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This is a reference guide — designed to be bookmarked and returned to. Use the table of contents to jump to any section. We update it as market conditions, products, and theft patterns change. Last update: March 2026.

A car is stolen in England and Wales every three to four minutes. In more than 70% of cases, no key was needed and no alarm was triggered. Factory security — the immobiliser and keyless entry system your manufacturer fitted — was not built to stop this. Aftermarket immobilisers exist to fill that gap. This guide tells you everything you need to know to choose the right one.

We’ve written this as a genuine reference — not as a thinly veiled advertisement for our own products. Where LockCar products are the right recommendation, we’ll say so and explain why. Where they aren’t, we’ll say that too. The goal is for every reader to leave this page knowing exactly what to buy, what to pay, and what questions to ask.

Why factory immobilisers fail against modern theft

Every car sold in the UK since 1998 is legally required to have a factory immobiliser. These systems work by verifying that the electronic key chip communicates correctly with the ECU before allowing the engine to start. For the first decade of widespread adoption, they were highly effective.

Modern relay attacks have changed the equation entirely. A relay attack doesn’t bypass the factory immobiliser — it makes the factory immobiliser irrelevant by amplifying your real key’s signal across a distance it was never designed to travel. From your car’s perspective, the key is right there. The factory immobiliser checks out. The engine starts. The car is gone.

70% of UK car thefts now use relay attacks or CAN injection (ABI, 2024)
£50 cost of a relay device capable of stealing a £50,000 car
60s typical time from approach to engine started — no alarm, no force

An aftermarket immobiliser adds a second authentication layer that operates independently of the key system. Even if a thief relays your key signal perfectly — even if your car thinks your key is right next to it — a properly fitted aftermarket immobiliser means the engine still won’t start. That is the gap factory security leaves open, and it is the gap a good aftermarket product fills.

For a full explanation of how relay attacks work, see: How relay attacks steal keyless cars in under 60 seconds →

The five types of aftermarket immobiliser

Not all immobilisers are built the same way. Understanding the fundamental differences in method will help you ask better questions and make a more informed choice. Here are the five main types currently available in the UK market.

CAN bus immobiliser
Method: ECU network signal
Connects to the vehicle’s CAN bus network and monitors driver inputs (button sequences) as a PIN. Prevents the ECU from enabling the engine until the correct sequence is entered. Ghost is the most widely known product in this category.
Advantages
  • No visible hardware once fitted
  • Large installer network (Ghost)
  • Well-known brand recognition
Limitations
  • Documented ECU interference cases
  • BMW / Volvo warranty rejected
  • PIN lockout frustration
  • No GPS, 4G, or app features
Proximity / ADR tag immobiliser
Method: passive RFID or UWB presence
Arms and disarms automatically based on whether an authorised tag or fob is within range. No PIN, no button press. Can be combined with relay or CAN bus methods. LockCar’s IC3ST and IS357 use proximity tags with relay-based disarming.
Advantages
  • Hands-free — no user action required
  • No lockout risk
  • Partners can use independently
Limitations
  • Tag must be carried
  • Range varies (1.5m–5m typical)
GPS tracker with immobilisation
Method: remote circuit cut via 4G
Combines real-time GPS tracking with the ability to remotely immobilise the vehicle via a smartphone app or monitoring centre. Primarily a recovery and deterrence tool, though the remote immobilisation adds a prevention layer. LockCar ONE Plus includes this functionality.
Advantages
  • Recovery as well as prevention
  • Remote response capability
  • Monitoring evidence for insurance
Limitations
  • Subscription typically required
  • Not a standalone prevention device
OBD port lock / OBD immobiliser
Method: OBD port blocking or monitoring
Physically blocks or monitors the OBD diagnostic port — the standard port mechanics use for diagnostics, and which thieves can exploit to programme new keys on some vehicles. A useful supplementary measure for older vehicles where OBD key programming is a specific risk vector, but not a substitute for a full immobiliser. Relatively cheap (£20–80). Primarily relevant for pre-2018 Ford, VW Group, and BMW models.
Advantages
  • Cheap and easy to fit
  • Closes a specific vulnerability on older vehicles
  • No professional installation required
Limitations
  • Does not protect against relay attacks
  • Not an immobiliser — a supplementary layer only
  • Less relevant on post-2018 vehicles

The most important distinction in this list is not between brands — it’s between relay-based and CAN bus methods. One has zero ECU contact risk; the other has documented cases of causing ECU faults, warranty rejections, and diagnostic bills. For full detail: CAN bus vs relay — the difference that could cost you £800 →

What to look for — and what to avoid

Use this checklist when evaluating any immobiliser product or installer. Items marked Must have are non-negotiable for a competent installation. Items marked Should have add meaningful value. Items marked Avoid are genuine warning signs.

