Panic Buttons and Duress Alarms for Home Safety
Panic buttons and personal duress alarms can add an important layer of safety for homes, seniors, carers, families and people who may need help quickly during an emergency. While a standard home alarm is designed to detect intruders, a panic or duress alarm is designed to let the user manually trigger an alert when they feel unsafe, unwell or under threat.
For many households, a panic button can be a simple but powerful addition to a home security system. It can be installed near a bedside, reception-style home office, garage, hallway or carried as a portable device, depending on the alarm system and the type of support required.
At CTC Communications, we supply a range of panic buttons and personal duress alarms for home, business, aged care, lone worker and personal safety applications.

What Is a Panic Button?
A panic button is a security device that allows a person to manually trigger an emergency alert. Depending on the system, pressing the panic button may activate the alarm, send a signal to the alarm panel, notify users through an app, or report an event to a monitoring centre if the alarm is professionally monitored.
Panic buttons are commonly used in homes, offices, retail shops, medical centres, aged care settings and workplaces where a fast emergency alert may be needed.
They may be installed as:
- Wall-mounted panic buttons
- Portable panic remotes
- Wireless emergency buttons
- Wearable pendants or wristband-style devices
- Under-desk duress or holdup switches
- Dual-button panic devices designed to reduce accidental activation
What Is a Duress Alarm?
A duress alarm is designed to raise an alert when a person needs help due to a threatening, unsafe or emergency situation. The term “duress alarm” is often used for personal safety, staff safety, lone worker protection, reception counters, retail environments and high-risk situations where discreet activation may be important.
For home safety, a duress alarm may be useful for elderly residents, people living alone, people recovering from illness or surgery, carers, or families wanting a simple way to call for help in an emergency.
Panic Buttons vs Personal Duress Alarms
| Feature | Panic Button | Personal Duress Alarm |
|---|---|---|
| Main Purpose | Quick manual alarm activation | Personal safety alert when the user needs assistance |
| Typical Use | Bedrooms, offices, counters, reception areas and fixed emergency points | Seniors, lone workers, carers, vulnerable users and people on the move |
| Device Style | Fixed button, remote, wireless button or under-desk switch | Pendant, wearable device, portable emergency button or monitored personal safety device |
| Best For | Fast access to alarm activation in a known location | Personal emergency support at home, work or while moving around |
Why Panic Buttons Are Useful for Home Safety
A home alarm is usually activated by a detector, reed switch or keypad command. A panic button gives the user a direct way to call for help, even if the alarm has not detected an intrusion.
This can be valuable in situations such as:
- A person feels unsafe inside the home
- An elderly resident has a medical or personal safety concern
- A family member needs help quickly
- Someone is working alone from a home office
- A carer needs to raise an alert
- A garage, workshop or detached area needs a simple emergency button
- A bedroom or bedside needs quick-access emergency activation
For many families, panic buttons are not just about intruder alarms. They are also about giving vulnerable users a simple and familiar way to request help when they need it.
Where Can Panic Buttons Be Installed at Home?
The best location depends on the user, property layout and alarm system. A professional installer can help choose practical locations where the device is easy to reach but not likely to be pressed accidentally.
Common locations include:
- Beside the bed
- Near a main living area
- Inside a home office
- Near a garage internal access door
- Inside a workshop or shed
- At a front reception-style desk in a home business
- Near a bathroom or hallway for elderly residents, where suitable
- As a portable button or wearable pendant for personal use

Wired vs Wireless Panic Buttons
Panic buttons are available in both wired and wireless formats. The right option depends on whether you are installing a new alarm system, upgrading an existing alarm, or adding a device to a compatible wireless system.
Wired Panic Buttons
Wired panic buttons are often suitable for new builds, renovations, commercial sites or locations where cabling can be installed neatly. They can be a reliable option for fixed locations such as counters, desks or bedside panic points.
Wireless Panic Buttons
Wireless panic buttons can be easier to add to existing homes and businesses, provided they are compatible with the alarm system. They are useful where cabling is difficult, or where a portable or wearable option is preferred.
Hikvision Emergency Buttons for AX Pro Alarms
Hikvision offers wireless emergency button options for compatible AX Pro alarm systems. These can be a good choice for homes, offices, elderly users, carers and lone workers who want a simple emergency activation device connected to a modern wireless alarm platform.
Hikvision emergency buttons may include fixed and portable options, single-button models and dual-button models designed to reduce accidental activation. When connected to a compatible Hikvision alarm system and configured correctly, emergency button activations may also generate smartphone notifications through the Hik-Connect app.
Browse Hikvision Wireless Emergency Buttons for compatible AX Pro panic and personal safety options.

