What Makes a Gun Safe Actually Safe

Does the industry get it wrong?

A gun safe is often judged by thickness of steel, fire ratings, or advertised capacity. None of those metrics define how safely firearms are actually stored or accessed.
Real safety is determined by how a storage system performs in real conditions — during access, under stress, and over years of use.
 

Security Is Only One Part of Safety

 
Physical security matters, but it is not the whole equation. A safe that is difficult to access, damages equipment, or forces unsafe handling practices introduces new risks while attempting to mitigate others.
A truly safe system balances:
• controlled access
• predictable retrieval
• equipment protection
• responsible placement
• adaptability over time
Ignoring any one of these creates failure elsewhere.
 

Access Under Stress Is Non-Negotiable

 
In force-on-force training, one pattern is consistent: fine motor skills degrade rapidly under stress. Systems that require precise inputs, awkward movements, or multiple steps fail when they are needed most.
Storage that requires rifles to be shifted, tilted, or navigated around obstacles increases cognitive load and error rates. Safe storage must support gross-motor, intuitive access — not fight it.
 
 

Interior Design Matters More Than Steel Thickness

 
Most gun safes fail on the inside. Fixed shelves, carpeted walls, and notched rests create friction, collisions, and damage. They also prevent reconfiguration as firearms evolve.
A safe interior must support firearms vertically, isolate them from each other, and provide clear access paths. Without that, exterior security is undermined by interior chaos.
 

Safe Placement Is Part of Safety

 
A single large safe placed in a predictable location creates a single point of failure. Modern safety favors intelligent placement — sometimes centralized, sometimes distributed — based on how firearms are actually used and accessed.
Storage that supports flexible placement improves both security and readiness.
 

Defining “Actually Safe”

 
A gun safe is actually safe when it:
• protects firearms from damage • supports clean, predictable access • works under stress • adapts as firearms and gear change • integrates responsibly into the home
 

Technical References

• FBI LEOKA — Stress response and access performance
• NIJ Human Factors Research — Motor-skill degradation under threat
• UL RSC Standards — Scope limitations
• MIT Motion Efficiency Studies — Reduced motion equals reduced error

This series breaks down modern gun storage into clear, practical concepts:

Modern Gun Storage

The Problem With Old-Style Gun Safes
Modernizing Home Gun Storage
Military Principles Applied to the Home
• What Makes a Gun Safe Actually Safe

tom gun wall

By Line

Tom Kubiniec is the President and CEO of SecureIt Tactical. He is considered the leading authority on small arms storage and armory design. SecureIt is the global leader in military weapon storage. Tom has spent decades designing, evaluating, and correcting weapon storage systems, including the modernization of armories used by U.S. military and law-enforcement units. Kubiniec is the inventor of CradleGrid® Technology, a modular weapon-storage system developed to replace the fixed interiors and poor access common in traditional military weapon racks and gun safes. His work centers on building storage systems that protect equipment, allow clean and repeatable access, and remain functional as firearms and gear change over time.