Must have

Physical relay or genuine circuit interruption

The immobiliser must physically break a circuit — not just send a signal. If a device only relies on electronic communication to prevent starting, it can potentially be bypassed by electronic means. A 20A physical relay that interrupts the fuel pump, starter, or ignition circuit is the mechanical foundation of reliable protection.

Must have

Professional installation with concealment

An immobiliser that a thief can locate and bypass in 90 seconds provides almost no protection. Professional installation means the relay and control unit are hidden in locations that require significant disassembly to find — not under the dashboard in plain sight.

Must have

Single point of accountability

You must be able to reach someone who can resolve a problem with the installation. If the manufacturer and installer are different parties — and something goes wrong — you may find yourself caught between two entities, each blaming the other. The ideal arrangement is a single person who manufactured the product and installed it.

Should have

Hands-free or app-based disarming

Proximity tag or app disarming removes the risk of lockout, partner confusion, and the friction of a PIN sequence. The IS357’s 5m detection range means the car is disarmed before you reach the door. No codes to forget. No timed lockouts. No explaining the sequence to your partner.

Should have

App monitoring and alerts

Motion alerts, arming status, and the ability to check your vehicle’s security state remotely add meaningful value — particularly if you park away from home overnight, use public car parks, or own a vehicle in the most-targeted makes. The ONE Plus adds live camera and 4G remote immobilisation for owners who want full visibility.

Should have

Compatibility with your vehicle type

EVs, HGVs, motorhomes, and hybrid drivetrains have specific electrical architectures. Not every immobiliser is rated for 24V systems or designed to work safely with hybrid power management. Confirm compatibility before purchase. LockCar products work on all 12/24V vehicles including cars, vans, EVs, HGVs, and motorhomes.

Avoid

Unverifiable CAN bus claims

If a product claims to connect to the CAN bus but the manufacturer cannot tell you specifically which circuits it touches, how it handles bus arbitration, or what vehicle-specific testing has been done — treat that as a warning sign. ECU interference from poorly implemented CAN bus connections is a documented real-world problem, not a theoretical one.

Avoid

Cheap online units fitted by non-specialists

A £25 immobiliser from an online marketplace, installed by someone without vehicle security specialisation, is worse than no immobiliser in some respects: it creates a false sense of security, may interfere with vehicle wiring, and is trivially bypassed by anyone with basic knowledge. If you’re going to invest in protection, invest in the full solution.

Avoid

No post-installation support

What happens if your tag stops working at 11pm? What if a firmware update is needed? What if your car goes into a dealer and the technician needs to know what’s fitted? An immobiliser that comes with no ongoing support structure — no phone number, no direct line to someone who knows the product — is a product to avoid regardless of its other specifications.

Price guide: what you should expect to pay

Price in this market correlates moderately well with quality — but not linearly. The most expensive option is not necessarily the best, and several mid-range relay products offer superior technical protection to premium CAN bus systems. Here’s a realistic breakdown of what different price points actually buy you.

£20–80product only

Budget online units — DIY or non-specialist fitting

Generic relay units, OBD locks, and basic alarm add-ons. Not designed for concealment. Trivially bypassed by informed thieves. May interfere with vehicle wiring if fitted incorrectly. Acceptable only as a supplementary layer on top of a proper installation — never as primary protection.

Avoid as primary
£139–149product only

Professional standalone relay immobilisers (IC3ST / IS357)

The sweet spot for individual car owners. UK-manufactured, professionally designed relay units with full app control, proximity tag, and hands-free operation. The IC3ST and IS357 are standalone products — no additional MCU required. Zero ECU contact. These products deliver protection equal to or better than CAN bus units at £400+.

Best value
£199product only

Combined dashcam + immobiliser with GPS and 4G (ONE Plus)

Fleet-grade specification: live camera, GPS+GLONASS, 4G remote access, automatic night immobilisation, Face ID, and full remote immobilisation from any location. Comparable commercial fleet security systems start at £1,500 per vehicle. The ONE Plus delivers this at £199 because it’s manufactured directly rather than resold.

