Fayette COUNTY LOCKSMITH
Locksmith Service

Master Key System Setup

Running a business in Jeffersonville — whether it's a grain and feed operation off US-35, a warehouse near the Fayette County line, or a multi-suite professional office on Main Street — means managing who gets through which door at what time. A tiered master key system solves that problem by creating a structured hierarchy of access: one grand master key for ownership or upper management, department-level master keys for supervisors, and individual change keys for employees who only need specific rooms. When that architecture is designed and installed correctly, it eliminates the chaos of carrying dozens of keys while keeping sensitive areas genuinely secure.

Open 24 hours, 7 days a week · Licensed, bonded & insured

Fayette County Locksmith specializes in planning and installing master key systems for commercial and industrial properties throughout the Jeffersonville area. Our insured, experienced technicians come directly to your location — no need to haul hardware across town or wait on a contractor who services five counties. We work on everything from traditional mortise lock cylinders in older office suites to modern high-security pin-tumbler hardware in climate-controlled warehouses. Every system we design is mapped on paper before a single cylinder is touched, so you get a clear picture of your access hierarchy upfront and a confirmed price before any work begins.

What we do

1

Available 24/7

Day, night, weekends and holidays — a real local locksmith answers and rolls a fully-stocked van.

2

Fast local response

Based in Jeffersonville, we reach the Jeffersonville area in well under an hour.

3

Insured & background-checked

Vetted technicians, up-front pricing, and no surprise add-ons when we arrive.

4

Damage-free entry

We pick and bypass locks the right way, so most lockouts are solved without drilling anything.

01

How a Tiered Master Key System Setup Actually Works

A master key system is built on a principle called 'change key and master key co-action.' Each lock cylinder contains a set of pin stacks. In a standard lock, those pins are set to respond to one key cut. In a master-keyed cylinder, the pin stacks carry an extra wafer — called a master wafer — that creates a second shear line. This means the lock will open at two different key cuts: the individual change key and the master key above it. Stack multiple levels — change key, sub-master, master, grand master — and you have a true hierarchy. The engineering challenge is making sure those extra shear lines don't accidentally overlap in ways that create unintended cross-keys, which is why professional system design on graph paper (or dedicated keying software) is essential before any cylinder is ordered or cut.

For a typical Jeffersonville office with, say, a front reception area, a finance suite, a warehouse loading dock, and a server room, we might design three tiers: a grand master for the owner, sub-masters for the office manager and warehouse supervisor, and individual change keys for each employee station. Each tier is documented in a key control record we leave with you. Future additions — a new hire, a new storage room — can be keyed into the existing system without rebuilding from scratch, as long as the original system was designed with expansion capacity.

02

Mortise Lock Integration and Commercial Door Hardware

The mortise lock is the workhorse of commercial master key systems, and for good reason. Unlike a cylindrical knob or lever lock that bolts into a bored hole, a mortise lock body is recessed into a pocket cut into the door edge, giving it far greater structural integrity and a much longer service life under heavy daily use. Mortise lock cylinders are also significantly easier to re-key within a master key system because the cylinder is removable with a simple cam turn — no door disassembly required. We work with Schlage, Kwikset, Medeco, and other major hardware lines to match the grade of lock to the application. A loading dock door on a Jeffersonville warehouse needs a Grade 1 commercial mortise lock; an interior office door connecting two low-traffic suites might be appropriately served by a quality door knob lock or lever trim on a mortise chassis.

When we walk a property for a master key system consultation, we assess every door in the proposed hierarchy: the current lock type, door thickness and frame condition, whether the existing prep matches the intended hardware, and how wear affects re-keying accuracy. Old mortise lock cylinders with worn pins can introduce false key acceptance — a security risk in any master-keyed environment. We replace worn components before they become vulnerabilities, always working damage-free where the door and frame allow, and clearly communicating any cases where hardware replacement is the safer path forward.

03

Warehouses, Offices, and the Master Key System Setup Process Step by Step

Before we cut a single key, we conduct a site walkthrough with whoever manages access control — typically the owner, facilities manager, or office administrator. We map every door that will be part of the system, assign it a zone and access level, and sketch the key hierarchy. For a warehouse environment, that often means separating the loading dock, the inventory floor, the break room, and the management office into distinct zones. For a professional office, we might separate clinical or legal files from common-area doors. Once the hierarchy is approved, we order or configure the cylinders with the correct pin stack combinations, install them — re-keying existing mortise lock bodies where possible, replacing full hardware where needed — and then cut and stamp every key in the system before handing over the key control chart.

We also walk you through your responsibilities as a key administrator: how to track issued keys, what to do when a key is lost (re-keying a single change key level rarely requires rebuilding the entire system), and how to add doors to the hierarchy later. If you manage multiple buildings — a common scenario for agricultural businesses and small manufacturers around Fayette County — we can design a grand master system that spans properties while keeping each building's internal access separate. Call (740) 754-0038 to schedule your site consultation; our team answers 24/7, including weekends and holidays.

04

Emergency Locksmith Response and Ongoing Commercial Lock Service

A master key system creates efficiency, but it also creates a single point of urgency: if a grand master key is lost or a cylinder is compromised, the security of every door in the hierarchy is potentially affected. That's why having a trusted emergency locksmith relationship matters as much as the initial installation. Fayette County Locksmith operates 24/7 — if a warehouse supervisor loses a sub-master at 11 p.m. on a Friday before an early Saturday shipment, we can respond, assess the exposure, and re-key affected cylinders the same night. We're mobile, so we come to your Jeffersonville property with the tools and blank inventory needed to handle most commercial lock emergencies on the spot.

