🔐 Unlock the Future of Hospitality!
The Yale Assure Lock 2 Touch Deadbolt is a state-of-the-art smart entry solution designed for vacation rental hosts. Featuring a Wi-Fi connected touchscreen keypad and a fingerprint scanner, it allows for easy guest check-ins with unique codes, automatic locking, and remote access via the Yale Access app. Battery-powered and easy to install, this lock ensures security and convenience for both hosts and guests.
Control Method | App, Touch |
Connectivity Technology | Wireless |
Power Source | Battery Powered |
Item Dimensions | 0.88 x 2.5 x 4.88 inches |
Battery Cell Type | Alkaline |
Color | Black Suede |
L**A
Love
Love this locking system! My husband and I can always control the locking via our phones etc. what makes it really unique is the fact you’re able to remove fingerprints of guests after they leave etc.
T**A
Yale Assure Lock 2 is so easy and house safely secured
The Yale Assure Lock 2 is so easy to assemble. Love the mobile app that makes its flexible and compatible to crate codes and give it to your family members to access home. It’s durable. Safe and secure. Love this so much and I know you will too
K**A
Premium quality
Very well made, with high-quality materials. When you hold it in your hand, it feels like a heavy premium lock. The touchscreen is responsive. The keyed option is a great backup
E**A
Great smart lock
I definitely like its smart system, the design is great, sleek and modern. Great quality. Smart lock is about upgrading your security.
A**Z
great security
very good and strong for the security of your home
A**R
Lock itself works fine, included wi-fi bridge connect unit is utter crap
I have Google home as my smart home hub/brains, and I use Google’s nest wifi pro router mesh system in my house. I bought and installed this lock on a side door to my house, thinking that if I liked it I would later add another one to my front door. I won’t be doing that.One thing to know about the lock is that there are various tests they’ll give you in installing the lock to replace an existing deadbolt in terms of the size of the existing hole in the door, the location of that hole relative to the door edge, etc. My door passed in everyway but one. So there I was with my old deadbolt removed, this new yale lock package open with parts strewn around my work bench, and NOW you tell me that it won’t fit my door? Should there not be some (easy) way for the customer to determine that BEFORE buying the lock?But mine wasn’t far off, the hole in my door was about ¼” in diameter too big, so I tried it anyway, I think compensating with the latch part that comes out at the edge of the door and made it work.The lock itself seems fine, and I very much like using my finger (actually thumb in my case) print to open the lock quickly. But I bought this as something to integrate into Google Home. I could get a simple keypad lock, I imagine, for less money and certainly less hassle.I’ve tried every combination of things and gone round and round with Yale product support. A positive is that they’ve responded pretty quickly. They just haven’t come up with anything useful. I’m asking to either be escalated to a higher level of support or for a refund of that part of my purchase. I’m not optimistic. A(nother) downside of their support is that they just ignore parts of my response that they aren’t inclined to respond to.The hoops they’ve had me jump through are ridiculous. They tell me that the bridge connect unit has to be plugged in fairly close to my lock, and I get that --- Bluetooth doesn’t have super range, though in fact I can connect from my phone to the yale lock (via Bluetooth since their POS wifi bridge doesn’t work) from much farther away than they demand for connection. But they also told me at one point that the bridge unit has to be no further from my router than 15 feet. Perhaps their design staff all live in tiny homes and/or small apartments and aren’t inclined to do any product testing in the real world, but for a unit designed to bridge from Bluetooth to wifi that, IMO, is ridiculous. I got it to within 20 feet of my router mesh node and saw at that point that I had strong wi-fi connection; measured my wifi speed at that point using speedtest.net and found I was getting 300-some Mbps download and about 25 Mbps upload speed there. But it still just immediately tells me that it can’t connect.This is the newer approach they have to wifi connection. The previous approach (and btw, the only approach the documentation refers to) is a sort of module that you plug in to the lock itself. I think the idea was that with the new approach a single wifi bridge could serve multiple locks, and that sounded good to me when I chose to buy this thing. I asked product support if the older plug-in wifi module would work better and they told me that it wouldn’t.So. If all you want is a smart lock that works via key, fingerprint or keypad, this is a fine unit. If, however, you aspire to connect it to your smart home, I would suggest that you buy … well, I don’t know what. Maybe some other manufacturer actually tests their products before shipping them to end users. This one apparently does not.Ah, and I should add about the fingerprint sensor: the first time I tried to set this up I gave up and abandoned it. It requires you to keep pushing your finger on it through 12 steps, and I kept getting stuck around step 5 or 6 and it wouldn’t go further, eventually timed out. I had a phone like that once, a real PITA. But I went back later and with more patience and care was able to advance it through all 12 stages with my thumb, and it opens flawlessly (the few times I’ve tried) via thumbprint now. Much easier than keying in a code each time. But just be warned, it’s not the easiest fingerprint reader that you’ve used in terms of registering the fingerprint in the first place.
R**Y
Not WiFi capable.
Description is misleading. Says it connects with WiFi. However package does not contain WiFi module and unit will not connect to WiFi.
P**O
Amazing
Amazing
Trustpilot
2 months ago
1 month ago