Best features
£300–500product + fitting

IC3ST or IS357 professionally installed

The total cost of a relay immobiliser purchased with professional installation by LockCar. This is the all-in price for most individual car owners — product, professional concealment, app setup, and a direct line to the engineer who built it. Compares favourably to Ghost at £450–600 fitted for substantially better technical protection.

Recommended
£450–600product + fitting

CAN bus immobilisers (Ghost and equivalents)

The typical installed price for Ghost and similar CAN bus products via their installer networks. You pay a premium for brand recognition and a large installer network. The technical protection against relay attacks is genuine but comes with the ECU interference risk, PIN usability limitations, and absence of GPS or 4G features discussed in detail elsewhere in this guide.

Caution — see ECU risk
£600+product + fitting

Insurance-approved Thatcham systems (Pandora, Meta Trak, Smartrack)

Pandora, Meta Trak, and Smartrack operate in the insurance-grade tier. These products are designed primarily to satisfy insurer requirements on high-risk vehicles — often required by insurers for Range Rovers, certain BMW M-series, and other high-theft models. They typically include GPS tracking and monitoring centre subscription. The right choice if your insurer specifically mandates a Thatcham-approved device.

Insurer mandated only
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The right question isn’t “how much should I spend?” It’s “what method provides the best protection for my vehicle without adding new risks?” A £139 relay immobiliser professionally fitted provides better fundamental protection than a £500 CAN bus device if the relay design is sound and the installation is concealed. Method matters more than price band.

Installation: what good looks like

The quality of installation determines the real-world effectiveness of any immobiliser as much as the product itself. A professional-grade product poorly installed is trivially bypassed. Here is what distinguishes a good installation from a bad one.

Warning signs in an installation

  • 🚩 Relay or control unit visible under the dashboard without disassembly
  • 🚩 Wiring run in obvious paths along existing looms
  • 🚩 Installation completed in under 30 minutes on a complex vehicle
  • 🚩 No app setup or pairing performed during installation
  • 🚩 Installer unable to explain where the relay is physically located
  • 🚩 No documentation of what was installed and where
  • 🚩 Vehicle returned with unexplained new warning lights

What a good installation includes

  • Full disassembly of relevant panels for concealment
  • Relay placed in a non-obvious location requiring significant access time to find
  • App paired and tested before the installer leaves
  • Tag detection range confirmed in situ
  • All panels replaced correctly with no rattles or damage
  • Owner walked through app features, tag operation, and valet mode
  • Direct contact for any follow-up questions or issues
“When it goes faulty you are stuffed — only your installer can sort it out. So choose your installer wisely.” — UK car owner, automotive forum
Installing an IC3ST immobiliser - panel removed, relay being positioned The LockCar difference Victor can personally assists each LockCar device – the same person who designed it.

At LockCar, Victor builds and supports each device. He travels to the customer’s location if needed, and guarantees a successful complete installation, configures the app, confirms the tag’s detection range, and walks the owner through each feature. There is no possibility of a communication gap between the manufacturer and the installer.

Immobilisers and your insurance

The relationship between aftermarket immobilisers and car insurance is nuanced and worth understanding before you buy. Here is what the data and insurer communications tell us.

What you should know about immobilisers and insurance

  • Some insurers — particularly for high-risk vehicles like Range Rovers and BMW M-series — now mandate Thatcham-approved security systems as a condition of cover. If your insurer has specified a Thatcham category requirement, a non-Thatcham product may not satisfy that requirement, regardless of its technical quality.
  • Thatcham approval is a certification process run by the Motor Insurance Repair Research Centre. It does not necessarily mean a Thatcham-approved product is technically superior to a non-approved one — it means it has been through a specific testing and certification procedure that insurers recognise.
  • If your insurer has not mandated a Thatcham product, fitting any professionally installed immobiliser may reduce your premium or be viewed positively at claim time. Call your insurer and ask directly — the response varies significantly between providers.
  • A CAN bus immobiliser that has caused ECU faults on your vehicle could complicate an insurance claim if the insurer argues the aftermarket device contributed to the vehicle’s condition. Keep records of any installation, including who fitted it and when.
  • An immobiliser does not replace a tracker for insurance purposes. If your insurer requires a Thatcham-approved tracker (common for Range Rovers), that is a separate requirement from an immobiliser. The LockCar ONE Plus includes GPS+GLONASS tracking — confirm with your insurer whether this satisfies their tracker requirement.
  • Always inform your insurer when you fit aftermarket security. Failure to disclose a modification — even a beneficial one — can in theory be grounds for declining a claim. The conversation takes five minutes and protects you.

