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Bosch Alarm User Code and Handover Checklist
Bosch Alarm Handover
Summary
Use this guide when a Bosch alarm is changing owners, adding staff or family users, or being handed over after installation or tenancy change.
Applies to
- Bosch alarm systems with keypad user access
- Homes and small businesses
- User code handover and cleanup jobs
Difficulty and time
Difficulty: Low to moderate
Estimated time: 15 to 30 minutes for safe checks
What you will need
- Keypad access
- Current site owner details
- List of users who should keep or lose access
- Technician contact if programming changes are needed
Many Bosch support problems start with a dirty handover. Someone moved out, a manager changed, or a site was serviced years ago and nobody wrote down who still has codes. The result is confusion, not just inconvenience.
Before you start
- Write down the current site owner or responsible manager.
- List who still needs access and who should be removed.
- Check whether the system is monitored before making assumptions.
- Do not experiment with deeper programming if you are not sure of the panel path.
Step 1: Confirm who really owns the system now
This matters more than people expect. If the business owner, new tenant or householder is not clearly recorded as the responsible party, later support becomes messy.
- Record the current owner or manager contact.
- Confirm whether monitoring contact details are still current.
- Check whether old staff, contractors or tenants may still have active codes.
Step 2: Decide what the customer wants the day-to-day users to do
Not every user needs the same access or the same training. Some only need to arm and disarm. Others also need to manage openings, closings or service visits.
- List who uses the site daily.
- List who only needs occasional access.
- Agree on a simple arming and disarming routine before dealing with codes.
Step 3: Clean up the code ownership path
For many sites, the biggest improvement is not a new feature. It is removing the uncertainty about who still has access.
- Remove old users where the site is certain they should no longer have access.
- Do not leave old shared staff codes active if the site no longer trusts the user list.
- If the site is unsure how deeper code programming was previously handled, involve the technician who supports the panel.
Step 4: Do a basic safe handover test
The handover is not complete until the people keeping access can actually use the system properly.
- Confirm the keypad shows normal ready status before arming.
- Arm and disarm once using the intended user path.
- Make sure the customer understands entry delays and common trouble indications.
- Leave a clear note on who to contact if a beeping or communication fault appears later.
Step 5: Escalate safely if the job turns into a programming or monitoring issue
If the site also needs monitoring changes, module changes or deeper programming, that should be treated as a technician job rather than improvised user support.
- Escalate if communication paths, monitoring reports or deeper user programming are unclear.
- Escalate if the site has a commercial monitoring requirement.
- Escalate if nobody can prove which codes are still active safely.
Related support guides
Relevant product categories
Still stuck?
Need help choosing or setting up a system? Contact SecurityWholesalers support with your order number, product model and a clear description of the issue.
Frequently asked questions
- Should every Bosch user keep the same code forever?
No. When staff, tenants or responsibilities change, the user list should be reviewed properly.
- Can I guess my way through Bosch user programming?
That is not a good idea on a commercial or monitored site. Safe checks are fine, but deeper programming should go to a competent technician where needed.
- What is the most useful part of a Bosch handover?
Knowing who owns the system now, who should still have access, and who to call when something changes later.
















