Types of Safes
Explained
Everything Canadians need to know before buying a safe — from ULC ratings to the right safe type for your home, business, or industry. Written by Toronto's security experts with 35+ years of experience.
Not All Safes Are Created Equal —
Especially in Canada
Walk into any hardware store and you'll find products labelled "safe" that wouldn't stop a determined thief for more than a few minutes. Meanwhile, Canadian insurance policies, firearms laws, and fire codes have specific requirements that most buyers don't discover until it's too late.
This guide was written by our team at The Safe Depot — Toronto's leading safe supplier for over 35 years — to give you a clear, honest breakdown of every safe category, what each is designed to protect against, and how to choose the right one for your situation.
Every Type of Safe, Explained
Click any safe type to view our inventory
Burglary Safes
Burglary safes are built specifically to resist forced entry — prying, drilling, cutting, and torch attacks. They are rated by the resistance time they provide against each method. If your primary concern is theft of cash, jewelry, or valuables, this is your starting category.
Burglary & Fire Safes
These safes meet both burglary resistance and fire protection standards simultaneously. For most Canadian homeowners and small businesses, this is the most practical choice. Look for products with separate ULC burglary and fire certifications — not just a single dual-protection label.
Document Fire Safes
Fire safes keep contents below the temperature at which paper or digital media is destroyed during a building fire. Many budget "fireproof" boxes sold at hardware stores do not meet ULC standards and may fail under real fire conditions. Always verify the certification before purchasing.
Gun Safes & Rifle Cabinets
In Canada, safe storage of firearms is a legal requirement under the Firearms Act — not a recommendation. The storage type required depends on whether your firearms are non-restricted, restricted, or prohibited. Our team can guide you through the correct solution based on your licence class and firearm types.
Home Safes
Home safes are designed for everyday residential use — storing passports, jewelry, backup keys, small amounts of cash, and personal documents. Available in freestanding, wall-mounted, and under-desk configurations to suit different room layouts and concealment preferences.
Floor Safes
Floor safes are embedded directly into the concrete or subfloor, making them extremely difficult to remove without demolition equipment. Once covered with a rug or floor plate, they become effectively invisible — ideal for high-value storage without the footprint of a freestanding safe.
Deposit Safes
Deposit safes are designed for high-volume cash environments. A drop slot allows deposits without opening the main compartment — reducing employee access and internal theft risk. Commonly used in retail stores, restaurants, gas stations, and pharmacies across Toronto and the GTA.
Hotel & Hospitality Safes
Hotel safes are compact in-room units for temporary guest use. They use guest-programmable PIN codes that reset between stays and are sized to fit standard laptops. Available in wall-mounted and freestanding configurations — bulk pricing is available for hotels, motels, and short-term rental operators.
Custom Luxury Safes
Custom luxury safes combine the highest security levels with interior finishes designed around specific collections — watches, fine jewelry, art documents, or rare items. Built to specification with custom dimensions, biometric access, watch winders, LED lighting, and leather or wood veneer exteriors.
Custom Vaults & Vault Doors
Custom vaults convert an entire room into a secure storage space with bank-grade protection. Vault doors are installed in existing or purpose-built rooms. Used by banks, jewellers, government agencies, cannabis licensees, and high-value retailers. Full design, fabrication, and installation available.
ULC Ratings:
What They Mean for You
ULC (Underwriters Laboratories of Canada) is the Canadian certification body for safes and security products. Unlike American UL ratings, ULC standards are calibrated specifically for Canadian conditions and are recognized by Canadian insurance companies.
Many insurers in Ontario and BC require ULC-certified safes to honor theft claims. Buying an uncertified product could invalidate your coverage.
Get Expert AdviceSafe Types at a Glance
A quick comparison to help you narrow down what you need
| Safe Type | Theft Protection | Fire Protection | CA Law Req. | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Burglary Safe | ●●● | ●○○ | — | Cash, valuables, jewelry |
| Burglary & Fire Safe | ●●● | ●●● | — | Home & small business use |
| Document Fire Safe | ●○○ | ●●● | — | Wills, deeds, tax records |
| Gun Safe / Rifle Cabinet | ●●● | ●●○ | Required | All firearm owners |
| Home Safe | ●●○ | ●○○ | — | Families, condo residents |
| Floor Safe | ●●● | ●●○ | — | Hidden high-value storage |
| Deposit Safe | ●●● | ●○○ | — | Retail, restaurant, pharmacy |
| Hotel Safe | ●○○ | ●○○ | — | Guest room, travel documents |
| Custom Luxury Safe | ●●● | ●●● | — | Collections, private offices |
| Custom Vault / Vault Door | ●●● | ●●● | — | Enterprise, banks, licensees |
●●● Strong ●●○ Moderate ●○○ Limited Required = legally required under the Canadian Firearms Act
Frequently Asked Questions
It depends on your insurer and the contents you're storing. Many Canadian providers — particularly in Ontario and British Columbia — require ULC certification for high-value theft claims. Contact your insurance broker before purchasing and ask specifically what certification level they require for the items you plan to store.
Under the Canadian Firearms Act, all firearms must be stored unloaded. Non-restricted firearms must be stored with a trigger lock or in a locked container. Restricted and prohibited firearms must be stored in a locked container with a secure locking mechanism and rendered inoperable. Requirements vary by firearm class — our team can advise on the correct solution for your situation.
UL ratings are issued by Underwriters Laboratories in the United States. ULC ratings are issued by the Canadian branch and reflect testing standards calibrated for Canadian requirements. Canadian insurers typically recognise ULC ratings for coverage purposes. When shopping for a safe in Canada, always prioritise ULC certification.
Not always. Many budget boxes labelled "fire resistant" or "fireproof" have not been independently tested to ULC standards. They may offer some protection in a minor fire but can fail in a full building fire. Always look for a specific ULC fire rating (F1, F2) rather than a general marketing claim.
Very important. A safe that isn't anchored can often be carried out of a property and opened elsewhere, even if it would take significant effort to crack in place. Most burglary safes include anchor bolt holes for floor or wall mounting. Professional installation ensures anchoring is done correctly — particularly for heavier models and floor safes.
Yes — installation is one of our core services. Our team handles delivery, positioning, floor and wall anchoring, floor safe embedment, and vault door installation across the Greater Toronto Area and surrounding regions. Contact us to discuss your specific requirements.
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Is Right for You?
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