Will an aftermarket immobiliser void your car’s warranty?

This depends almost entirely on the method used — relay-based vs CAN bus — and on your specific manufacturer.

Relay-based immobilisers place a physical relay in an existing engine circuit. They do not connect to, communicate with, or draw power from the CAN bus. From the manufacturer’s perspective, this is equivalent to having an additional switch in a circuit — a modification that is straightforward to identify and straightforward to reverse. Most manufacturers’ warranty terms do not void warranty for this type of modification, though it is worth confirming with your specific dealer.

CAN bus immobilisers connect a new electronic device to the vehicle’s ECU communication network. BMW has explicitly told owners that a Ghost-fitted vehicle is not covered under manufacturer warranty. Volvo installers have reported similar feedback. Other European manufacturers are moving in the same direction as vehicles become more electronically complex and ECU networks more tightly controlled.

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If your vehicle is under manufacturer warranty: before fitting any CAN bus immobiliser, call your manufacturer’s warranty team directly and ask whether the specific product voids your cover. Get the answer in writing if possible. Several owners have discovered their warranty was void only when they needed to use it — after a fault had already developed.

For a detailed analysis of this issue including real-world cases and the technical reason why relay-based is warranty-safer, see: Does an immobiliser void your warranty? What BMW owners need to know →

Red flags: what to avoid when buying

The vehicle security market has a number of operators who are not what they present themselves to be. Here are the warning signs to watch for when evaluating any product or installer.

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An installer who can’t explain what they’re fitting or where

A professional installer should be able to tell you the product name, the manufacturer, what circuit it interrupts, and approximately where the relay will be located. If the answer to any of these questions is vague or evasive, find someone else.

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Unlabelled vans and no company credentials

Several UK forum users have reported being ripped off by “mobile immobiliser fitters” with no company identity, no insurance, and no recourse if something goes wrong. Verify the company exists, has a website, has reviews, and has a physical presence before you let them near your car’s wiring.

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Products making “unhackable” or “unstealable” claims

No security product is absolute. A well-fitted professional relay immobiliser makes theft dramatically harder and buys significant time — that is a realistic and valuable promise. Any product claiming total, unbeatable, guaranteed security is either ignorant or dishonest. The goal is to make your car a harder target than the unprotected car next to it.

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No phone number — just a web form

A security product is not a commodity purchase. You need to be able to reach someone when something goes wrong — at 10pm on a Sunday if necessary. If a company’s only contact is an online form with a 48-hour response commitment, that is not acceptable support for something protecting a £30,000 asset.

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Products that require internet connectivity to arm or disarm

If an immobiliser requires a live internet connection to arm or disarm the vehicle, a mobile signal outage, app server downtime, or subscription lapse could leave you locked out of your own car. The primary arming and disarming function must work offline — additional features like remote access should be online-dependent, not the core function.

Frequently asked questions

Does a car immobiliser prevent all theft?

No security measure prevents all theft absolutely. A professional relay immobiliser dramatically raises the difficulty and time required to steal your vehicle — making it a much harder target than any unprotected car nearby. Determined, well-resourced theft teams may attempt to locate and bypass any device given enough time. The goal is to make your car the harder option, not the impossible one. Most professional relay attack teams will move on when a standard relay attack fails to start the engine.

How long does installation take?

A professional installation by an experienced fitter typically takes 45–90 minutes depending on the vehicle. Vehicles requiring more disassembly for proper concealment may take longer. Any installation completed in under 30 minutes on a complex vehicle should be viewed with scepticism — proper concealment requires time.

Can a car immobiliser be fitted to an electric vehicle?

Yes — relay-based immobilisers that operate on the 12V auxiliary system (rather than the high-voltage drivetrain) are compatible with EVs and hybrid vehicles. LockCar products are rated for all 12/24V systems including EVs, hybrids, HGVs, and motorhomes. CAN bus products should be approached with additional caution on EVs, as the ECU network architecture in electric vehicles is typically more complex and tightly controlled than in combustion engine vehicles.

What happens if my tag or phone dies and I can’t disarm the immobiliser?

A well-designed system has a fallback. LockCar products include a valet mode and alternative disarm method precisely for this situation. Ask about the backup disarm procedure before any installation — you should never be in a situation where a flat battery or lost tag permanently locks you out of your own vehicle.

