Access Hubs & Controllers

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  • Ubiquiti UA-G3-SK-GATE Access kit with Hub, Intercom, PoE++ - Image 3

    Ubiquiti

    SKU: UA-G3-SK-GATE

    Ubiquiti UA-G3-SK-GATE Access kit with Hub, Intercom, PoE++

    Complete gate access kit with hub, intercom, and PoE++ power

    • IP65-rated polycarbonate hub survives outdoor gate installs without added weatherproofing.
    • PoE++ (802.3bt) output powers the bundled G3 Intercom and one additional access device.
    • DIN-rail mount and pre-matched hub/intercom bundle eliminate separate controller sourcing.
    $819.99
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  • Image coming soon

    Ubiquiti

    SKU: UA-G3-SK-PRO

    Ubiquiti UA-G3-SK-PRO cont. for 1 door with 2 readers, AppleTP

    Single-door access control with dual readers, PoE powered

    • Single 802.3bt PoE++ cable delivers power and data, eliminating low-voltage conduit runs.
    • Dual-reader support enables badge+PIN or NFC multi-factor auth on one door controller.
    • IP54-rated enclosure with ±15kV ESD protection suits electrically noisy install environments.
    $599.00 $576.99 Save $22.01
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  • Ubiquiti UA-HUB-DOOR Mech that provides entry and exit cont - Image 3

    Ubiquiti

    SKU: UA-HUB-DOOR

    Ubiquiti UA-HUB-DOOR Single-Door Access Control Hub

    Single-door access hub with PoE++ power for UniFi ecosystems

    • PoE++ (802.3bt) powered—no separate supply needed, simplifying conduit runs.
    • Five Gigabit ports support readers and downstream devices from a single hub.
    • UL 294 and NDAA compliant for regulated facilities and federal-eligible deployments.
    $204.99
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  • Ubiquiti UA-HUB-DOOR-MINI Compact Access Control Hub for 1 door

    Ubiquiti

    SKU: UA-HUB-DOOR-MINI

    Ubiquiti UA-HUB-DOOR-MINI Compact Access Control Hub for 1 door

    Single-door access control hub with PoE++ power and DIN rail mount

    • PoE++ (802.3bt) at 19W eliminates separate power supplies for single-door deployments.
    • DIN rail mount (113 × 66 × 27.6 mm) fits IDF closets and wall-mounted cable trays.
    • UL 294, FCC, CE, and NDAA compliance satisfies enterprise and government procurement requirements.
    $129.00 $128.99 Save $0.01
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  • Ubiquiti UA-HUB-GATE adv Gate Hub for seamless gate access - Image 2

    Ubiquiti

    SKU: UA-HUB-GATE

    Ubiquiti UA-HUB-GATE adv Gate Hub for seamless gate access

    Compact UniFi Access hub for distributed gate control with PoE++

    • Single PoE++ (802.3bt) uplink powers the hub and delivers 55W across four PoE+ ports.
    • Two dry-relay outputs (30V DC, 1A) drive electric strikes or mag-locks without external modules.
    • Rated –30 to 60°C with DIN-rail mount; UL 294, FCC, CE, and NDAA certified for deployment.
    $282.99
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Access Hubs & Controllers

Centralized access control hubs connecting multiple door controllers, readers, and I/O modules into a unified management plane. Aggregate door events, firmware updates, and policy changes across enterprise sites.

Plan Your Deployment

  • Define total door count and geographic distribution of sites
  • Evaluate hub-to-controller communication: IP, RS-485, or cloud
  • Plan redundant hub deployment for failover in multi-site architectures

Access Hubs & Controllers — Engineering-Grade Access Control for Commercial Deployments

This category covers 30 working models of access hubs & controllers sourced manufacturer-direct or through channel-direct US distribution. Build the rest of your system around the architectural choices below — compatibility, environmental rating, and lifecycle decisions made here propagate through every downstream component you specify.

