Rocklin, CA

Reliable Locksmith in Rocklin, CA

24-hour Emergency Services in Rocklin, CA

24 hour locksmith in Rocklin, CA Regal Locksmith can dispatch you a locksmith with only one phone call. A technician will usually take less than 30 minutes to arrive. The techs arrive with a full set of Industry standard kits in their van.

Residential Locksmith Services in Rocklin, CA

  • Locked out of home
  • Lock Replacements
  • New Door Lock Installation
  • Smart Door Lock Installation / Replacement
  • Rekeying Locks for Doors
  • Lock Repairs
  • Broken Key Extractions
  • Stuck Key Extraction
  • House Safe Lockouts

24 Hour Rocklin Commercial Locksmith

  • Office Building Lockouts
  • Master System Re-Key
  • New Lock Installation
  • Lock / Old Lock Repair
  • Cabinet Lock Unlock Services

Reliable Auto Locksmith Services in Rocklin, CA

  • Vehicle Lockout Services
  • Trunk lockouts
  • Car Door Unlocking Service
  • Remote Key Services
  • Program / Re-Program or Replace Key Fobs
  • Vehicle Key Cutting
  • Car key fob replacements
  • Duplicate Car Keys
  • Transponder Key Programming
  • Broken Car Key Extraction
  • Broken Ignition Replacement or Repair
  • Broken Ignition switch Replacement or Repair

Rocklin, CA Roots

Rocklin is a city in Placer County, California located approximately 22 miles (35 km) from Sacramento, California, and about 6.1 miles (9.8 km) northeast of Roseville in the Sacramento metropolitan area. Besides Roseville, it shares borders with Granite Bay, Loomis and Lincoln. As of the 2010 census, Rocklin’s population was 56,974. The California Department of Commerce placed the 2019 population at 69,249 with a 3.8% growth rate.

Prior to the California Gold Rush the Nisenan Maidu occupied both permanent villages and temporary summer shelters along the rivers and streams which miners sifted, sluiced, dredged and dammed to remove the gold.[5] Explorer Jedediah Smith and a large party of American fur trappers crossed the Sacramento Valley in late April, 1827. The group saw many Maidu villages along the river banks.[5] Deprived of traditional foodstuffs, homesites and hunting grounds by the emigrants, the Nisenan were among the earliest California Indian tribes to disappear.[5]