Fayette COUNTY LOCKSMITH
Locksmith Service

Mortise Lock Repair & Replacement

If you live in an older home in Jeffersonville, OH — along Broadway Street, near the historic courthouse square, or in one of the area's charming century-old farmhouses — there's a good chance your exterior doors are secured by a mortise lock rather than a modern cylindrical knob set. These deep-bodied, pocket-style locks were the residential and commercial standard for much of the 19th and early 20th centuries, and many of them are still doing their job today. The problem is that decades of use, seasonal wood movement, and dried-out internal mechanisms can turn a once-smooth mortise lock into a stubborn, sticky, or completely seized headache.

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

Fayette County Locksmith is a 24/7 mobile locksmith serving Jeffersonville and the surrounding area. We come directly to your home or business — no shop drop-off, no waiting. Whether your mortise lock cylinder has stopped turning, the latch bolt is binding in its pocket, or an aging Baldwin or Corbin Russwin mortise lock set is simply past saving, our trained and insured technicians diagnose the problem on the spot and walk you through every option 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

What Is a Mortise Lock — and Why Older Homes Still Rely on Them

A mortise lock is a lock body that sits inside a carved-out pocket (the 'mortise') cut into the edge of a door, rather than mounted through a bored hole like a standard knob or deadbolt. The result is a mechanism that's fully recessed into the door, giving it a remarkably slim profile on the face while housing a far more complex set of components inside — a latch bolt, a deadbolt, a strike mechanism, and sometimes an indicator or passage function all in one unified body. Because so much is packed into a single unit, a failing mortise lock set tends to fail in several ways at once: a sticky latch, a deadbolt that won't throw fully, and a loose trim plate are often symptoms of the same worn internal cam or dried-out spring.

Mortise lock sets were standard on exterior doors, interior passage doors, and commercial entries throughout the early-to-mid 1900s. Brands like Baldwin mortise lock hardware and Corbin Russwin mortise lock bodies became fixtures in institutional buildings, schools, churches, and upscale residences. Many of those same locks are still installed today, which is actually a testament to their build quality — but quality has limits. When a lock body that's been in service for 60 or 80 years begins to fail, replacement parts are scarce, and the repair window is narrower than most homeowners expect. That's when a professional locksmith — mortise lock specialist in particular — becomes essential.

02

Common Mortise Lock Repair Scenarios We Handle in Jeffersonville

The most frequent call we receive involves a sticky or seized mortise lock cylinder — the plug-and-pin assembly that your key actually turns. In older installations, the cylinder can corrode internally, collect debris, or simply dry out until the key requires serious force to rotate. Forcing it risks snapping the key in the cylinder, which converts a manageable repair into an extraction job. Our technicians service the cylinder in place where possible, using damage-free methods to clean, lubricate, and re-pin the assembly without disturbing the surrounding door or trim. If the cylinder is beyond service, we can rekey or replace just that component and match the new cylinder to your existing keys when feasible.

Beyond the cylinder, we regularly repair or replace worn cam assemblies (the internal piece that translates key rotation into bolt movement), broken or fatigued springs that cause the latch to stick or retract sluggishly, and stripped spindle connections that leave the interior knob or lever spinning freely. We also handle full mortise lock set replacement on exterior doors where the entire body has deteriorated — fitting a new lock body into the existing mortise pocket, refinishing or replacing the trim hardware, and ensuring the door knob lock components align correctly with the strike plate. If you're upgrading and curious about modern options like a smart mortise lock or an electric mortise lock for a rental unit or small business, we can discuss those platforms as well and explain what's involved in retrofitting them into an older door profile. Call (740) 754-0038 — we answer 24/7 and can often reach Jeffersonville addresses the same day.

03

Mortise Lock Replacement: When Repair Isn't Enough

Not every aging mortise lock can or should be saved. If the lock body casing is cracked, the bolt pocket in the door edge has widened from years of shifting, or internal components are no longer available for a discontinued model, replacement is the more dependable path. Full mortise lock repair & replacement on an exterior door requires careful measurement — the mortise pocket dimensions, the backset distance, the hub-to-hub spacing, and the door thickness all determine which replacement body will fit without major door modification. Our technicians carry a range of lock bodies suited to residential exterior and interior applications, and we source quality hardware for specialty situations including sliding door mortise lock replacements, which have a distinct pocket geometry and bolt orientation from standard swinging-door units.

For Jeffersonville homeowners with historic or architecturally significant properties, we take extra care to preserve the door's integrity. Unnecessary drilling or chiseling isn't just disruptive — it can damage irreplaceable millwork. Where the existing mortise pocket accommodates a modern replacement body, we fit it cleanly and test full operation of the latch, deadbolt, and both interior and exterior trim before we pack up. Where it doesn't, we explain your options honestly and let you decide how to proceed. An exact, up-front price is confirmed before any work starts — the final quote reflects factors including the lock body selected, any parts that need to be sourced, the complexity of the installation, the time of day we're called, and travel distance to your location.

04

Commercial & Specialty Mortise Lock Services — Emergency Locksmith Response Included

Mortise lock hardware is still the default standard for commercial locksmith applications: office buildings, retail storefronts, medical offices, and light industrial spaces around Fayette County rely on heavy-duty mortise bodies for their high-cycle durability and the ability to integrate with access control hardware. An electric mortise lock, for example, pairs a standard mortise body with a solenoid or motor-driven bolt that can be triggered by a keypad, card reader, or buzzer system — making it popular for controlled-entry offices and rental properties. When these systems malfunction, the failure usually isn't the electrical component alone; it's often the mechanical lock body underneath that's worn, misaligned, or needs adjustment. Our commercial locksmith services cover both layers of the problem.

We also provide emergency locksmith response for mortise lock failures that leave you unable to secure or access your property — a broken key in the cylinder, a deadbolt that won't retract, or a door knob lock assembly that has completely separated from the spindle. These situations don't wait for business hours, and neither do we. Fayette County Locksmith operates around the clock, every day of the year. Whether it's a late-night call from a business owner on US-35 or a weekend emergency from a homeowner near the Jeffersonville Community Park, our mobile unit comes to you fully equipped. Call (740) 754-0038 any time — a real person answers, and we'll give you an honest arrival estimate along with a transparent price before work begins.

Frequently asked questions

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

What is a mortise lock, and how is it different from a regular deadbolt?+

A mortise lock sits inside a pocket carved into the door's edge, housing the latch bolt, deadbolt, and operating mechanism all in one body. A standard deadbolt is a surface-mounted or bored-hole design with far fewer internal components. Mortise locks are significantly more robust and were the default for quality construction throughout the early-to-mid 1900s, which is why you'll still find functioning examples in older Jeffersonville homes — but their complexity also means repairs require specialized knowledge of the internal cam and spring system.

Can you repair a mortise lock cylinder without replacing the entire lock body?+

Yes, in many cases. If the issue is confined to the cylinder — corrosion, pin wear, dried lubrication, or a key that's difficult to turn — our technicians can service or replace just the cylinder while leaving the lock body in place. We can also rekey the cylinder to match a new key if needed. Full lock body replacement is only recommended when the body itself is mechanically compromised, cracked, or no longer compatible with available replacement parts.

I have a Baldwin mortise lock on my front door that's over 50 years old. Can you get parts for it?+

Baldwin mortise lock hardware has a strong legacy of quality and some parts remain available through specialty suppliers, but availability varies widely by model and production era. Our technicians assess what's serviceable in the field. In some cases we can adapt compatible components; in others, we'll recommend a full body replacement and help you select a new unit that fits the existing mortise pocket with minimal door modification. We explain all options before any work is done.

How much does mortise lock repair or replacement cost?+

We don't quote a flat rate because the final price depends on several factors: the specific lock body and any parts required, whether we're servicing just the cylinder or replacing the entire mortise lock set, the complexity of the door setup, the time of day we're called out, and the travel distance to your location. What we do commit to is confirming an exact price up front — before any work begins — so there are no surprises on the invoice.

Do you handle mortise lock repair on sliding doors?+

Yes. A sliding door mortise lock has a different geometry than a swinging-door unit — the bolt orientation, pocket dimensions, and trim profile are all distinct. We carry hardware suited to sliding door applications and can repair or replace the lock body, cylinder, and latch components on sliding patio or barn-style doors. If your sliding door lock is stiff, won't latch, or the key no longer operates it cleanly, give us a call and we'll diagnose it on-site.

Can you upgrade an old mortise lock to a smart mortise lock or electric mortise lock?+

In many cases, yes. Modern smart mortise lock and electric mortise lock systems are designed to retrofit into standard mortise pockets, though the exact fit depends on the pocket dimensions and door thickness. Electric mortise locks that integrate with keypads or access control panels are particularly popular for rental properties and small offices in the Jeffersonville area. We assess the existing door and pocket during our visit and walk you through which platforms are compatible before recommending any upgrade path.

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