Gate keypad codes or license-plate access?
A keypad code is a shared secret; a license plate is a unique credential. That single difference is why plate-based gate access is replacing keypad codes at self-storage facilities, parking lots, and gated communities.
Even a per-tenant code is a secret that can be shared or handed off, and the gate log shows whose code was typed — not who was actually at the gate or what vehicle came through. A plate can't be handed off, gives a photo-verified record of every entry, and drops off the list when access should end.
Swipe the table sideways to compare →
| Dimension | Keypad codes | License-plate access |
|---|---|---|
| The credential | A shared numeric code — the same secret everyone types. | The vehicle's license plate — unique per vehicle, nothing to hand out. |
| Sharing & leakage | Codes get shared, written down, and passed around; one leak and everyone's in. | Nothing to share — a plate can't be texted to a friend or taped to a visor. |
| Removing access | With one shared code, removing a person means re-keying and re-issuing to everyone; a per-user code revokes individually — but any copy the person shared keeps working. | Drop that one plate from the list; everyone else is unaffected. |
| Move-out / turnover | A shared code outlives the move-out until the gate is re-keyed; a per-user code must be remembered and deactivated — and so must every copy of it. | Remove the plate from the list and it stops opening the gate. |
| User friction | Stop, roll down the window, remember and type the code. | Hands-free — the gate opens as the vehicle arrives. |
| Audit trail | Logs which code was typed — not who actually typed it or what vehicle came through. | Photo-verified, timestamped record of every crossing — plate, vehicle, clip. |
| Visitor access | Give out the gate code — and hope it isn't reused or passed on. | Time-limited guest passes for a specific plate that expire on their own. |
Keypad codes still make sense
for a small, low-turnover site with almost no visitor traffic and no need to know who came and went — where the shared-code risk is low and a log isn't required.
License-plate access wins
wherever codes get shared, tenants and residents turn over, visitors come and go, or you need a photo-verified record of every entry and instant lockout on move-out.
- Are gate keypad codes secure?
- A keypad code is a secret — even a per-tenant code can be shared, written down, or handed off, and a shared code stays valid after someone leaves until the gate is re-keyed. The gate log shows which code was typed, not who was actually at the gate. License-plate access removes the shared secret: the plate is the credential, unique per vehicle, gives a photo-verified record of every entry, and drops off the list when access should end.
- Why do self-storage and parking sites move from codes to plates?
- Because a code is a shared secret and a plate isn't. Tenants share codes, codes outlive move-outs until the gate is re-keyed, and a code can't tell you who actually entered. A plate is unique, produces a photo-verified record of every crossing, and can be removed instantly on move-out — with no need to re-key everyone else.
- What happens to a keypad code when a tenant moves out?
- A shared gate code stays valid until an admin re-keys it and re-issues a new one to everyone. A per-tenant code has to be individually deactivated — and anyone the tenant shared it with had access until then. With license-plate access you remove that one plate from the list and everyone else is unaffected.
- How do visitors get in without a shared gate code?
- Time-limited guest passes: the operator or resident issues a pass for a specific plate and time window, and it expires on its own. There's no code to leak, reuse, or forget to change — unlike a gate code that's handed out once and rarely rotated.
- Does license-plate access replace the keypad entirely?
- It can, but many sites keep the keypad as a fallback for the rare vehicle with no readable plate or an edge case, while plates become the default, hands-free way in. GateGuardX installs on the gate and opener you already have, so the keypad can stay.
Trade the shared code for a plate.
Send a few photos of your gate and current setup — we'll confirm compatibility (it installs on the gate and opener you already have — the keypad can stay as a fallback) and send a quote, usually within 48 hours.
- 30-day money-back guarantee
- 1-year hardware warranty
- No gate replacement
- Compatibility answer in 48 hours