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Security screen (AS 5039)

Security screen is a hinged or sliding screen over an external door, tested to AS 5039.1 for impact, anti-jemmy, knife shear and pull. Three-point lock typical.

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A security screen in Australian residential construction is a hinged or sliding screen door fitted over a main external door (and equivalent grilles fitted over windows), providing physical security against forced entry plus insect screening in a single product. The Australian Standard AS 5039.1:2023 sets the performance classification and required test results; compliant products carry an AS 5039 certificate and are commonly required by home contents insurers as a condition of theft cover (verified 2026-05-16).

The four AS 5039.1 performance tests:

  1. Impact test: a heavy bag dropped against the screen at increasing energies; the screen must not deform or detach within the rated impact.
  2. Anti-jemmy test: a crowbar applied to leverage the screen open; the screen must resist for a rated time without failing.
  3. Knife shear test: a knife or blade attempted to cut through the mesh; rated mesh must resist.
  4. Pull test: continuous pulling force on the mesh and frame, simulating an intruder gripping and pulling.

Each tested product gets a classification (typically “Security screen door” for compliant tested doors, “Insect screen” for non-rated screens). Insurers commonly require AS 5039-compliant doors on every external opening; insect-only screens do not meet the contractual standard.

Common types in Australian residential:

TypeMeshFrameCost band
Stainless steel mesh on aluminium frame (Crimsafe, ScreenGuard)0.9 mm stainlessAluminium with internal stainless$700-1,500 per door
Marine-grade steel grille (perforated steel)Solid steelSteel frame$500-1,200 per door
Diamond-pattern steel meshWelded steel rodAluminium or steel$400-800 per door
Decorative steel grilleSteel patternAluminium$400-700 per door
Insect screen only (not security)Aluminium or fibreglassAluminium$150-300 per door (NOT AS 5039)

Lock requirements on a compliant security screen:

  • Three-point locking (lock engages at top, middle, and bottom of the door) is the market standard. Five-point locking is available on higher-spec doors.
  • Lock cylinder rated to AS 4145.2 for mechanical durability (commonly 5-star or higher star rating per AS 4145).
  • Hinge side reinforced to prevent hinge-removal attacks.
  • Glass-doored security screens must use AS 1288 Grade A glazing where in a human impact zone.

Where security screens are required (insurance and DDA):

  • Home contents and home building insurance typically requires AS 5039-compliant screens on every external entry point as a condition of theft cover.
  • Bushfire-prone-area builds may have a separate ember-screening requirement under AS 3959 that interacts with security screening.
  • DDA-rated accommodation requires accessible-operable handles on security screens (lever, not knob, satisfying AS 1428.1).

Common defects:

  • Insect screen substituted for tested security screen during construction. Insurer claim repudiated at first incident.
  • Three-point lock fitted but the bolt strikes the frame at one or more points are loose, defeating the lockup.
  • Hinge-side screws too short, allowing the hinge to be levered out.
  • Compliant door + non-compliant frame attachment to the wall (frame pulled out, screen door comes with it).

Also known as: Crimsafe (brand-misuse generic); security door; safety screen; AS 5039 screen.

Category: Materials.

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-16. Verified: 2026-05-16. Quarterly review for currency.