Switching systems is a money decision, so we treat it like one. There are three costs to switching and three savings, and the honest answer is a single number: how many months until the switch pays for itself. We work it out with you on one call.
Call (844) 521-0675
Plenty of homeowners stay on an old, overpriced security contract because they assume switching is expensive. Sometimes it is. Often it is not, and the switch pays for itself in a few months. The only way to know is to run the actual numbers rather than guess.
At Solvent Security we frame every switch around one figure: the payback period. Below is how it works, what usually gets missed, and when we will tell you to stay exactly where you are.
The payback period is simple: total cost to switch, divided by your monthly savings, gives the number of months until you are ahead.
Say switching costs you $300 in one-time fees, and the new plan saves you $25 a month between a lower rate and the insurance discount. That is a 12-month payback. After a year, every month is pure savings. If the payback lands inside the time you plan to stay in the home, switching makes financial sense. If it does not, it usually does not. We calculate this with your real figures.

These are the costs people forget, and we surface all three before you decide:
If your current contract has time left, breaking it can cost $200 to $500 or more.
Some providers require you to pay off leased equipment when you leave. Ask your current provider for the payoff figure, or we will help you find it.
A new plan usually starts a fresh term, commonly 36 months. That is not a cash cost, but it is a commitment worth counting.

Weighed against those costs are three recurring gains:
Moving off legacy pricing to a current promotional plan often saves $10 to $30 a month on its own.
A professionally monitored setup can earn 10 to 15 percent off your homeowner premium, roughly $150 to $400 a year, provided your insurer offers it.
A reliable modern system means fewer service calls and fewer false-dispatch fines than an aging one that keeps faulting.
Suppose you face a $250 termination fee and no equipment buyout. Your new plan saves $20 a month on the rate, plus a $270 yearly insurance discount, which is about $22.50 a month. That is roughly $42.50 in monthly savings.
$250 divided by $42.50 is a payback of under six months. If you are staying in the home longer than that, the switch clears easily.
Change any input, a bigger fee or a smaller discount, and the payback moves. That is why we run your real numbers rather than a template.

We will tell you to stay put when the math says so. That is usually when your current contract has years left with a steep termination fee, when your existing system is already modern and the monthly savings are small, or when you do not qualify for a meaningful insurance discount.
An honest “keep what you have” is an answer we give often, because a switch that never reaches payback is just a new bill.
Call (844) 521-0675 and speak with an advisor. We add up the three costs and three savings, give you a real payback period, and tell you honestly whether to switch or stay. If you go ahead, we connect you with the right provider partner. No pressure.
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