bottom line, if they want in bad enough, and have the time, they're getting in.
This is not the case. (If they are common in your area, it must be for another reason.) There is pressure on one side of a building from wind and a nearly equal suction on the opposite side of the building:South Florida. Hurricanes can blow in an inswing door. Outswing is safer during these types of storms as the wind can't blow the door in.
That said, I believe the MIAMI DADE Hurricane codes were adopted about 20 years ago to only allow outswing doors in new construction. Older homes may still have inswing.

they use inswing for BETTER RAIN/WATER protection.
This is not true and you can do the following two things to confirm:Outswing doors are mandated in South Florida
If you stand by it, then please point us to the section that requires an outswing door.I stand by the MIAMI DADE BUILDING CODE that we follow here. Feel free to reach out to them and let them know their code is wrong. I didn't write the building code.
I stand corrected. My apologies. You are in fact correct.If you stand by it, then please point us to the section that requires an outswing door.
This is right-on. If security is a concern, you should invest in a security system. With regard to the door, the weakest part of the door is the jamb. (Inswing vs. outswing doesn't matter a bit.) It's easy to pop a deadbolt through a wood jamb or to pry an outswing door out of a wood jamb. Steel jambs are more difficult.Security is a concern but I have 3 overhead doors and 3 windows. If someone wants in theyre going to get in.
This is why most doors are inswing. The rain sheds off the stops and down to the threshold. Depending on which way the wind is blowing and if you have positive or negative pressure on the house/door, it may press into the seals or pull away from them. With an inswing door, the rain will still shed off the stops.My bigger concern is rain/ wind beating on the door. But now that im thinking about it the inswing seals will probably hold up better stopping a driving rain
They don't even sheath houses in wood any more. Many places use foam or drywall. Forget the doors - we can just cut through the exterior wall with a razor blade.As for security, it's a big joke that people worry about getting good locks or dead bolts when they have a sliding glass door to their patio. One brick and you are in.
