Stun Master Mini Personal Alarm with LED Flashlight and Belt Clip 120dB – Keychain or Pocket Carry, 3 LR44 Batteries Included, Black or Pink, 3 x 1.5 x 0.5 Inches

$8.95

Buy with Confidence
Covered by a 30-Day Money Back Guarantee. If it's not right for you, returns are easy and hassle-free.

Secure Checkout - Satisfaction Guaranteed - Money Back Guarantee

Secure checkout • 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed • 30 Day Money Back Guarantee • Easy Returns • Fast Customer Support

Small enough to clip on a belt or drop in a pocket, loud enough to get everyone within a block’s attention. The 120dB alarm activates fast and shuts off with a button press when you’re done — no fumbling, no accidental lockouts. The built-in LED flashlight is there when you need a little extra light, and the whole thing runs on three included LR44 batteries.

  • 120 decibels — genuinely loud; produces immediate, startling attention in any public setting
  • LED flashlight built in — useful for parking lots, stairwells, or any low-light situation
  • Multiple carry options — belt clip, keychain, pocket, or purse
  • Simple activation — one clearly placed button turns it on and off
  • 3 LR44 batteries included — 3 x 1.5 x 0.5 inches, 0.1 lbs, available in black and pink

120 Decibels in Something That Fits in Your Pocket

The value of a personal alarm isn’t complicated — it’s loud, it draws attention, and most people who are up to no good don’t want attention drawn to them. A 120dB alarm is about the same volume as a chainsaw or a thunderclap close by. Hard to ignore. Hard to pretend you didn’t hear it. That’s the whole mechanism, and it works without requiring any physical confrontation, training, or permits.

What makes this one worth having is the size. At 3 inches by 1.5 by 0.5, it’s genuinely small — clips on a belt or keychain without adding bulk, or just drops in a jacket pocket. You’ll actually have it with you, which is the only thing that matters.

Who This Personal Alarm Is For

Honestly, a pretty wide range of people. Anyone who spends time walking alone, getting to their car late at night, or traveling through unfamiliar areas has use for one of these. College students, people who walk dogs after dark, nurses finishing night shifts, older adults who want something they can operate quickly without strength or training.

It’s also one of the few self-defense tools that’s legal essentially everywhere, goes through airport security without issue, and doesn’t require any explanation. Just a small clip-on device that makes a lot of noise when you need it to.

The pink version gets a lot of use as a gift for someone who’d never ask for a self-defense tool but would appreciate having one. Non-intimidating, practical, and easy to use.

Is This the Right Choice for You?

Choose this personal alarm if you want:

  • Something completely legal everywhere with no permits or restrictions
  • A tool that works without physical contact or any training
  • Compact size that actually goes on your keychain or belt and stays there
  • A low-intimidation option for someone who doesn’t want to carry pepper spray or a stun gun

Consider something else if you need:

  • Active deterrence — an alarm draws attention but doesn’t physically stop anyone
  • Ranged protection in isolated areas — pepper spray or a stun gun gives you more direct options where no one else is around to hear an alarm

How It Works and Why the Details Matter

Activation is a single button press — clearly located, nothing to figure out in a stressful moment. Deactivation is the same button. No pin to pull, no switch sequence, no mode cycling. That simplicity matters. The last thing you want is to be fumbling with a device you can’t remember how to operate.

The 120dB output is the key spec here. For reference, 85dB is the threshold where prolonged exposure causes hearing damage — 120dB is well above that. It’s the kind of sound that makes people stop and look. In a public setting, that immediate attention is often enough to resolve a situation before anything else happens.

The belt/visor clip is a small thing that makes a real difference in whether you actually carry it. Gear that lives in a bag tends to stay in the bag. Gear that clips to your belt or keychain is just there — no decision required.

The LED flashlight is a bonus that earns its keep. Not flashlight-grade bright, but useful enough for a dark parking garage or a walk to the car. Running on three LR44 batteries that are included, so it’s ready to use out of the box.

Quick Comparison: How Does This Personal Alarm Stack Up?

Feature Mini Personal Alarm Pepper Spray Stun Gun Safety Whistle
Volume / Deterrence 120dB ✓ N/A Arc sound only ~100–110dB
Requires Training No ✓ Minimal Some ✓ No ✓
Legal Everywhere Yes ✓ Most states Many states Yes ✓
TSA / Air Travel Yes ✓ Carry-on restrictions No Yes ✓
Built-in Flashlight Yes ✓ No Some models ✓ No
Best For Universal carry, any age or ability Active deterrence with standoff range Physical deterrence, higher output Minimal carry, no batteries

Practical Details

Dimensions: 3 inches x 1.5 inches x 0.5 inches. Weight: 0.1 lbs. Output: 120 decibels. Power: 3 LR44 batteries (included). Includes belt and visor clip; also attaches to a keychain. Available in black and pink. Legal for carry in all U.S. states and TSA-compliant for air travel. No permits required.

For fifteen bucks or so, it clips on your keychain and disappears into your day — and 120 decibels is genuinely loud enough to matter if you ever need it.

Frequently Asked Questions

How loud is 120 decibels really?

It’s the equivalent of a car alarm or a thunderclap at close range. It’s the kind of sound that makes people physically flinch and turn to look — not background noise you can tune out. In a public space, it draws immediate, unavoidable attention. Even in a moderately populated area, 120dB carries far enough that people in nearby buildings or across a parking lot will hear it clearly.

Can I take this through airport security?

Yes. Personal alarms are TSA-compliant and can travel in carry-on bags without issue. Unlike pepper spray, which is restricted to checked luggage, or stun guns, which generally can’t fly at all, a personal alarm is just an electronic noisemaker as far as TSA is concerned. Good to have when you’re traveling somewhere unfamiliar.

How long do the batteries last?

LR44 batteries in a device you’re not running constantly will last a long time — often a year or more with typical use. The alarm draws significant power when it’s active, but standby drain between uses is minimal. Worth replacing the batteries once a year as a habit, or any time you notice the alarm sounding weaker than usual. Replacement LR44s are available at any hardware or pharmacy.

Is this better than just yelling for help?

For most people, yes — for a few reasons. A 120dB alarm is louder than most people can yell and doesn’t require breath, composure, or sustained effort. It also sounds unmistakably like an alarm, which signals to bystanders that something is wrong rather than leaving them to interpret what they’re hearing. Under stress, most people’s voices don’t carry the way they expect. Having a device that does the job regardless is more reliable.

Battery3 LR44 (Included)
IncludedBelt / Visor Clip

Additional information