Beyond emergencies, we offer scheduled maintenance visits for properties with high-traffic commercial locksmith needs — inspecting mortise lock bodies for wear, testing master key function across the hierarchy, and updating key control records when personnel change. A door knob lock or lever set that feels stiff or intermittently fails to retract the latch is often a sign that the cylinder or chassis is wearing in ways that could compromise master key acceptance. Catching those issues before a lock-out or a security incident saves significant disruption for any business. For new tenants moving into commercial space on or near US-35 or around the Jeffersonville square, we can re-key an existing master key system to eliminate all prior-tenant key access — one of the most commonly overlooked security steps in commercial leasing. Reach out any time at (740) 754-0038.

05

Key Control, Expansion, and Choosing the Right Hardware Grade

One detail that separates a well-designed master key system from a patchwork of re-keyed locks is key control. Restricted keyways — cylinders that accept only keys cut on a patented or proprietary blank — prevent unauthorized key duplication at a hardware store. We offer restricted keyway options across several hardware lines for clients who need documented chain-of-custody for every key in circulation. This matters enormously for warehouses storing regulated materials, medical offices, law firms, and any business where a copied key could represent significant liability.

Hardware grade selection is equally important. ANSI/BHMA grades rate commercial locks on cycle testing, security, and durability. Grade 1 hardware is appropriate for exterior commercial doors and high-security interior zones; Grade 2 handles moderate-traffic interior applications. We help you match grade to application rather than defaulting to the same hardware across every door — which either over-spends on interior closet doors or under-protects exterior loading dock access. Our services across master key and general commercial locksmith work include: mortise lock installation and re-keying, master key system design and documentation, grand master and sub-master key cutting, restricted keyway cylinder installation, high-security deadbolt installation, door knob lock replacement and re-keying, commercial lever lock installation, panic bar and exit device installation, electromagnetic lock wiring coordination, access control system integration, key control record creation, key cabinet installation, padlock keying to master systems, cabinet lock installation, file cabinet re-keying, mailbox lock replacement, interchangeable core system setup, building re-key after tenant change, lost key re-key response, lock-out assistance with ownership verification, cylinder extraction after broken key, lock repair and latch adjustment, door closer and hardware alignment, safe lock evaluation and referral, and 24/7 emergency commercial lock response throughout Jeffersonville and surrounding Fayette County.

Frequently asked questions

Answers to what our customers ask most. Still unsure? Just call.

How many tiers can a master key system realistically support?+

Most commercial properties function well with two to four tiers: change keys for individual users, a sub-master per department or zone, a master for a building manager, and a grand master for ownership. Beyond four tiers, the mathematics of pin stack combinations becomes constrained, which can limit how many individual locks the system can accommodate without risking cross-key conflicts. We design every system to your actual headcount and access needs, with room built in for growth.

Can you add our existing mortise lock cylinders into a new master key system?+

Often yes, but it depends on the cylinder brand, its current condition, and whether the pin stack capacity supports the additional shear lines a master wafer requires. We inspect existing mortise lock hardware during the site walkthrough and tell you directly which cylinders can be re-keyed into the new system and which are better replaced. We never recommend replacement just to sell hardware — only when the existing cylinder genuinely can't deliver reliable function in the new hierarchy.

What factors determine the final price for a master key system installation?+

The quote depends on the number of doors and cylinders in the system, the hardware grade and brand specified, whether we're re-keying existing cylinders or supplying and installing new hardware, the number of key tiers and total keys cut, any restricted keyway upcharge, and travel distance to your property. Time of day can also be a factor for emergency after-hours calls. We confirm an exact up-front price before any work begins — no surprise charges appear on the final invoice.

What should we do immediately if a grand master key is lost or stolen?+

Contact us at (740) 754-0038 right away — we answer 24/7. The appropriate response depends on the system design and which doors the lost key controls. In some cases, re-keying only the cylinders accessible by that key level is sufficient; in others, a partial or full system re-key is warranted. We'll walk you through the exposure based on your key control record and recommend the fastest path to restored security. This is one reason we provide thorough documentation when we install a system — it makes emergency response faster and more targeted.

Can a master key system work across multiple buildings on the same property?+

Yes. A grand master key system can span multiple structures — common for farms, manufacturing campuses, or multi-building office parks in the Jeffersonville area — while still allowing each building's internal access to remain separate. An employee with a sub-master for Building A has no access to Building B unless their key tier is designed to include it. We plan cross-building hierarchies carefully to avoid unintended access overlaps.

Is a door knob lock ever appropriate in a commercial master key system?+

A door knob lock can be keyed into a master system and is sometimes appropriate for low-traffic interior doors — storage closets, break rooms, or secondary interior offices. However, for exterior doors or any door that needs to resist forced entry, we recommend a mortise lock or a heavy-duty deadbolt instead. Knob locks are vulnerable to lateral force in a way that a properly installed mortise lock body is not. We'll identify which doors warrant which hardware grade during the walkthrough so the system is both convenient and genuinely secure.

Locked out or need a lock fixed? We are on the way.