Washington, DC is a top-tier private security market driven by the federal government and its vast base of agencies and contractors, the diplomatic corps, and a dense downtown office core. Federal buildings and their contractors, embassies and international missions, K Street law firms, lobbying shops and trade associations, think tanks, and universities like Georgetown, GWU, Howard and American drive constant demand for professional lobby and access-control posts, credential and visitor management, and after-hours patrol. The Smithsonian museums, national monuments and a heavy tourism calendar, sports and events at Capital One Arena and Nationals Park, hospital campuses, and frequent demonstrations and large public gatherings add event, crowd-management and public-facing coverage across wards from downtown and the Golden Triangle to Capitol Hill, Georgetown, NoMa and the Wharf. Because DC has some of the strictest firearm laws in the country, the overwhelming majority of contract security is unarmed — armed posts require Metropolitan Police Department firearm registration and a Special Police Officer commission — and many firms serving the District are headquartered in the Maryland and Virginia suburbs but licensed to operate in DC.
How to choose a security company in Washington
Before you hire, verify that the company holds an active license with its state licensing board (such as California's BSIS or Illinois's IDFPR), carries liability insurance and employs properly licensed guards. On HireSecurityNow.com you can compare companies in Washington using official licensing data and request free quotes, so you can pick the provider that best fits your needs and budget.
DUNBAR GUARD SERVICE, INC.
State Licensed
Washington, DC
Security GuardsEvent SecurityResidential & HOA Security+7
State Licensed (multi-state) — active license confirmed with the state licensing board; operates in two or more states.State Licensed — active license on file with its state's licensing board (most local companies).Verification pending — company listed from public business records; its license hasn't been confirmed yet.
Frequently asked questions about private security in Washington
What license do security guards in Washington, DC need?
Washington, DC licenses private security through the Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection (DLCP), in its Occupational and Professional Licensing division — not a California-style guard card. A company that supplies guards must hold a Security Agency Business license (and a Private Detective Business license for investigative work), and individual officers are licensed as Security Officers. Armed officers and Special Police Officers (SPOs) are a separate, tightly controlled category: they are commissioned and overseen by the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) Security Officers Management Branch (SOMB), and armed officers must additionally complete MPD firearm registration. Many firms serving the District are headquartered in the Maryland or Virginia suburbs but must be licensed to operate in DC — always confirm a company's DC license before hiring.
What security do federal agencies, contractors and embassies drive in Washington, DC?
The District's economy centers on the federal government and its agencies and contractors, the diplomatic corps of embassies and international missions, and K Street's law firms, lobbying shops and trade associations, alongside think tanks and universities like Georgetown, GWU, Howard and American. That mix drives heavy demand for professional lobby and reception posts, integrated access control and badging, credential and visitor management, and after-hours patrol — much of it in compliance-conscious, high-scrutiny environments. Officers here must present well and be trained in controlled-entry protocols and de-escalation, so look for a DLCP-licensed Security Agency experienced in government-adjacent, corporate and diplomatic settings.
Is contract security in Washington, DC armed or unarmed?
Washington, DC has some of the strictest firearm laws in the country, so armed contract security is limited and the overwhelming majority of officers are unarmed. An armed post requires MPD firearm registration and a Special Police Officer (SPO) commission overseen by the Metropolitan Police Department's Security Officers Management Branch (SOMB) — a higher bar than in most states. Most lobby, access-control, event and patrol work in the District is handled by unarmed, DLCP-licensed Security Officers, and buyers who assume they need armed coverage should discuss whether an unarmed program with strong access control and police coordination meets the need instead.
How much does it cost to hire private security in Washington, DC?
Washington, DC is a high-cost, top-tier market, comparable to other major coastal metros and driven by federal, corporate and diplomatic demand. A standing unarmed guard post over a 12-hour daily shift runs a monthly rate built on prevailing local DC wages before markup; armed (SPO), event and higher-clearance work bills higher, while shared mobile patrol costs far less per property. Because many providers are based in the Maryland and Virginia suburbs, request two or three quotes from DLCP-licensed agencies and compare scope and service quality.
How many private security companies are there in Washington?
Our directory lists 522 security guard and private security companies in Washington. Most hold an active license with their state licensing board (such as California BSIS or Illinois IDFPR) and offer on-site security guards, executive protection, corporate security, mobile patrol and alarm monitoring.
How are security companies in Washington ranked?
Companies are ranked on merit: those with a verified, active state license come first, followed by verified reviews and track record. Reviews count 7 days after they're published. If you only want to see companies with a verified license, check the list of state licensed security companies in Washington.
How much does it cost to hire private security in Washington?
Costs vary by service type. A security guard post in Washington runs between $9,200 and $15,000 per month for a 12h daily post; an executive protection agent between $17,000 and $40,000 per month; event security between $40 and $69 per guard per hour. We recommend requesting 2-3 quotes to compare.
What services do private security companies in Washington offer?
Security companies in Washington offer on-site security guards, armed security, mobile patrol, event security, executive protection, corporate security, warehouse and industrial security, residential and HOA security, alarm monitoring, video surveillance and security consulting. Each profile details the specific services each provider offers.
How do I verify that a security company in Washington is licensed?
Each profile shows the company's license status and, where available, its license number. You can cross-check it on your state licensing board's public lookup — the Bureau of Security and Investigative Services (BSIS) in California or the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (IDFPR) in Illinois. If a company doesn't appear in the registry, or its license shows as expired, suspended or revoked, don't hire it.
How do I request security quotes in Washington?
Use our quote form to describe what you need (type of service, area within Washington, shifts, number of guards) and we share your request with licensed companies so interested providers can contact you with a quote. It's 100% free with no obligation.
How quickly can I hire private security in Washington?
For standard services like on-site guards or alarm monitoring, coverage can typically start within 48-72 hours of accepting a quote. For specialized services (executive protection, large events), expect 5-10 business days for personnel selection, screening and site onboarding.
What's the risk of hiring an unlicensed security company in Washington?
If an incident occurs involving personnel from an unlicensed company, you can face negligent-hiring liability. Unlicensed operators also frequently lack certified training, guard registration (guard cards) and active liability insurance, and states can fine businesses that knowingly use them. Always verify the state license before signing a contract.