Apartment Security While Traveling: Keep Your Buzzer Under Control
Leaving for vacation shouldn't mean coming home to missed deliveries, mystery visitors, and buzzer anxiety. Here's how to keep your apartment building access under control while you're away.
Knockli Team
Building Access Experts

You're packing for a trip. Flight booked, hotel confirmed, pet sitter scheduled. Then the thought hits: what happens when someone buzzes your apartment and you're 2,000 miles away?
Apartment security while traveling presents a specific challenge that homeowners don't face. Your building's buzzer connects the outside world to your unit, and when you're not there to answer it, things get complicated. Deliveries pile up. Important visitors can't get in. You have no idea who came by or what they wanted.
The anxiety is real, and it's not unfounded. According to a comprehensive survey of apartment renters, 39% of apartment residents have experienced package theft. That risk increases when packages sit unattended during extended absences. And Security.org's 2025 Package Theft Report found that apartment residents are more than three times as likely to have packages stolen compared to those in single-family homes.
But you don't have to choose between traveling and keeping your apartment secure. With the right preparation, you can protect your apartment when away and manage your building access remotely, coming home to exactly what you left.
The Problem With Leaving Your Buzzer Unattended
When you're home, managing your buzzer is straightforward. Someone buzzes, you ask who it is, and you decide whether to let them in. But travel breaks this simple workflow in several ways.
Missed deliveries become inevitable. That package you ordered before your trip arrives while you're gone. The driver buzzes, no one answers, and your package either gets returned to the depot or left somewhere vulnerable. Research from Parcel Pending's 2025 Resident Preferences Report found that 95% of residents consider package security important, yet most apartment systems offer no solution for residents who aren't home.
Trusted visitors get stuck. Your friend agreed to water the plants. Your pet sitter is scheduled for daily visits. Your parents are stopping by to check on things. Without a way to let them in, they're standing at your building's entrance calling your cell phone while you're in a different time zone.
Unknown visitors go unchecked. Someone buzzes your unit while you're away. Who were they? What did they want? Did they leave? With traditional intercom systems, you'll never know. That uncertainty creates a low-grade anxiety that can follow you through your entire trip.
Your building's security depends on your neighbors. Every time a resident buzzes in an unknown visitor, the entire building is less secure. When you're not there to screen your own buzzer calls, that responsibility falls on whoever happens to answer their phone. It's not a system designed for the reality of how people actually live.
Your Options for Managing Apartment Access While Traveling
There's no single perfect solution, and what works depends on your building setup, trip length, and who needs access while you're gone. Here's how the main approaches compare:
| Approach | Best For | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Pause all deliveries | Short trips (under a week) | Doesn't help with visitors; requires advance planning |
| Neighbor assistance | Known, trusted neighbors | Puts burden on others; limited availability |
| Leave spare key | Single trusted visitor | Security risk; only works for one person |
| AI-powered intercom | Any trip length; multiple visitors | Requires phone-based buzzer system |
| Building concierge | Luxury buildings with 24/7 staff | Most buildings don't have this |
Pausing Deliveries
For shorter trips, the simplest option is to stop packages from arriving while you're gone. Amazon lets you pause deliveries through your account settings. UPS My Choice and FedEx Delivery Manager allow you to hold packages at nearby locations or reschedule delivery windows.
The limitation: This only works if you plan ahead and remember to pause everything. It also does nothing for visitors, unexpected mail, or the random person who buzzes your unit. And if a package slips through anyway, you're back to the same problem.
Relying on Neighbors
If you have a neighbor you trust, they can buzz in your expected visitors and grab packages left at your door. Many apartment buildings have informal neighbor networks where residents look out for each other during trips.
The limitation: This requires a neighbor willing and able to be on call for your buzzer. It also means giving someone else decision-making authority over who enters your building. For longer trips or frequent travelers, this quickly becomes an imposition.
AI-Powered Intercom Solutions
If your building has a phone-based buzzer system (where someone buzzing your unit triggers a call to your phone), AI solutions can handle those calls whether you're home or not. Services like Knockli answer your buzzer automatically, screen visitors by asking who they are and what they need, and apply rules you've set in advance.
How it works: When someone buzzes, the AI picks up and asks clarifying questions. Based on your rules (let delivery drivers in during certain hours, ask you first for unknowns, always grant access to people on your allowlist), it either unlocks the door, declines the visitor, or forwards the request to your phone so you can decide.
The advantage for travelers: everything happens automatically according to your preferences, and everything gets logged so you can review what happened when you get home.
Pre-Travel Apartment Security Checklist
The best time to prepare for apartment security while traveling is before you're at the airport scrolling through boarding passes. Run through this checklist a day or two before departure.
