Specifying door hardware for a commercial project means more than picking a finish or a function. It means selecting the right ANSI/BHMA grade, because that single number determines how long the hardware will last, how much force it can withstand, and whether it meets the security requirements for the building type. Get the grade wrong, and you end up replacing hardware years ahead of schedule, failing inspections, or leaving an opening under-secured.
The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and the Builders Hardware Manufacturers Association (BHMA) jointly administer the grading system through the ANSI/BHMA A156 standard series. Testing is conducted by independent, BHMA-accredited laboratories, and certification is not self-reported. Every grade has specific cycle counts, impact resistance benchmarks, and weight tests that hardware must pass to carry the certification.
This guide covers what ANSI/BHMA Grade 1 and Grade 2 actually mean, what the test specifications require, and how to match the right grade to the right opening.
ANSI/BHMA grades classify door hardware based on performance under three types of tests: cycle testing (repeated operation), impact/strike testing (simulated forced entry), and weight testing (load on the latch or bolt). Hardware must pass all three to earn its grade certification.
The two grades relevant to commercial door hardware are:
Grades apply across product categories, including cylindrical locks, mortise locks, and deadbolts, though the specific cycle requirements differ by hardware type.
Grade 1 is the benchmark for commercial door hardware. It is specified wherever durability, security, and code compliance are non-negotiable: hospitals, schools, government facilities, airports, hotels, and any opening that sees heavy daily traffic.
Those 1,000,000 cycles on a cylindrical latch assume multiple operations per day across the life of the product. On a door that opens and closes 100 times a day, that is roughly 27 years of use before reaching the test threshold. For a 24/7 healthcare corridor or a school hallway, that durability margin matters.
PDQ manufactures Grade 1 cylindrical locks and mortise locks built to ANSI/BHMA A156 specifications. The GT Series cylindrical lock is PDQ's Grade 1 cylindrical offering, designed for the demands of commercial applications. For openings requiring a mortise solution, the MR Series mortise lock delivers Grade 1 performance in a full-function mortise format.
Grade 2 is the practical choice for openings that need reliable security without the full durability requirement of a high-traffic commercial installation. It is well suited to environments where daily cycle counts are moderate and extreme forced-entry resistance is not the primary concern.
Grade 2 hardware is not a compromise on security in lower-traffic environments. The 800,000-cycle rating is more than sufficient for an office interior door, a retail stockroom, or a light commercial application where the door cycles significantly fewer times per day than a high-traffic corridor.
PDQ's SD Series cylindrical lock is the Grade 2 cylindrical option for projects where light commercial performance and cost efficiency are the primary drivers. For a side-by-side comparison of PDQ's Grade 2 cylindrical options, see the blog post on the SD vs. SF Series.
Use this table as a quick reference when specifying or comparing hardware options:
|
Test / Specification |
Grade 1 |
Grade 2 |
|
Cycles (Mortise / Latch) |
1,000,000 |
800,000 |
|
Cycles (Deadbolt) |
250,000 |
150,000 |
|
Door Strikes (Impact) |
6 strikes |
4 strikes |
|
Weight Test |
360 lb. |
250 lb. |
|
Primary Application |
Commercial / institutional / high-traffic |
Light commercial / residential |
Source: ANSI/BHMA A156 standard series, cross-referenced with BHMA-accredited test data.
The right grade depends on traffic volume, occupancy type, applicable codes, and project budget. Here is a practical breakdown by application:
|
Application |
Grade |
Reason |
|
Hospital / healthcare entry doors |
Grade 1 |
1M+ cycle durability required for 24/7 operation |
|
K-12 school classroom locks |
Grade 1 |
Code compliance and forced-entry resistance |
|
Office building entry |
Grade 1 or 2 |
Depends on traffic volume and local code requirements |
|
Retail storefront |
Grade 2 |
Cost-efficient for moderate daily traffic |
|
Light industrial / warehouse |
Grade 1 |
Durability in demanding environments with heavy use |
|
Multi-family residential (common areas) |
Grade 2 |
Balance of security and cost for moderate traffic |
When in doubt between grades, select up. The cost difference between Grade 2 and Grade 1 hardware is modest relative to the labor cost of an early replacement or a failed inspection.
Grade 1 is the highest ANSI/BHMA certification, rated for 1,000,000 cycles and 360 lb. of force resistance. Grade 2 is rated for 800,000 cycles and 250 lb. Grade 1 is specified for commercial and institutional applications. Grade 2 suits light commercial and residential settings where traffic is moderate.
Many building codes and specifications require Grade 1 hardware for commercial entry doors, corridors, and high-traffic openings. Requirements vary by jurisdiction, occupancy type, and project specification. Always verify against applicable local codes and the project's construction documents.
Yes, Grade 2 hardware is commonly specified for light commercial applications such as office interiors, retail environments, and multi-family common areas where traffic is moderate and Grade 1 durability is not required.
Per the ANSI/BHMA A156 standard, Grade 1 cylindrical and mortise latches are tested to 1,000,000 cycles. Grade 1 deadbolts are rated to 250,000 cycles.
BHMA (Builders Hardware Manufacturers Association) administers the testing and certification program behind ANSI door hardware grades. When hardware carries BHMA certification, it has been independently tested and verified to meet the ANSI A156 performance standards for its stated grade.
ADA compliance addresses operability (force required to open, lever vs. knob, etc.) rather than the ANSI grade directly. However, Grade 1 hardware is typically specified on ADA-compliant openings in commercial settings because those openings are often high-traffic and subject to code review. Verify requirements with the project's accessibility consultant and local code authority.
PDQ manufactures Grade 1 and Grade 2 commercial door hardware built to ANSI/BHMA A156 standards. Whether you are specifying an entry system for a healthcare facility or fitting out an office building interior, the right product is available through PDQ's authorized distributor network.
For full product specifications, finish options, and function codes, visit the PDQ products page. To get hardware specified for your project, connect with a sales rep or talk to an expert.