Car key replacement, done at your car.
Cut and programmed wherever the car actually is β your driveway, the lot at Florida Park, the VPS terminal curb. Transponder keys, push-to-start fobs, spares, and the all-keys-lost job where the last one went into Boggy Bayou. No tow to a dealer in Fort Walton Beach.
Tell us the year, make and model on the phone β we will tell you before we roll whether your vehicle is one we can do.
What are you driving?
Year, make, model. That one line decides the whole job. Call if it's urgent β it's faster.
Three eras of car key β and yours is one of them
What a replacement key involves comes down almost entirely to which of these three things is in your pocket. Worth thirty seconds to know which one you own.
A plain piece of cut metal
No electronics. The blade's cuts lift the pins in the ignition cylinder, the cylinder turns, the car starts. That is the whole system. Duplicated in minutes, and even with every copy gone we can decode the lock and cut a fresh one. The easy end of the trade.
Transponder chip in the plastic head
The blade still turns the cylinder, but a chip is now moulded into the head of the key. Turn the ignition and a coil around the lock energizes that chip; the chip answers with an ID; the immobilizer decides whether fuel and spark are allowed. This is why a hardware-store copy cranks and then dies a second later β the metal is right, the chip is missing. Cutting is half the job; the chip has to be written into the car through the OBD port.
Proximity smart fob
No blade in the ignition at all. The fob and the car hold a rolling encrypted conversation whenever you are near it β doors open for a fob the car trusts, and the start button works only when that fob is in the cabin. Most hide an emergency blade in the fob body, and most cars keep a backup coil behind the start button for a dead fob battery. Replacing one means writing a new key into the security module, and on some makes waiting out a built-in security timer first.
Duplicate vs. all keys lost
Two different jobs, and the gap between them is not small. It is the single most useful thing a driver can understand about car keys.
You still have a working key
Then we have a reference. The blade is duplicated from the original, and on most vehicles the existing key is what authorizes the car to accept a new one. A short visit.
Every key is gone
Now nothing on the car will vouch for us, so the key has to be built from scratch. We decode the door lock or ignition cylinder to read its wafer depths, or pull the factory key code from the VIN through the manufacturer's locksmith channel, then cut a fresh blade to that code. Only then do the electronics start: putting the immobilizer into a learn state and writing your new key or fob into it, at the vehicle, with the vehicle powered.
Which is the whole argument for the spare. A second key cut while the first one still works is a fraction of that. One key is not a key. It is a countdown.
Why the dealer is usually the wrong call from here
Nothing against them. It is a question of geography, and of what happens to your car.
Lose every key to a car sitting in Valparaiso and the dealer route starts with a tow. The car goes on a truck down Government Avenue or out SR 20 to Fort Walton Beach or Crestview, then sits in a queue until a service writer can fit it in. Eventually a technician programs a key to your immobilizer β the same operation, against the same OBD port, that we perform standing in your driveway.
The programming was never the hard part. Getting the car there is. We skip that step: the truck comes to the car, the key is cut and programmed where it sits, the car never leaves. For a truck stranded at the Lincoln Park ramp with a boat still on the trailer, that difference is the whole ballgame. There is a short list of exceptions, and we are honest about it below.
What we carry blanks and software for
Concretely. This is not a "we do all makes and models" wave of the hand β these are the vehicles this truck is actually stocked and licensed to handle in this town.
Fob care, bayou edition
Most "my key stopped working" calls in a waterfront town are not key problems at all. Three things account for nearly all of them.
Shrinking range is the battery
Nearly every fob on the road runs a CR2032 coin cell. If you used to unlock from across the parking lot and now have to be standing at the door, the fob is not failing β the cell is. Two-minute fix, and nothing needs reprogramming.
Water kills fobs. Permanently.
Do not take your only fob on the boat at the Lincoln Park ramp. Rice is folklore. The water is gone in a day but the corrosion stays on the board, and the fob usually dies a week or two later, in the driveway, on a Sunday. Carry the spare, leave the good one in the truck.
Worn rubber buttons
A fob that works only when you mash the button has a worn contact pad, not a dead battery. On many fobs the shell and pad can be swapped while keeping the electronics and the existing programming β cheaper than a new fob taught to the car from scratch.
The VPS call
The airport code on your DestinβFort Walton Beach boarding pass is VPS, and it stands for Valparaiso. Our town's name is printed on the luggage tag of everyone who flies into this county.
So we get a particular call, and we get it often: flew in, picked up the rental, loaded the bags, shut the door with the keys on the seat. Or worse β the rental fob is gone and the counter's answer is a tow and a swap that eats the first day of the trip.
We are minutes from that terminal. Non-destructive entry for a keys-inside lockout is on our emergency lockout page, and it is the faster of the two problems by a wide margin.
Anywhere your car actually is. See the full service area β
Proof of ownership β and why you want us to ask
Key programming happens at the vehicle. That is not a preference; it is how the work is done.
A new key is written into the car's own immobilizer, so the car must be there, powered, with our tool on its OBD port. And since we are about to hand somebody a working key to a vehicle, you must be there too β photo ID, plus registration, title, or an insurance card in your name matching the VIN on the dash.
Plainly: any locksmith willing to program a key to a car without checking who owns it is a locksmith you should not call. If we will do it for you with no questions, we will do it for the next person who points at your truck. The check takes a minute.
If the car is titled to a spouse, a parent, or a company, say so on the phone β solvable, but not something to discover in a parking lot at nine at night.
Car key questions we actually get
Can you make a car key if I lost every single one?
Yes, on most of the vehicles we carry. That is the all-keys-lost job: decode the lock or pull the key code from the VIN, cut a fresh blade, program it to the immobilizer at your location. Far more work than duplicating a key you still have β which is the whole argument for a spare.
Why does the hardware-store copy of my key crank but not start?
They copied the metal, not the chip. Since the mid-1990s the head of your key carries a transponder chip the car reads at the ignition. If the immobilizer does not recognize it, it cuts fuel and spark and the engine dies. The blade is right; the electronics were never programmed, and that has to happen at the vehicle.
Do I have to tow my car to a dealer in Fort Walton Beach?
Usually no. For the makes we carry we cut and program at your vehicle β the same immobilizer programming a dealer performs, minus the tow and the service queue. The exceptions are certain European makes and a few very late-model push-to-start systems needing dealer-only tooling or a security wait period. We tell you which one your car is on the phone.
My fob's range keeps getting shorter. Is the fob dying?
Almost certainly not β that is the CR2032 coin cell going flat. Shrinking range over a few weeks is the battery, not the fob and not the car. Swap the cell first. Sudden total failure after the fob got wet is a different story, and that one is usually terminal.
My fob went in the water at the boat ramp. Will rice save it?
No. Rice is a myth. The water is gone in a day but the corrosion it started on the board is not, and a soaked fob commonly works for a week or two and then quits for good. The rule on Boggy Bayou is simple: never take your only fob on the boat.
What do I need to have with me when you program a key?
Photo ID and proof the vehicle is yours β registration, title, or an insurance card in your name matching the VIN. You have to be present, because programming happens at the car. A locksmith who will program a key to a car without checking ownership is one you should never call, for the obvious reason.
Need a key made in Valparaiso?
Have the year, make and model ready. We will tell you straight whether it is a job we can do at your car β and if it is not, we will say so before you wait on us.
(850) 389-2182Not a car problem? We also handle house and business lockouts, rekeys and commercial hardware.