Delivery Preparation
- Reschedule or pause incoming orders. Check your Amazon, UPS, FedEx, and USPS accounts for expected deliveries during your trip
- Update delivery instructions. If you're using an AI intercom or have a package room, update instructions to route deliveries appropriately
- Consider a locker or hold. For valuable packages, use Amazon Hub Lockers or carrier hold-at-location services
Visitor Coordination
- Create a list of expected visitors. Pet sitters, plant waterers, family members, cleaning services
- Add them to your allowlist. If using a smart access system, pre-approve visitors so they can enter without you intervening
- Share building access details. Make sure trusted visitors know how to buzz your unit and any codes they'll need
- Set up passphrases if needed. For added security, give expected visitors a code word to verify their identity
Access Rules
- Enable stricter quiet hours. Consider blocking all unknown visitors during your absence, or setting narrow windows when buzzes are forwarded to you
- Set up "away mode" rules. Many smart intercom systems let you create travel-specific settings that decline unknowns, grant access to allowlisted visitors, and log everything for later review
- Test your setup. Have a friend buzz your unit before you leave to confirm everything works as expected
Building Communication
- Notify building management. Let them know you'll be away and who (if anyone) is authorized to access your unit
- Confirm emergency contacts. Make sure the building has a way to reach you if something urgent happens
- Check maintenance schedules. Ask about any planned building access that might affect your unit while you're gone
For more on coordinating service provider access, see our guide on giving apartment building access to dog walkers and service providers.
While You're Away: Managing Access Remotely
You've prepared everything, and now you're actually traveling. Here's how to maintain control without spending your vacation glued to your phone.
If You're Using an AI-Powered Solution
The goal of automated access management is to handle the routine so you don't have to. With a solution like Knockli, proper rules in place mean your system should:
- Auto-handle expected visitors. Your pet sitter buzzes, identifies themselves, and the door unlocks because they're on your allowlist. You get a notification, but no action required.
- Screen unknowns appropriately. A delivery driver buzzes, the AI confirms the delivery and provides instructions, and the package gets left safely. If someone can't explain why they're there, access is declined.
- Escalate when needed. For situations your rules don't cover, the system forwards to your phone. You can handle it in 30 seconds or let it go to voicemail with an automated response.
The key is trusting your rules. Adjust them before the trip, not during, so you're not constantly second-guessing settings while you should be relaxing.
If You're Managing Manually
Without automated screening, you'll need a plan for when your buzzer rings:
- Set your phone to deliver buzzer calls. Make sure your phone can receive calls internationally if you're traveling abroad.
- Create a standard response for unknowns. "I'm not available. Please leave a message at the leasing office" works for most situations.
- Give yourself permission to ignore. You can't answer every buzzer call from across the world. If it's important, they'll find another way to reach you.
Checking In
Regardless of your approach, a quick daily review helps catch issues early:
- Review any access logs or notifications
- Check tracking for expected packages
- Confirm your pet sitter or visitors successfully got in
- Address any failed delivery attempts before they become returns
When You Get Home: Post-Travel Review
You're back. Before you unpack, take five minutes to review what happened while you were gone.
Check Your Activity Log
If you're using a smart access system, review the complete log:
- Who buzzed and when
- How each interaction was resolved (granted, denied, forwarded)
- Any unusual patterns (repeated visits from unknowns, failed access attempts)
This review serves two purposes. First, it confirms everything worked as expected. Second, it helps you refine your rules for next time.
Inventory Deliveries
- Verify all expected packages arrived
- Check with your building's package room or management for anything held
- File claims for any missing deliveries while documentation is fresh
Follow Up on Issues
If something went wrong during your trip (a legitimate visitor couldn't get in, a package was stolen, someone behaved suspiciously), address it now:
- Report incidents to building management
- Adjust your access rules to prevent recurrence
- Document anything that might matter for insurance or police reports
Reset to Normal Mode
If you enabled travel-specific settings (stricter quiet hours, limited access windows), decide whether to keep them or return to your everyday configuration. Some travelers find they prefer the stricter settings permanently.
Apartment Security While Traveling: The Bottom Line
The traditional apartment buzzer was designed for a time when people were home more often. It assumed someone would always be there to answer, verify, and decide. That assumption doesn't match modern life, especially for people who travel.
The anxiety you feel about your building access while traveling is legitimate. Without visibility into who's buzzing and why, you're left imagining worst-case scenarios. Without a way to let trusted visitors in, you're relying on workarounds that burden neighbors or create security risks. Without activity logs, you return home to uncertainty about what happened in your absence.
But the tools to solve this exist today. AI-powered intercom solutions work with your existing phone-based buzzer, require no hardware changes, and let you manage apartment security while traveling from anywhere in the world. Combined with good pre-travel preparation and clear rules, you can leave for your trip knowing your building access is handled.
Your apartment should be the place you're excited to come home to, not a source of stress while you're away. With the right setup, that's exactly what it becomes.
Planning your next trip? Learn how Knockli's AI doorman can screen your visitors, manage deliveries, and keep your building access secure while you're away. Setup takes minutes, works with your existing buzzer, and gives you complete visibility into what happened while you were gone.
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