

Comprehensive home security systems can do much more than simply detect break-ins. Systems that include environmental sensors also provide alarms when certain conditions inside your home threaten your life and property.
Environmental sensors can alert homeowners to leaks, floods, fire, rapid rises in temperature, and dangerous levels of carbon monoxide. When these sensors are part of a professionally monitored home security system, homeowners have the additional confidence of knowing that emergency services will be sent promptly to their aid, even if they’re not home or unable to call for help.
Not only can installing environmental sensors as part of a home security system save lives, prevent long-term health problems, and help residents avoid expensive property damage, it may also provide users with discounts on their homeowners insurance.
Many insurance companies offer discounts to customers who take steps to make their homes safer. Installing a professionally monitored home security system could shave 4–8% off your homeowner’s insurance premium. Adding smoke alarms might provide an additional small discount, while more companies provide larger discounts for monitored smoke and fire alarms.
Frontpoint offers three types of environmental sensors that can be incorporated into your home security system: water and flood sensors, smoke and heat sensors, and carbon monoxide sensors. Unlike intrusion detection sensors which are only active when your alarm system is armed, these life safety detection devices are active 24/7. Let’s look at how each of these sensors protects your home and family, and how each should be installed.
Whether your home is located in a flood zone or not, water damage is always a possibility. Basements can leak, pipes can freeze and burst, water heaters can break, sump pumps can fail, and toilets and bathtubs can overflow. And the weather seems to become more unpredictable every year, leading to floods in areas that have never had drainage issues and serious storms that damage roofs and cause leaky attics.
Frontpoint’s best-in-class Flood Sensor can alert you to even the smallest leaks as soon as they happen, allowing you to stop water issues before they create thousands of dollars’ worth of damage.
The wireless, battery-operated sensor sends a signal as soon as any water touches it. Meanwhile, a separate transmitter, located where it’s unlikely to be affected by incoming water, is able to send a message to your security system so that an alarm sounds, Frontpoint’s monitoring center can reach out to inform you, and you’re able to receive an instant, automated mobile notification.
Home fires cause incredible amounts of damage, serious injuries, and loss of life. According to the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), an average of almost 400,000 property fires are reported in the United States every year. These fires result in an average of almost 3,000 deaths, 12,000 injuries, and billions of dollars of property damage every year. And more than twice as many people die in home fires where no smoke alarm is present than in homes with a working smoke detector.
Although many homes in the United States already have smoke detectors installed, these typically are not monitored smoke alarms—and many individuals fail to keep the battery charged or remove it altogether after nuisance alarms. Having one or more smoke and heat sensors integrated with a professionally monitored home security system provides homeowners with an extra degree of safety and security.
If the sensor is triggered, an alarm will sound, the monitoring company will be notified immediately, and an alert can be sent to your mobile device. If the monitoring company is not able to reach you, they will dispatch emergency help immediately—the local fire department will be notified even if you’re incapacitated by smoke or otherwise unable to contact them yourself.
The wireless, battery-operated sensor can be placed at various optimum locations within your home. It can also provide mobile notifications for any diagnostic issues, a low battery, or case tampering.
Carbon monoxide (CO) is a colorless, odorless, poisonous gas. According to the American Lung Association, “Approximately 430 people die each year from CO exposure related to fuel-burning, residential appliances. Thousands more became ill or sought medical attention. CO poisoning is estimated to cause more than 50,000 emergency room visits in the United States each year.”
Sources of CO include faulty, improperly used, or incorrectly vented gas appliances (furnaces, ranges, ovens, water heaters, clothes dryers, etc.), fireplaces, wood stoves, space heaters, and generators. Exposure to low levels of CO can cause headaches, nausea, dizziness, weakness, and confusion while breathing high levels of CO can also cause sleepiness, anxiety or depression, vomiting, impaired vision and coordination, and disorientation. Regular exposure to low levels of CO can result in permanent mental or physical problems, while very high levels of CO exposure can quickly lead to loss of consciousness and death.
