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Door locks and handles in Australian construction: types, AS 4145 ratings, brands

Door locks and handles in Australian construction: AS 4145 security ratings, lever handle DDA, Lockwood Whitco Yale, fire-rated, defects.

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TL;DR

Door locks and handles span a wide product range from simple privacy latches (toilet doors) through to high-security multi-point locking entry systems. The Australian security rating standard is AS 4145.2:2008, which classifies locks from 1-star (minimum) to 6-star (highest) based on durability, key cycle resistance, and forced-entry resistance. Volume residential entries in Australia use 3-star or 4-star locks; 5-star and 6-star are insurance-specified high-security applications. Class 2 apartment entry doors and Class 5-9 commercial entries usually step up to 4-star or higher and add fire-rated mortice hardware where the door forms part of an FRL-rated assembly. Five lock-and-handle categories cover virtually all applications: passage sets (no lock; corridor/internal doors), privacy sets (bathroom/bedroom, simple thumb-turn), entry sets (lock + lever or knob; standard front entry), deadlocks (separate key-only lock; security upgrade), and electronic / smart locks (keyless, Bluetooth, NFC, PIN). Lever handle compliance under AS 1428.1:2021 is mandatory in Australian buildings designed to be accessible (Class 1b plus parts of multi-residential); the round knob is non-compliant because someone with hand-mobility impairment cannot grip and turn it. The Australian volume brands are Lockwood (ASSA ABLOY, the dominant entry-lock brand), Whitco (sliding door and security hardware specialist), Yale, Schlage, and Brava. The two job-killers: specifying a 1-star or 2-star lock at an external entry door (fails AS 4145 minimum for forced-entry resistance; insurance won’t pay out on a burglary), and using a non-compliant handle (round knob) on a DDA-required accessible doorway.

What it is

Door hardware covers the latching, locking, and handle mechanism on every interior and exterior door across Class 1a, Class 2, and Class 3-9 construction. The Australian security standard is AS 4145.2:2008, which sets test procedures and classification for mechanical locks. Disability access requirements sit under AS 1428.1:2021 (lever vs knob); fire-rated door hardware sits under AS 1530.4:2014 test methods.

The main categories of door hardware:

CategoryWhere usedFunction
Passage setInternal corridor doorsLatch only; no lock
Privacy setBathroom, ensuite, bedroomLatch + simple thumb-turn lock (no key); coin-slot emergency release
Entry set (lock + lever or knob)Front entry, garage internal, side doorLatch + key-operated cylinder lock; deadbolt optional
Deadlock (standalone)Front entry security upgrade; secondary lockSeparately keyed deadbolt; typically paired with an entry set or passage set
Mortice lockOlder homes, premium entry doorsLock mortised into door edge; key-operated
Electronic / smart lockPremium entry, multi-tenancy access controlKeyless via PIN, key fob, Bluetooth, NFC; battery-powered
Multi-point lockPremium entry doors, security upgrades3-point or 5-point locking from a single key turn

AS 4145 security rating

AS 4145.2:2008 tests locks on multiple criteria and assigns a star rating from 1 to 6:

RatingTest criteriaWhere used
1-starBasic durability testCabinet locks, low-security internal applications
2-starHigher durability, basic forced-entryInternal doors, secondary doors
3-starStandard residential durability + forced-entryVolume residential front entry
4-starEnhanced durability + forced-entryPremium residential, security-conscious entries
5-starHigh security + extended durabilityInsurance-specified, high-risk locations
6-starMaximum securitySpecialist commercial, high-net-worth residential

A typical residential front-entry deadbolt is rated 3-star or 4-star. Going below 3-star on an external entry door fails insurance compliance in many policies. The star rating is on the product packaging and data sheet; verify before installing on any external door.

AS 1428.1: DDA compliance

AS 1428.1:2021 (Design for access and mobility) requires that door hardware be operable by a person with limited hand mobility. The key requirements:

RequirementWhere it applies
Lever handle (not round knob)Any door in an accessible path of travel; mandatory in Class 1b accommodation, Class 2 dwelling entries, Class 9 (commercial)
One-handed operationThe handle must be operable without grasping, pinching, or twisting; the wrist alone must be sufficient
Maximum operating forceLess than 19.5 N to operate
Lever return lengthThe lever must not project more than 100 mm from the door face; sharp ends are non-compliant
Mounted heightHandle centreline 900 to 1100 mm from finished floor level
Push plate / pull plate alternativeAcceptable on certain doors instead of lever

For Class 1a (standalone houses), DDA compliance is not strictly required, but increasingly volume residential builders apply lever-handle compliance throughout for future-proofing and consistency. Class 1b (boarding houses, hostels) and Class 2 (apartment dwellings) typically require AS 1428.1 compliance on accessible-path doors per NCC Part D3 (Access and egress).

Australian manufacturers

BrandMarket positionRange
Lockwood (ASSA ABLOY)Dominant Australian residential entry lockFull residential range: deadlocks, entry sets, electronic
WhitcoSliding-door and security hardware specialistPatio doors, security screens, sliding entries
YaleInternational brand, premium and electronicSmart locks, multi-point, commercial overlap
Schlage (Allegion)Premium residential and commercialEntry locks, lever sets, electronic
BravaVolume retail residentialEntry sets, passage, privacy; Bunnings + retail merchant
CarbineNZ-AU regional brandEntry sets, passage, privacy; volume residential
Kaba (Multilock)Premium and securityMaster key systems, high-security

For volume residential builds, Lockwood is the dominant single-brand specification. Specifier-led projects often mix brands by application (Yale electronic at the front, Lockwood deadbolts on secondary doors, Whitco on sliding doors).