What to Look For

Door count today versus expansion in 5 years dictates controller architecture. Single-door PoE controllers (HID Aero, Axis A1601) are economical for small sites and scale linearly. Multi-door panels (Mercury, Lenel S2, Kantech KT-400) consolidate hardware and reduce per-door cost on large deployments but require upfront commitment to a head-end platform. Plan capacity to absorb growth without ripping out boards mid-life.

Credential strategy locks you to a reader and controller ecosystem. Modern 13.56 MHz options (HID iCLASS Seos, Mifare DESFire EV2/EV3, OSDP-native) resist cloning that 125 kHz prox cards do not. Mobile credentials (HID Mobile Access, LEAF, Bluetooth/NFC) demand readers that support secure transports. If you anticipate migrating credentials, choose controllers and readers that accept multiple formats and OSDP from the start.

Integration with your video, intrusion, and identity systems is the long-tail cost. Native ONVIF Profile A (access control) is uncommon; most integrations rely on vendor APIs, scripted IFTTT-style bridges, or middleware. Confirm controller-to-VMS and controller-to-active-directory integration paths before you commit — retrofitting these later is expensive.

Power, network, and physical mounting requirements vary widely. Some controllers run on 12VDC, others on 24VAC, others on PoE+. Door-frame mounting versus closet/rack mounting changes wire-pull strategy. Budget for door hardware (electrified locks, strikes, REX, door position) and the secondary power supply with battery backup that fire code requires on egress doors.

Key Specs in This Category

SpecAvailable Options
Resolution8MP, 2MP
IP RatingIP67, IP54, IP65, IP55, IP66
ConnectivityWired, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi
PowerAC/DC, PoE, PoE++, PoE+, Battery
TypeAccess Point, Controller, Reader, Access Controller, Enclosure, PTZ, Dome, Accessory

Top Brands in This Category

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between OSDP and Wiegand?

Wiegand is the legacy reader-to-controller protocol — open, unencrypted, vulnerable to spoofing and limited to short cable runs. OSDP (Open Supervised Device Protocol) is the modern replacement: encrypted, bidirectional, supports tamper detection and firmware updates, and runs reliably over longer distances. SIA SP1/SP2 designations indicate OSDP Secure Channel support. New deployments should specify OSDP everywhere unless legacy infrastructure forces Wiegand.

Can I use one controller across multiple buildings?

Most modern IP-based controllers can manage geographically distributed doors as long as network connectivity to the head-end is reliable. However, doors at remote sites lose access decision capability if WAN goes down unless the controller supports offline mode and caches valid credentials locally. For multi-site deployments, choose controllers with documented offline operation and consider redundant head-ends for compliance-sensitive industries.

How many credentials can a typical controller hold?

Entry-level controllers hold 5,000-10,000 credentials. Mid-range hold 50,000-100,000. Enterprise platforms scale to millions through the head-end software with the controller acting as a cached decision point. Card-to-reader presentation time matters more than raw capacity once you're above 10,000 — confirm the read time at the maximum cardholder count, not the controller's spec-sheet headline number.

Do I need PoE or can I use a separate power supply?

PoE simplifies installation — one cable per door — and is the dominant approach for single-door IP controllers. Multi-door panels typically need a dedicated 12VDC or 24VAC power supply with battery backup sized to drive electrified locks and accessories. Egress doors often require code-mandated battery backup regardless of controller power source. Confirm local fire code requirements before finalizing the power architecture.

What's the typical lifespan of an access control panel?

Hardware lifespan is 10-15 years for well-built panels (Mercury, Lenel, Kantech, HID Aero). The platform software typically forces a refresh sooner — 5-8 years — through driver deprecation, mobile credential support gaps, or end-of-life of the head-end version. Plan for software-driven refresh ahead of hardware failure. Migration projects always run longer than planned; start scoping a replacement in year 5 of a 10-year hardware horizon.

Need help choosing? Talk to a Senior Specialist — direct line 877-277-7147 or request a quote.