Personal Defence
Personal alarms, door blockers, tactical whistles and pocket alarms for legal deterrence in Canada.
Recommended products
Products reviewed by the EmergencyKitLab Canada team using civil protection and Red Cross guidance as baseline references
Stop Attack Anti-Aggression Spray, 40 ML
16,90 €
4.4 (943)
DoorJammer Portable Door-Locking Brace for Home Security and Personal Protection (DJ4LD - DoorJammer (Lockdown))
Más opciones de compra
50,36 €
4.2 (935)
HOERNECKE Criminal Identifier Spray Tiw Dye-Gel 20 ML
16,99 €
4.4 (831)
Stop Attack Anti-Aggression Spray 20 ml - The Definitive Solution for Maximum Safety - Effective, Fast and Deterrent - Stops and Identifies - 4-Metre Range
17,99 €
4.3 (803)
Defender Security U 11317 Swing-Bar Door Guard with Auxiliary High-Security Lock, Classic Bronze Finish, 1-Pack
o
26,37 €
4.6 (739)
Fast Prime delivery
Acme Acmet2000 Whistle, Unisex - Adults, Orange, One Size
9,95 €
4.5 (714)
Fast Prime delivery
Amig, Security Shield Mod.31, Steel, Reinforced Sintered-Steel Body, Anti-Drill, Matte Black, For Doors min. 40 mm Thick, 65 mm Diameter Keyhole
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14,94 €
4.4 (674)
Fast Prime delivery
Lvcky - Door Security Bolt (1 unit), Black
18,99 €
4.3 (648)
keypak Suffolk - Thumb-Latch with Double-Sided Locking Pin, Antique Black, 11.5 x 20 x 4.5 cm
15,68 €
4.2 (507)
Lince 4940HL Supra Simply I Deadbolt with Gold Finish I No Exterior Cylinder I Locking Secured by 3 Bolts I Fast, Effective Opening.
Más opciones de compra
45,81 €
4.6 (412)
Defender Security U 11318 Swing-Bar Door Guard with Auxiliary High-Security Lock, Chrome Finish, Pack of 1, 1 pack
o
21,91 €
4.4 (372)
Fast Prime delivery
SALEWA Alpine Tuber - Belay/Rappel Device, Blue
23,99 €
4.8 (301)
Fast Prime delivery
Prime-Line Products U 10827 Door Blocker, Entry Door Stop, Satin Nickel
Más opciones de compra
25,88 €
4.7 (276)
Fast Prime delivery
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Editorial verdict
If you do only one thing, choose a personal defence option you already know how to use and keep it easy to reach. The most expensive setup is not automatically the right one. Use the EmergencyKitLab Canada planner to size the rest of your household setup correctly.
Our planner calculates exactly what you need based on your situation, headcount, and scenario.
Build your personalized planHow to choose personal defence: what actually matters
Emergency gear should be judged by reliability under stress, not by feature count. If it fails when power is out, hands are cold, or you are tired, the spec sheet does not matter.
Start from your real scenario: sheltering at home, evacuating quickly, covering one person, or covering a whole household. Duration, storage space, and redundancy needs change the right choice completely.
Prioritize gear you can operate without rereading instructions. Simpler setups usually beat more complex ones in real household emergencies.
EmergencyKitLab Canada filters for practical usefulness, stable availability, and review history. That does not make every pick perfect, but it does remove a lot of low-signal catalog noise.
Common mistakes when buying personal defence
Most purchasing mistakes are predictable. Catching them early saves money and makes the kit more usable when things go wrong.
Buying before defining the scenario
A home blackout setup, a car kit, and a go-bag solve different problems. If you skip that distinction, you usually overspend and still miss key gaps.
Assuming more gear means better preparedness
Extra items add weight, clutter, and maintenance. A smaller setup you understand is usually stronger than a larger one you never test.
Ignoring household-specific needs
Children, older adults, medications, pets, and limited storage all change what makes sense. Generic shopping lists miss those details.
Forgetting rotation and maintenance
Batteries discharge, consumables expire, and products drift to the back of a closet. If you never review the setup, it will quietly degrade.
How to maintain and rotate personal defence
Preparedness gear is not a one-time purchase. It needs periodic review so it still works when you actually depend on it.
Tie the review to a memorable date such as the start of storm season, New Year, or a daylight-saving change. Check consumables, test powered items, and replace anything expired or damaged.
Use simple rotation rules for food, hygiene items, and medical supplies. The oldest items should be the first ones out.
The EmergencyKitLab Canada planner is useful here too: it gives you a stable reference for how much to restock after each review cycle.