There's a lot of car security advice floating around, not all of it equally useful. Here's a realistic breakdown of what each option actually does — and doesn't do — for London drivers heading into 2026, where car theft is up 32% this year.
| Security Type | Stops Relay Theft? | Insurer Recognised? | Typical Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Steering lock | Partially — adds delay only | Rarely | £30-£80 |
| Dash cam | No — evidence only, after the fact | Sometimes (small discount) | £80-£250 |
| Signal-blocking key pouch | Mostly — depends on consistent use | No | £10-£20 |
| GPS tracker only | No — recovery only, not prevention | Yes (Thatcham S7) | £349-£400 |
| Hidden CAN BUS immobiliser | Yes — directly | Yes (Thatcham approved) | £499 |
Why prevention beats recovery
A tracker is genuinely useful — a 96% recovery rate for tracked vehicles is a real statistic — but it only helps after the car is already gone, with all the disruption and excess that involves. A hidden immobiliser stops the theft from succeeding in the first place, which is a meaningfully better outcome than a fast recovery.
Why key pouches aren't a complete answer
Signal-blocking pouches work, but only if used every single time, consistently, by everyone with access to a key. In practice, one forgotten pouch on one night is all a relay attack needs. A hidden immobiliser doesn't depend on remembering anything.
The strongest setup for 2026 combines a hidden immobiliser with a tracker — prevention first, recovery as the backup if it's ever needed.
What we'd actually recommend
For most London drivers, the Scorpion X CAN BUS immobiliser alone closes the single biggest gap in modern car security — relay theft and key cloning — for a one-off £499. If your vehicle is higher value or your insurer specifically requires tracking, pairing it with the Scorpion S5 combined tracker and immobiliser at £699 covers both prevention and recovery in one fitting.
Get the Right Setup for Your Car
We'll advise honestly on what your specific vehicle needs — no upselling.
Get My Free Quote →Frequently Asked Questions
Is a hidden immobiliser enough on its own?
For most London drivers, yes — it directly closes the exact gap that relay theft and key cloning exploit, which is the dominant theft method currently. Adding a tracker is about recovery, not prevention, if the immobiliser is ever somehow bypassed.
Are steering locks still worth using?
They add a visible deterrent and a small extra delay, but shouldn't be relied on as your main line of defence — they don't stop the ignition system being started via a relayed key signal.
Do insurers care which security option I choose?
Insurers specifically recognise Thatcham-approved categories. A hidden immobiliser and/or tracker with Thatcham approval is far more likely to earn a premium discount than a generic steering lock or dash cam.