Calabasas, CA

Reliable Locksmith in Calabasas, CA

24 Hour Services Throughout Calabasas, CA

Are you in need of a 24-hour locksmith in Calabasas, CA? Regal Locksmith can dispatch you a locksmith with only one phone call. A professional locksmith usually takes 30 minutes or less to arrive! The locksmiths come fully equipped with their van.

Residential Locksmith in Calabasas, CA

  • Emergency Home Lockout Services
  • Lock Replacements
  • New Door Lock Installation
  • Smart Door Lock Replacement & Installations
  • Rekeying Locks for Doors
  • Damaged Lock Repair
  • Broken Key Extractions
  • Stuck Key Extraction
  • House Safe Lockouts

Calabasas Commercial Locksmith Services

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

We also provide Auto Locksmith Services in Calabasas, CA

  • Car Lockout 24 Hour Services
  • Keys left in Trunk / Lockout
  • Vehicle Door Unlocks
  • Remote Key Services
  • Program / Re-Program or Replace Key Fobs
  • Car Key Cutting
  • Car Key Replacement
  • Duplicate Vehicle Keys
  • Transponder Key Programming
  • Broken Car Key Extraction
  • Broken Ignition Replacement or Repair
  • Broken Ignition switch Replacement or Repair

History of Calabasas, CA

Calabasas is a city in Los Angeles County, California, United States, located in the hills west of the San Fernando Valley and in the northwest Santa Monica Mountains between Woodland Hills, Agoura Hills, West Hills, Hidden Hills, and Malibu, California. The Leonis Adobe, an adobe structure in Old Town Calabasas, dates from 1844 and is one of the oldest surviving buildings in greater Los Angeles.[9][10] The city was formally incorporated in 1991. As of the 2010 census, the city’s population was 23,058, up from 20,033 at the 2000 census.[11]

It is generally accepted that the name of Calabasas is derived from the Spanish calabaza meaning “pumpkin”, “squash”, or “gourd”[12] (cf. calabash). Some historians hold the theory that Calabasas is derived from the Chumash word calahoosa which is said to mean “where the wild geese fly.”[13] Owing to vast presence of wild squash plants in the area, the squash theory is more prevalent among local residents. At the top of the Calabasas grade, which is east of Las Virgenes Road on the original El Camino Real, legend has it that in 1824, a Basque rancher from Oxnard spilled a wagonload of pumpkins on the road en route to Los Angeles. The following spring, hundreds of pumpkin seeds sprouted alongside the road. The area was named Las Calabasas—the place where the pumpkins fell.[14]