Does a Ghost immobiliser affect my car’s ECU?

There are documented cases of Ghost and other CAN bus immobilisers causing ECU interference, dashboard faults, and limp mode on certain vehicles — particularly European makes. This does not happen to every vehicle, but it has happened to enough owners that it warrants careful consideration. For the full picture with real-world forum evidence, see our detailed guide: CAN bus vs relay immobiliser →

Which car immobiliser is best for a Range Rover?

Range Rovers are the most stolen vehicle in the UK and are specifically targeted by organised theft rings. For this vehicle class, we recommend the LockCar ONE Plus — the combination of physical relay immobilisation, night auto-arming, GPS tracking, and 4G remote access provides maximum protection and remote response capability. The IC3ST is also effective as a standalone relay immobiliser, but the ONE Plus adds the recovery and remote monitoring layer that matters for a vehicle at this risk level.

How do I know if my car already has an immobiliser?

All UK cars manufactured after 1998 have a factory immobiliser. You can confirm the category level via your vehicle’s V5C or by checking with your insurer — factory immobilisers are typically Category 1. Factory immobilisers do not protect against relay attacks; they verify the key’s electronic code, which relay attacks circumvent by presenting the real key’s signal at the car. An aftermarket immobiliser operates as a second, independent layer that the relay attack cannot replicate.

Is the LockCar IC3ST better than Ghost?

On most technical dimensions, yes — zero ECU contact risk, hands-free proximity disarming, full app control, lower installed price, and UK manufacture. Ghost has the advantage of greater brand recognition and a larger installer network. For a detailed side-by-side, see our full comparison article: Ghost immobiliser alternative — what to buy instead and why →

Recommendation matrix — find your product

Use this table to find the right LockCar product for your situation. Every product in the range is relay-based — zero ECU contact, zero interference risk — and is installed by Victor at your location.

Your situation Recommended product Key reason
Individual car owner, any vehicle, want solid standalone protection IC3ST — £139 Standalone, app-controlled, proximity tag, zero ECU contact. The direct relay alternative to Ghost for most buyers.
BMW, Mercedes, Range Rover, Volvo owner — vehicle on most-stolen list IS357 — £149 5m proximity range, smartwatch support, Bluetooth. Relay-based — safe for warranty on all European makes.
Want maximum remote control — see the car, act from anywhere, automatic night protection ONE Plus — £199 4G, GPS+GLONASS, live camera, Face ID, auto night-immobilise. Fleet-grade spec at personal price.
Fleet or professional vehicle — need dashcam evidence and immobilisation combined ONE — £199 24/7 dashcam recording + relay immobiliser. One device, local SD storage, no subscription for recording.
Ford Transit, van, or commercial vehicle (12 or 24V) IC3ST — £139 or ONE for dashcam IC3ST works on 12/24V. ONE adds dashcam for driver accountability and evidence.
EV or hybrid (Lexus, Toyota, BMW i-series) IC3ST — £139 Relay operates on 12V aux — independent of high-voltage drivetrain. No CAN bus contact on EV network.
Fleet of 5+ vehicles — want one supplier for full range ONE Plus fleet + ic326 add-on ONE Plus for managed vehicles; ic326 for immobiliser-only add-ons. One relationship, one training session.
Garage or auto electrician — looking for a wholesale relay product i124, i125, or ic326 Dealer pricing from £30–60/unit. One training session covers the full range. No ECU comebacks.
The relay alternative — fitted at your door across the UK

LockCar — UK-made immobilisers from £139

Victor designs, builds, and installs every device himself. Zero CAN bus contact. Works on every vehicle type. Professional installation at your location — no finding an installer, no trusting a stranger.

Shop the full range → WhatsApp for a free recommendation
From £139product only
from £300 fitted

The short version

If you’ve read this far and want it condensed: buy a professionally fitted relay immobiliser from a supplier who will also install it. Choose one with hands-free proximity disarming so there’s no PIN to forget. Make sure the installation is concealed properly. Tell your insurer. And if your car is in the top-stolen list and is parked outside — consider the ONE Plus for automatic night arming and GPS.

That’s it. Everything else in this guide is supporting detail for the buyers who need it. The core decision is simpler than the market makes it look.

Still not sure which product is right for your vehicle? Send Victor a WhatsApp with your make, model, and main concern. He’ll give you a direct recommendation and a quote. No forms, no callbacks from a call centre. The engineer who built it, answering in plain English.