NEVERalone® Personal Emergency Location Devices
For users who need personal safety support beyond a standard alarm panic button, the NEVERalone® Personal Emergency Location Device may be a more suitable option.
NEVERalone® is designed for personal emergency support and is ideal for seniors, people living independently, lone workers and vulnerable users who may need monitored assistance. It is a personal emergency pendant-style solution that can support emergency alerts, location reporting where available and 24/7 monitored safety support.
This type of device may be a better fit when the user needs safety support outside the immediate range of a home alarm system, or where a personal monitored emergency device is preferred over a fixed panic button.
Who Should Consider a Panic Button or Duress Alarm?
Panic buttons and personal duress alarms can be useful for many different people and properties. They are commonly considered for:
- Seniors living independently
- People with medical or mobility concerns
- People recovering from surgery or illness
- Carers and family members supporting elderly relatives
- Lone workers
- Home offices and small businesses
- Retail counters and service desks
- Reception areas and clinics
- Warehouses, workshops and back-of-house areas
- Homes wanting an additional personal safety option
Can Panic Buttons Be Monitored?
Yes, depending on the alarm system and monitoring setup. A panic or duress alarm event can be configured to report through an alarm system to a monitoring centre if the system is set up for back-to-base monitoring.
This is important because a local siren or smartphone alert may not be enough in every situation. With back-to-base alarm monitoring, alarm events can be reported and actioned according to nominated response instructions.
For personal emergency devices such as NEVERalone®, professional monitoring is usually a key part of the safety solution.
Do Panic Buttons Replace Emergency Services?
No. Panic buttons and duress alarms are safety support devices, not a replacement for calling emergency services directly in a life-threatening emergency. If there is an immediate threat to life or safety, call 000 where it is safe and possible to do so.
A panic button can still be valuable because it provides another way to raise an alert, especially if the user cannot easily reach a phone, is in distress, or needs a simple emergency activation option.

Choosing the Right Panic Button for Your Alarm System
Not every panic button works with every alarm system. Compatibility is important, especially when choosing wireless panic buttons, portable remotes or branded emergency buttons.
Before buying, check:
- Which alarm system brand and model you have
- Whether the panic button is wired or wireless
- Whether the device needs a receiver, hub or control panel
- Whether you want fixed, portable or wearable activation
- Whether accidental activation protection is required
- Whether app alerts or monitoring response are required
- Whether the device is for home, business, aged care or lone worker use
CTC Communications can help recommend a compatible panic button or duress alarm based on your existing security system and safety needs.
Professional Installation and Setup
Professional setup is recommended for panic buttons and duress alarms because the device must be correctly paired, programmed and tested. The installer can also confirm whether the alarm event is local-only, app-notified, monitored or assigned to a specific response pathway.
Professional setup can help with:
- Choosing the correct compatible device
- Correct placement for quick access
- Reducing accidental activation
- Pairing wireless buttons to the alarm system
- Programming panic or duress zones
- Testing alarm activation and notifications
- Configuring monitoring response where required
- Explaining how the device works to the user or family
Our Recommendation
For homes and small businesses that already have a compatible alarm system, a panic button can be a simple and affordable way to add a fast emergency activation option. For Hikvision AX Pro users, Hikvision wireless emergency buttons are worth considering because they integrate with compatible AX Pro alarm systems and app notifications.
For seniors, lone workers or vulnerable users who need personal emergency support beyond the home alarm system, NEVERalone® may be a better fit because it is designed as a personal emergency location and monitored safety device.
If you are unsure which option is best, start with the main Panic Buttons and Duress Alarms collection, then compare whether a fixed alarm panic button, Hikvision emergency button or NEVERalone® personal emergency device is the right solution for your situation.
Need Help Choosing a Panic Button or Duress Alarm?
CTC Communications can help you choose a compatible panic button, wireless emergency button or personal duress solution for your home, business, elderly family member or lone worker safety needs.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a panic button used for?
A panic button is used to manually trigger an emergency alarm or alert when assistance is needed. It may be used in homes, offices, retail stores, medical centres, aged care settings and personal safety applications.
What is the difference between a panic button and a duress alarm?
A panic button is usually the physical device used to trigger an alert. A duress alarm refers to the broader safety function of raising an alert when a person feels threatened, unsafe or needs urgent assistance.
Can panic buttons be used at home?
Yes. Panic buttons can be used at home for seniors, people living alone, bedrooms, home offices, garages, carers, family safety and emergency support.
Do Hikvision emergency buttons work with AX Pro?
Yes. Hikvision wireless emergency buttons are designed for compatible Hikvision AX Pro alarm systems. They can trigger emergency alerts through the control panel and may send smartphone notifications when configured with the Hik-Connect app.
Is NEVERalone® the same as a panic button?
NEVERalone® is a personal emergency location device rather than a standard alarm panic button. It may be better suited to seniors, lone workers or vulnerable users who need a monitored personal safety device.
Can a panic button be monitored?
Yes, depending on the alarm system and monitoring setup. A panic or duress alarm event can be configured to report to a monitoring centre if the alarm system is connected to back-to-base monitoring.
Should I choose a wired or wireless panic button?
Wired panic buttons are ideal for fixed locations and new installations where cabling is available. Wireless panic buttons are often easier to add to existing homes and compatible wireless alarm systems.

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