understands: you're reducing risk in two ways — the risk of burglary, and the risk of overpaying for protection you could've installed in 30 minutes for $300.