GPS tracking can play an important role in asset recovery when vehicles, equipment, tools, trailers, containers, or other valuable assets are moved without authorization. When used lawfully and responsibly, location tracking can help businesses identify where an asset was last reported, when it moved, and whether it left an approved area.
In one reported Chicago-area bank robbery, a GPS-enabled tracking device helped law enforcement follow stolen cash and recover it after the robbery. While that example involves a specialized law enforcement and financial-security use case, the broader lesson applies to many businesses: better location visibility can support faster response when high-value assets go missing.
For businesses, GPS asset tracking is most often used to monitor vehicles, trailers, construction equipment, generators, portable signs, tool storage boxes, containers, and other mobile assets. These assets may be left at job sites, moved between yards, stored outdoors, or used across wide service areas.
GPS tracking does not prevent every theft or guarantee recovery. However, it can provide useful location information that helps managers respond more quickly and coordinate with law enforcement when appropriate.
GPS asset tracking uses a connected tracking device to report an asset’s location and movement. Depending on the device and configuration, the tracker may provide scheduled check-ins, motion-based alerts, geofence activity, location history, battery status, or other asset information.
For powered vehicles, tracking devices may connect to vehicle power and report more frequently. For unpowered assets, such as trailers, generators, containers, or equipment, devices may rely on long-life batteries, solar support, or other power options.
Most asset tracking systems use GPS to determine location and cellular connectivity to send data back to the fleet or asset management platform. In areas with limited cellular coverage, some devices may store events and send them when service returns.
Geofencing is one of the most useful tools for asset protection. A geofence is a virtual boundary around a location such as a yard, job site, customer site, storage area, warehouse, or restricted zone.
When an asset enters or exits a geofenced area, the system can log the event or send an alert. This can help managers identify unexpected movement sooner, especially after hours or when equipment is supposed to remain on site.
Geofences can also support normal operations by helping teams confirm whether equipment arrived at a site, left a yard, or returned after a job.
Businesses use GPS tracking to monitor a wide range of mobile and field assets. Common examples include:
The right tracking setup depends on the asset type, how often it moves, whether it has a power source, how frequently location updates are needed, and where the asset operates.
When an asset is missing or appears to have been moved without authorization, GPS tracking can support the response process by providing location history and recent activity.
Managers may be able to review:
If theft is suspected, businesses should follow internal policy and coordinate with law enforcement. GPS data can help provide useful context, but recovery efforts should be handled safely and lawfully.
GPS tracking works best as part of a broader asset security program. Businesses should combine tracking technology with practical security procedures, inventory controls, and employee training.
Helpful practices include:
Asset tracking should be used for legitimate business purposes, such as monitoring company-owned vehicles, equipment, trailers, tools, and other authorized assets. Businesses should avoid using tracking technology in ways that violate privacy expectations, employment policies, labor agreements, or applicable law.
Before deploying GPS tracking, companies should define what is tracked, who can access the data, how long records are retained, and how alerts or reports will be used. Clear policies help protect the business and create consistency for employees.
Asset tracking is useful even when nothing is stolen. Location visibility can help businesses reduce time spent searching for equipment, avoid unnecessary rentals, improve job-site coordination, and understand which assets are being used most often.
For example, a construction manager may use asset tracking to confirm whether a generator is already at a job site. A traffic safety company may use it to locate portable signs. A field service business may use it to confirm where a trailer or storage box was left after a project.
Over time, asset tracking data can support better planning, utilization, purchasing, maintenance, and redeployment decisions.
Zonar helps fleet and asset-intensive businesses bring vehicles, equipment, trailers, and mobile assets into clearer view. With GPS asset tracking, fleet visibility, geofencing, alerts, reporting, and movement history, Zonar can help organizations monitor high-value assets and respond more quickly when something moves unexpectedly.
For assets that spend long periods outdoors or away from a powered vehicle, Zonar’s solar asset tracking solutions can help support long-term visibility in the field.
To learn how Zonar can support your asset tracking and fleet visibility goals, contact the Zonar team.