Categories in detail

Passage sets

The simplest hardware: a latch that engages with the strike plate to hold the door closed, operated by a lever or knob from either side. No lock. Typical fitting cost in 2026: $40-80 per door.

Privacy sets

A latch with a thumb-turn lock from inside (no key); a small coin-slot release from outside for emergencies. Bathroom and bedroom doors. Typical cost: $50-100 per door.

Entry sets

Combine a key-operated lock cylinder with a lever or knob. Standard front-entry hardware:

Sub-categoryDescription
Cylindrical locksetLock mechanism in the door knob/lever itself; volume residential
Tubular latch + separate lock cylinderTwo-piece; lock and latch separate
Mortice locksetLock mortised into the door edge; premium
Deadlatch + deadboltCylindrical + separate deadbolt for added security

Typical AS 4145 rating: 3-star or 4-star. Cost: $80-280 per door.

Standalone deadlocks

Single-cylinder or double-cylinder deadbolts. Double-cylinder (key on both sides) is more secure but is a fire-egress concern (occupant cannot exit without key in a fire); many states discourage double-cylinder in residential.

Typical cost: $80-220 per lock.

Multi-point locks

Premium European-style entry locks that engage 3 to 5 points on the door frame from a single key turn. Common on imported European-style doors and high-security upgrades. Cost: $300-800+ per lockset.

Electronic / smart locks

TypeOperation
PIN keypadCode entry; battery-powered
Bluetooth / smartphonePhone proximity unlocks
NFC / RFID cardCard or fob proximity
Biometric (fingerprint)Fingerprint reader
Hybrid (keypad + key)Both options for backup

Examples: Yale Assure, Lockwood Cortex, Schlage Encode, August Smart Lock. Battery life typical 6-12 months; backup key entry typically included.

Cost: $300-1,200+ per lock.

Fire-rated door hardware

Doors in fire-rated walls (typically inter-tenancy boundaries, garage-to-house) need fire-rated hardware tested as part of the tested-door-assembly under AS 1530.4:2014. The hinges, lock, latch, seal, and self-closer must all meet the FRL rating.

FRL ratingTypical application
FRL-30Some Class 1 garage-to-house doors
FRL-60Inter-tenancy (apartment, townhouse)
FRL-90Higher-rise multi-residential
FRL-120High-rise commercial overlap

Generic residential hardware is not fire-rated. Use only hardware specifically certified for the door assembly’s FRL.

Common defects and on-site issues

  • Wrong AS 4145 rating on external door: 2-star or 1-star fitted to a front entry. Insurance compliance failure. Always 3-star minimum on external doors; 4-star recommended.
  • Round knob on DDA-required door: Class 1b or Class 2 entry with a knob instead of a lever. Compliance defect.
  • Double-cylinder deadbolt on egress door: occupant cannot exit in fire without key. Use single-cylinder + thumb-turn from inside.
  • Lever handle return too long or sharp: clothing snag risk; DDA non-compliant if over 100 mm projection. Use compliant lever profiles.
  • Self-closer omitted on fire-rated door: door doesn’t close after use, fire compartment not maintained. Mandatory on FRL-rated doors.
  • Strike plate not aligned: door doesn’t latch properly; slams or fails to close. Realign strike plate or adjust hinge position.
  • Drill-out vulnerability: cheap deadbolts can be drilled out in seconds. AS 4145 3-star+ products include anti-drill plates.
  • Electronic lock battery flat: occupant locked out; smart lock without physical key backup is a real risk. Always specify hybrid with key backup.
  • Patio sliding door lock orientation wrong: Whitco-style sliding patio door locks are handed (left vs right). Confirm at order.

Pricing (2026 indicative, ex-GST, supply only)

ItemIndicative cost
Passage set, lever (volume)$40-80
Privacy set, lever$50-100
Entry set, 3-star, lever$80-160
Entry set, 4-star, premium lever$160-280
Standalone deadbolt, 3-star$80-150
Multi-point lock (3-point European-style)$300-600
Smart lock (Yale Assure, Lockwood Cortex)$400-800
Smart lock (Schlage Encode WiFi)$450-900
Fire-rated entry lockset$200-450
Whitco sliding patio door lock$80-180

Install labour adds typically $80-220 per door depending on complexity.

Standards and references

  1. Standards Australia, AS 4145.2:2008 Mechanical locks for doors used in buildings. https://store.standards.org.au (verified 2026-05-13).
  2. Standards Australia, AS 1428.1:2021 Design for access and mobility, Part 1: General requirements. https://store.standards.org.au (verified 2026-05-13).
  3. Standards Australia, AS 1530.4:2014 Methods for fire tests on building materials. https://store.standards.org.au (verified 2026-05-13).
  4. Australian Building Codes Board, NCC 2022 ABCB Housing Provisions Part 11 (Safe movement and access). https://ncc.abcb.gov.au/editions/ncc-2022/adopted/housing-provisions (verified 2026-05-13).

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-13. Verified: 2026-05-13. Quarterly review for AS 4145 currency and pricing.