The Rise of Care Plans for Life-Safety Devices in Home Security

For years, the smart home was marketed around convenience. Consumers could adjust a thermostat from the couch, check a camera from work, turn lights on remotely, or unlock the door for a visitor. These features helped establish the smart home category, but they also framed connected devices as nice-to-have upgrades rather than essential services.

That perception is changing. As connected devices become more embedded in home security systems, the market is moving beyond convenience and into protection. Smoke detectors, CO detectors, water leak sensors, shut-off valves, and environmental monitoring devices are becoming part of a broader home security services model. The value is no longer only about controlling the home. It is about helping protect the people and property inside it.

Parks Associates data reflects this shift clearly. Among smart smoke and CO detector owners, 80% also own a security system, and 55% pay for services, usually as part of broader security subscriptions. These devices are part of integrated safety platforms rather than standalone products.

Life-Safety Is Becoming Part of the Smart Security Platform

The traditional home security system was built around intrusion: doors, windows, motion sensors, alarms, and professional monitoring. That model is still important, but it no longer captures the full scope of connected home security. Today, the same customer who wants to know if someone entered the home may also want to know if there is smoke, carbon monoxide, a water leak, or an environmental issue that requires attention.

This is why life-safety services are becoming a natural extension of smart home security. A smoke detector or CO detector is not just another device in the home. It carries a different level of trust. The customer expects it to work reliably, send alerts quickly, and connect to the right response path when needed.

73% of smart smoke/CO detector service users receive phone alerts when smoke or carbon monoxide is detected, and 73% include 24/7 professional monitoring to call for emergency help. That makes alerts and monitoring the clearest value drivers for paid detector services, not secondary features.

For home security providers, this creates a significant business opportunity. It also raises the standard for service quality.

The Revenue Opportunity Is Real

Home security providers have been looking for ways to grow recurring revenue beyond basic monitoring. Cameras, video storage, AI detection, and app-based services have helped expand the model, but life-safety services may offer a stronger emotional and practical value proposition. Customers may cancel a convenience feature if they do not use it often, but they may be more willing to keep a service that helps protect the home from higher-consequence events.

61% of security system owners are interested in fire and gas monitoring, with water monitoring close behind at 57%. Parks Associates describes fire safety as the strongest adjacent service for expanding security value.

This matters because the home security market is increasingly service-driven. 78% of security system owners pay for services, while hardware margins are shrinking and recurring revenue is growing. The same research also identifies safety and security as leading value propositions in the smart home market.

For security providers, telecom operators, smart home platforms, and utilities, life-safety features can become part of a more durable service relationship. They can be bundled into higher-value tiers, offered as add-ons, or used to strengthen retention among households that already rely on connected security systems.

Support Expectations Are Higher When Safety Is Involved

The support challenge changes when the device is tied to safety. If a smart light fails, the customer is annoyed. If a camera goes offline, the customer is frustrated. But if a smoke detector, CO detector, or water leak sensor is not working properly, the concern is different. The customer wants reassurance that the system is installed correctly, connected properly, and able to perform when it matters.

That makes traditional support models less sufficient. A customer may not know whether a detector is mounted in the right location, whether a sensor is showing an error state, whether a battery compartment is properly closed, or whether a device is connected to the correct hub. They may struggle to describe what they see, especially if the device is installed on a ceiling, near utility equipment, or in an area they do not access often.

For customer care agents, the problem is visibility. They may see account information, device status, or monitoring activity, but they often cannot see the physical installation. They cannot easily verify placement, wiring, indicator lights, or surrounding conditions. In home security support, that missing context can lead to longer calls, repeat contacts, unnecessary dispatches, or unresolved issues.

As life-safety services become a larger part of smart home security, support teams will need better ways to confirm that devices are not only connected, but correctly installed and functioning in the real home environment.

Visual AI Can Help Bolster Confidence

Visual AI is especially relevant for life-safety support because many of the issues are physical. The question is not only whether the device is online. It is whether the device is the right one, in the right place, showing the right status, and connected to the right service.

With visual support, a customer can use a smartphone camera to show the device, its location, its indicators, and its installation details. AI can help identify the device type, recognize visible error states, guide the customer through setup or troubleshooting, and give the agent more accurate context. In some cases, customers can resolve the issue through guided self-service. In more complex cases, the agent or technician starts with a clearer picture of what is happening.

This is not about replacing professional monitoring or emergency response. It is about improving the service layer around the devices that feed those systems. Better visual diagnostics can help providers reduce avoidable dispatches, improve first-contact resolution, and give customers more confidence that their home security system is working as expected. For providers offering home security services, that confidence is part of the product.

Life-Safety Will Shape the Next Phase of Home Security

The smart home category is maturing. Basic cameras and app controls are becoming expected, and providers need new ways to differentiate beyond device features. Life-safety services offer a stronger path because they connect directly to trust, protection, and ongoing service value.

The opportunity is not simply to sell more smoke detectors, CO detectors, or water leak sensors. It is to build a support and service model around them. That means bundling life-safety features into security tiers, making installation easier, verifying device performance remotely, and maintaining the relationship after the initial setup.

Home security providers that succeed in this next phase will not treat life-safety devices as add-ons at the edge of the system. They will treat them as core parts of the connected security experience.

As smart home security expands, the strongest providers will be the ones that can combine monitoring, alerts, remote support, and visibility into the physical home environment. In a market where customers are asking for more than convenience, life-safety services may become one of the clearest ways to create lasting value.

FAQ

Why are life-safety services becoming important in smart home security?

Life-safety services expand home security beyond intrusion detection. They give providers a way to address broader homeowner concerns around safety, property protection, and emergency awareness while creating opportunities for recurring service revenue.

How do smart smoke and CO detectors fit into home security systems?

Smart smoke and CO detectors are increasingly being bundled into broader home security systems and monitoring plans. Instead of acting as standalone devices, they can become part of an integrated home security platform with alerts, monitoring, and emergency response workflows.

Why is support more important for life-safety devices?

Support is more important because customers need confidence that these devices are installed, connected, and functioning properly. A disconnected camera is frustrating, but a malfunctioning smoke detector or CO detector creates a much higher level of concern.

How can Visual AI improve life-safety device support?

Visual AI allows customers to show agents the device, its location, visible indicators, and installation details. This can help support teams verify device type, identify setup issues, guide troubleshooting, and resolve problems remotely with more confidence.

Picture of Liad Churchill, Head of Brand Communications

Liad Churchill, Head of Brand Communications

Artificial Intelligence and Deep Learning expert, Liad Churchill, brings depth of knowledge in marketing smart technologies.

RELATED ARTICLES

Enhancing the Product Registration Process with Remote Visual Assistance
Customer Experience

Enhancing the Product Registration Process with Remote Visual Assistance

Remote Visual Assistance enhances the product registration process and warranty ...

12 Tips to Prepare Your Tech Support for the Millennials IT Era
Customer Experience

12 Tips to Prepare Your Tech Support for the Millennials IT Era

Top 12 tips for how to meet Millennials' unique set ...

The Quick Guide for #CHAT with #MILLENNIALS -- 10 Rules Your Brand Should Never Break
Customer Experience

The Quick Guide for #CHAT with #MILLENNIALS: 10 Rules Your Brand Should Never Break

Millennials love chat! here are the ten rules your brand ...