Because you cannot see, smell, or taste CO, a special sensor is required to detect its presence. The National Fire Protection Association’s NFPA 720: Standard for the Installation of Carbon Monoxide (CO) Detection and Warning Equipment provides rules for the installation, location, performance, inspection, testing, and maintenance of carbon monoxide detection and warning equipment. And, as of 2018, 26 states require homes to have working CO alarms installed.
You can purchase relatively inexpensive CO sensors and install them yourself, but unless they’re professionally monitored, they provide only partial protection. Because nausea, dizziness, weakness, and confusion can be caused by even low levels of CO exposure, it may be difficult or impossible for you to exit your home or call 911 if CO is present. Installing a professionally monitored CO sensor means that if dangerous levels of CO exist in your home, the sensor alarm will sound, the monitoring center will be notified, and emergency responders will be immediately dispatched to your home—with no prior calls to confirm an emergency.
With Frontpoint, everything you need comes pre-configured, so it works right out of the box. Your environmental sensors will arrive already programmed and can be set up using the Frontpoint mobile app. When you receive your Frontpoint security system equipment, the app will provide information on where the environmental sensors are located within the package. You will also be given information on the exact function of each sensor as you’re setting it up. The app will let you know once your Frontpoint system has successfully detected each sensor.
There are a number of things to keep in mind when installing your sensors. The following placement guidelines apply to all of Frontpoint’s environmental sensors:
Each type of environmental sensor also has specific placement and installation guidelines. Following these guidelines will ensure that you receive the most accurate and timely alerts, alarms, and emergency assistance.
Frontpoint’s Flood Sensor is comprised of two pieces—a transmitter and a detector. These sensors should be placed in flood-prone areas like basements, leak-prone areas like attics, and near appliances like washing machines, water heaters, and sump pumps.
Once you’ve decided on the proper location for your sensor, adhere the detector (which is the smaller piece) to the floor with the metal prongs and serial number facing down. Then you will adhere the transmitter (which is the larger piece) to the wall, at least 10 inches above the floor and as far from any appliance as possible.
Frontpoint’s Smoke and Heat Sensors can be installed in addition to any smoke alarms that are already in place in your home or can be used to replace your existing alarms. We recommend that you start by installing a professionally monitored smoke and heat sensor near your home’s bedrooms and consider adding at least one additional professionally monitored smoke and heat sensor for each level of your home.
Beyond following NFPA installation guidance for general smoke alarm placement, you will need to follow the manufacturer’s location recommendations when installing your Frontpoint Smoke and Heat Sensors. Much of the guidance is the same, but a notable difference with NFPA recommendations is that mounting sensors on the ceiling is specifically preferred:
One centrally placed Carbon Monoxide Sensor can protect multiple rooms. According to NFPA, “CO alarms should be installed in a central location outside each sleeping area and on every level of the home and in other locations where required by applicable laws, codes or standards.”
Ideally, a CO alarm should also be installed near each potential source of CO. This includes within every room containing a fuel-burning appliance (water heater, furnace, space heaters, etc.) and near attached garages. Do not place CO alarms too close to sources of CO, however, as this could result in false alarms.
Per manufacturer recommendations, Frontpoint’s Carbon Monoxide Sensors should be placed as follows:
DO NOT place Frontpoint’s Carbon Monoxide Sensors in the following areas:
Properly installed and professionally monitored environmental sensors provide maximum safety and security for your home, its possessions, and its people. If you follow the simple setup procedures and easy DIY installation guidelines for Frontpoint’s Water and Flood Sensor, Smoke and Heat Sensor, and Carbon Monoxide Sensor, you will receive critical alarms and alerts instantly—and rapid emergency response when it really matters.
Add environmental sensors to any of Frontpoint’s home security packages. And sign up for any of Frontpoint’s professional monitoring plans when you check out for complete life safety monitoring.
Frontpoint keeps homes safe whether families are there or not. To shop DIY home security systems, check out our products page. If you have questions or would like to discuss a quote, contact us at 855-866-4409.
Per manufacturer recommendations, AVOID placing Smoke and Heat Sensors in the following areas: