How to Open Locked Door – We’ve all experienced the desperation—and panic—of walking up to a locked door, reaching into our pocket for the key, and finding only loose change and your phone. Is the key just temporarily misplaced or lost forever? Either way, it’s a “what now?” moment that leaves you shaken and on the outside looking in.
However, you don’t always need a key to open a door. When you’re locked out, just remember that a lock is a pretty simple mechanical device designed primarily to keep honest people honest. If you need to, you can find a way in, even without a key. Here are seven ways to open a locked door, in ascending order of destruction. (Of course, only try these with your own locked doors.)
Table of Contents
Method 1: Using a Bump Key
- Bump open a tumbler lock. Bumping a lock is a quick, simple lock picking technique that is useful in the case of having to open a door that’s been closed for a long time (for example, of an unused home on family property), or if you need to break into an elderly relative’s house to make sure they’re okay.[1]
- Bumping a lock does take some practice, and especially in the case of cheaper locks, it can damage the lock, so don’t use it without a good reason.
- Acquire a bump key. A bump key is a key that will fit the lock you want to bump, but which doesn’t unlock it per se. As long as the key will fit in the lock, it can be turned into a bump key by filing every cut down to the lowest acceptable depth.
- Most reputable locksmiths won’t make a bump key for you, but you can sometimes find them online. To make one yourself, you’ll need metalworking tools and some patience.
- Fit the bump key into the lock-up to the last pin. Pin and tumbler locks are made of a round segment that turns once the pins inside line up and no longer blocks its motion. Every soft click you feel as you push a key into a lock is a pin being lifted by a tooth of the lock and then dropping onto the cut below it. Push your bump key in until there’s one pin left that hasn’t been lifted.
- Slam and turn the bump key. Use a small rubber mallet or similar object to strike the bump key hard, and turn it immediately thereafter. Since the pins inside the lock are in two sections, this slamming motion transfers force to the lower sections (which rest inside the tumbler), which then transfers it to the upper sections (which keep the tumbler from moving). If all the upper pin sections are lifted in this way, the lock will be able to turn.
- It may take a few tries to get the timing right, so keep at it until you’re successful.Advertisement
Method 2: Using a Pick Set
- Pick a lock with a tension pick set. This is a specialized skill that takes a lot of practice and is normally only taught to bona fide locksmiths. The sale of tension pick sets is likewise restricted to people with proper credentials, but with some creativity, you can roughly approximate this tool on your own.
- Make your tools. For weak locks, a pair of paper clips should work; tougher locks might require bobby pins, wire clippers, and a pair of pliers. The key is to use metal firm enough for your pick and your tension wrench, the two components of the tool.
- Spring steel is the best material to use because it doesn’t crack as easily and can be made with a file. You can get these from hacksaw blades. Consider the thickness of the blade because this will restrict the size of the locks that your lock pick will be able to enter.
- The tension wrench is made in an “L” shape and is used to apply tension to the bottom of the lock. You can make this by getting an Allen key and filing it flat.
- The pick itself is made with a much shorter leg, like a lowercase “r.” It’s used to push pins out of the tumbler so it can rotate.
- Insert the tension wrench. Press it in along the bottom of the lock, and apply constant tension on it the whole time as you work with your pick. If you don’t it will take longer and you may have to start again.
- If you’re not entirely certain which direction which way to turn the tension wrench, put it in the lock and turn it one way. Pull out the pick quickly while listening closely to the lock. When you turn in the right direction, you’ll actually hear the pins drop.
- Insert the pick above the wrench. Use the leg of the pick to find and push each pin up and out of the tumbler. Once all pins have been moved, the lock should open. As previously noted, this skill takes a lot of practice to master, so have plenty of cheap practice locks on hand if you hope to get good at it.
Method 3: Using a Hex Wrench on an Interior Door
- Open interior doors with a hex wrench. Most interior locking doors made in the last few decades use a special type of doorknob that allows the door to be opened in the event of it being locked by accident. If your interior door handle has a small, round hole in the center, it is this type of handle.
- Find or purchase a set of hex wrenches. Hexagonal or “hex” wrenches, also called “Allen wrenches,” are usually available for less than the cost of a fancy coffee at most hardware and home stores. They are small, L-shaped pieces of metal that come in an array of widths both metric and imperial.
- Fit the long end of a hex wrench into the hole on the door handle. You may have to try one or two different sizes to find the correct one, but it’s usually fairly obvious. You want a fairly snug fit, but you shouldn’t have to scrape or jam the wrench in. If you push the wrench in straight while turning it back and forth slightly, you should feel it catch on something.
