We help Australian homeowners and businesses understand what a safe room actually costs, what makes one genuinely secure, and how to find an installer who knows what they're doing.
Falling construction costs, modular systems, and growing home security awareness have made safe rooms a realistic consideration for a much broader range of Australian homeowners and businesses.
High-value properties with valuables, art collections, or simply a desire for peace of mind. Often integrated into master suites or wine cellars.
Senior executives, public figures, lawyers, and those in high-profile industries who may face elevated personal security risks.
Retail, hospitality, and commercial premises where after-hours security of cash, stock, or staff is a concern.
Properties with longer police response times where a secure refuge provides critical time while help is en route.
The most cost-effective time to add a panic room is during new construction — no demolition required, structural reinforcement is easiest.
Domestic violence survivors, witnesses, activists, minority communities, and anyone with a documented threat who needs a verified safe space.
Most people think of the 2002 Jodie Foster film and imagine an elaborate steel bunker. Real-world panic rooms are very different — and a well-designed one is virtually indistinguishable from a normal room to anyone who doesn't know it's there.
Costs range enormously depending on the threat level you're designing for, the construction approach, and the features included. Here are the realistic Australian ranges for 2026.
Existing room reinforced with steel door, wall panels, communication system. Suitable for basic home invasion protection. Often a master bedroom or walk-in wardrobe.
Purpose-designed, concealed entry, full structural reinforcement, CCTV integration, independent comms and power. Looks like a normal room to guests.
Full architectural integration, bullet-resistant construction, sophisticated biometric access, entertainment, comfort systems. Used in high-security estates.
| Component | Typical cost range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Security door (RC3 rated) | $8,000–$25,000 | The most critical element. Multi-point locking, reinforced frame, tested to forced-entry standards. |
| Wall and ceiling reinforcement | $5,000–$30,000 | Steel panels, Kevlar lining, or concrete block depending on threat level. Must match door specification. |
| Independent communication system | $2,000–$8,000 | Dedicated line, backup battery, panic button, cellular backup. Non-negotiable element. |
| CCTV and monitoring system | $3,000–$15,000 | Internal monitors showing all entry points and key property areas. Often integrated with existing security system. |
| Backup power supply | $2,000–$8,000 | UPS system to maintain all security systems during a power outage. Sized to the room's requirements. |
| Ventilation system | $3,000–$15,000 | Critical for stays over 30 minutes. HEPA filtration, controlled intake, positive pressure to prevent gas introduction. |
| Concealed entry (hidden door) | $5,000–$25,000 | Bookcase, mirror, or false wall panel concealing the entrance. Significant additional security through obscurity. |
| Biometric access control | $3,000–$12,000 | Fingerprint, facial recognition, or PIN-based access. Faster and more reliable than keys under stress. |
Understanding each element helps you evaluate whether a quote covers what you actually need — not just what's profitable for the installer to include.
The single most important element. Door must be rated to a recognised forced-entry resistance standard (RC2–RC6). The frame, hinges, and surrounding wall must match the door's rating — a strong door in a weak frame is meaningless.
Walls, ceiling, and floor must prevent forced entry independent of the door. Methods include steel panel lining, concrete block infill, Kevlar lining, or BallistiCrete spray application. Specification depends on the threat level designed for.
A room with no way to call for help is just a trap. Dedicated cellular modem, satellite phone, or independent landline with backup battery. Must function when main power and normal communications are cut.
Cameras covering all entry points, approaches, and key interior areas — viewed from inside the room. Gives occupants situational awareness without exposing themselves. Connects to recording system with backup power.
The most commonly overlooked critical system. A sealed room without ventilation becomes dangerous in under two hours. HEPA filtration with positive pressure prevents introduction of gas or smoke. Sized for expected occupancy duration.
UPS systems maintain security systems, communications, and lighting during a power outage. Attackers often cut power as a first step. The panic room must function completely independently of the property's main electrical supply.
Understand the real requirements before talking to any installer. A well-informed buyer gets better installations at fairer prices.
What are you actually protecting against? Home invasion, targeted attack, severe weather, or corporate security concerns? This determines specification.
Use our quiz to articulate your requirements clearly. A written brief ensures you get comparable quotes — not apples vs oranges.
We connect you with vetted panic room specialists — security firms with specific experience, not general builders who have done one room.
Answer 8 quick questions about your security requirements, property type, and budget. We'll match you with panic room specialists who know what they're doing.
Take the 2-minute quiz →The terms are often used interchangeably, but there is a technical distinction. A panic room is specifically designed to protect against intelligent, human threats — home invaders, targeted attacks. A safe room is a broader term that includes storm shelters, disaster protection spaces, and secure storage vaults. In Australia, most residential builds are panic rooms designed primarily for home invasion and personal security scenarios, not weather events (unlike the US, where tornado shelters are a major driver of the market).
The master bedroom or master walk-in wardrobe is the most common and often most practical location, for a simple reason: that's where most people are when a nighttime intrusion occurs. You want to reach the panic room in seconds, without navigating hallways. Other good candidates include a ground-floor home office (for those who work late), a central bathroom with no windows, or a basement room. The best location balances fast access from your most-used spaces with minimal windows and structural walls that are easier to reinforce.
Not necessarily, but concealment adds a significant layer of security. An obvious vault door is a target — an attacker will camp outside it, knowing you're inside. A concealed entrance (behind a bookcase, mirror, or false wall panel) removes this dynamic entirely. If an intruder doesn't know where the room is, they face a time pressure problem. For residential installs, most security specialists recommend at minimum a non-obvious door design, and ideally full concealment where budget allows. For new builds, concealment is easiest and adds relatively little cost.
In most cases, a panic room that is a retrofit within an existing room — adding a door, reinforcing walls, adding electrical and communications — falls under minor renovation and does not require a Development Application. However, any structural modifications, changes to load-bearing elements, electrical work requiring a licensed electrician, or anything that changes the external appearance of the property may trigger permit requirements. A qualified installer will navigate this with you. For new builds, the panic room is simply included in the standard building documentation — often listed as a "study" or "secure storage room."
A basic retrofit of an existing room typically takes 2–4 weeks from design finalisation to completion. Custom-built rooms with concealed entries, full structural reinforcement, and integrated security systems take 4–10 weeks. New builds are the most efficient — the panic room is built alongside the house structure with no demolition required. Lead times on specialised security doors (particularly imported European systems rated RC4+) can add 4–12 weeks. Most reputable installers will give you a detailed timeline during the design phase.
For luxury and high-end properties, a well-designed panic room can add measurable value — research suggests premium security features can contribute 2–5% to property values in the right market segments. More importantly, it's increasingly a buyer expectation in the ultra-high-net-worth property market. For mid-market properties, the room adds security value that doesn't necessarily translate directly to sale price, though it can be a differentiator. The key is discretion — a panic room that buyers discover during a sale can be an advantage or a conversation-stopper depending on how it's presented.