- Turn the wrench to open the door. Once the wrench is fitted into the handle, a simple turn will unlock it. It shouldn’t take a lot of force.
Method 4: Using a Credit Card
- Open a simple lock with a credit card. This popular trick works less and less on modern doors, but is still a useful way to get into your house with older doors, should you leave without the keys.
- Laminated cards tend to work the best. You want a card that is flexible (like a gift card) and one that you don’t mind getting damaged. Sometimes you can damage your credit card enough so it won’t work any longer.
- Put the credit card into the side of the door. Slide the long end of a credit card in between the door frame and the locking side of the door, just above where the lock enters the frame.
- Angle the card downward and situate it behind the bolt of the lock. You want to make sure that the card is perpendicular to the door.
- Slowly but firmly pull the card towards you while turning the handle. If you’re lucky, the credit card will slide in between the beveled interior side of the bolt and the frame, and you’ll be able to push the bolt all the way out of the frame by dragging the card towards you. The door will then open, as long as you keep the card in place between the bolt and the hole.
- Obviously, this trick will not work if the deadbolt has been set. Deadbolts don’t have a beveled side. Fortunately, it’s impossible to set your deadbolt from outside without your keys.Advertisement
Method 5: Jimmying a Car Door
- Jimmy a car door. Although “slim jims” (specialized metal tools for gaining entry to a locked car) are generally illegal, you can approximate the tool with a stiff metal coat hanger. If you’ve locked your keys in the car and a store or friend with coat hangers is close at hand, this can save you the hassle and waiting of calling a locksmith or roadside assistance service.
- Unravel and straighten the coat hanger. You can leave the hooked top section alone, but unwind it from itself at the “neck” and straighten the rest of the hanger out, giving you a long metal tool with a hooked tip.
- Lift the weather stripping from the bottom of the driver’s-side window. Push the end of the hanger in through the soft rubber weather stripping and the bottom of the window. The hanger is now inside the wall of the door.[4]
- Scrape the hanger around and feel for a latch. The latch should be no more than a few inches below the window, near where the interior lock is.
- Hook and pull the latch. Hook the hanger around the latch and pull it towards the rear of the car. This should unlock any manually locked car door.
- If your door has a push-button electric unlocking mechanism, you can also slide the straight end of the hanger down from the top of the window instead, and use it like a finger to poke the button inside.Advertisement
Method 6: Using Brute Force
- Kick in a door. In an emergency situation, such as if you encounter someone’s house on fire or your know of someone with a medical emergency who cannot answer the door, sometimes your only option is to physically force a door open. Be aware that this will ruin the door frame, the lock, and often the door itself. It’s also physically dangerous compared to the other methods, so only attempt this if you are reasonably strong and in good physical shape.
- Stand in a solid stance. Squarely face the door with your feet roughly shoulder-width apart, knees slightly bent. If you can, brace your hands or arms against walls, furniture, or anything else that isn’t likely to move when you shove it.
- Lift your dominant leg at the knee. Lift your knee straight up and let your lower leg be pulled along with it. Keep your foot facing the door. Don’t turn sideways or do anything else fancy.
- Kick the lock on the door with the bottom of your foot. This type of kick is sometimes called a “snap kick.” Snap your leg straight out in front of you so that the flat of your foot strikes the door where the locking mechanism is set.
- It is safer to kick the door. Your feet are designed to absorb a great deal of force, and your shoes act as additional armor. DO NOT hit the door with your shoulder; you’re more likely to dislocate it than you are to open the door.
- Continue kicking until the lock breaks from the frame. Given enough time, this will work on nearly any wooden door.
- If you don’t begin to see results within a few minutes at most, it may be that the door or frame is reinforced. Rest and work in alternating periods so that your kicks don’t become weak.
- Bust stubborn doors with a battering ram. If for some reason you’d prefer to use a battering ram on a stubborn door rather than simply calling a locksmith, a reasonably effective one can be made from a hand pile driver, the type used to drive posts into the ground.
- Purchase your manual pile driver. It should be a few feet long, with longish handles on either side.
- Fill the driver all or partway with cement. Be sure to let the cement dry completely before using.
- Use a side-tossing motion to drive the ram into the door at the lock mechanism. Swing the ram back across the front of your body with both hands as you stand perpendicular to the door, then lean and strike towards the door with the ram. Most doors should break within a few hits.
- Bear in mind that the door will in all likelihood be completely ruined and require a replacement.
Conclusion
We hope you’ve enjoyed our guide to ways to open a locked door! Whether you’ve locked yourself out of your home, bedroom or car, there’s a method to get back in again. But remember, you may cause damage. And if the door isn’t your own, make sure you get permission first.