Price trends, forecasts, and supply data for hinges, fasteners, door hardware, and finish accessories.
Current direction, confidence, year-over-year change, and volatility.
Hardware and accessories encompass thousands of individual SKUs — from structural fasteners and anchors to decorative cabinet pulls and door levers. While each item may represent a small line-item cost, hardware collectively accounts for 2-4% of construction material budgets and can cause disproportionate project delays when specific items are unavailable.
The hardware market is heavily import-dependent, with China, Taiwan, and India manufacturing the majority of hinges, fasteners, and decorative hardware sold in the U.S. This concentration creates significant tariff exposure and supply chain vulnerability that builders must manage proactively.
The vast majority of finish hardware is manufactured in Asia, primarily China and Taiwan. Domestic manufacturing is limited to a few specialty producers and some structural fastener companies. This import dependency means that trade policy changes, ocean freight disruptions, or factory shutdowns overseas can create acute shortages of specific items.
Lead times for stock hardware run 1-3 weeks from distribution. Custom or specialty hardware (matching historic profiles, unique finishes, high-security lock sets) can require 8-16 weeks. Specifying commonly available hardware families and finishes is the simplest way to manage lead time risk.
Current risk factors affecting hardware & accessories availability and lead times.
Hardware pricing is relatively stable seasonally, though manufacturers typically implement annual price increases in January. Demand follows broader construction cycles, with spring and summer seeing the highest volume. Year-end distributor promotions occasionally offer volume pricing advantages.
For details on how we calculate these forecasts, see our methodology. View all categories on the Price Index overview.
Chinese-manufactured cabinet hardware, door hinges, and decorative pulls face Section 301 tariffs. Structural fasteners from several countries face antidumping duties. These tariff costs are generally passed through to project budgets.
Specify hardware early and confirm availability before ordering. Avoid specifying discontinued or hard-to-source finishes. For large projects, place hardware orders during preconstruction rather than waiting for rough-in completion.
Limited options exist for decorative hardware. For structural fasteners, companies like Simpson Strong-Tie and ITW maintain domestic manufacturing. Decorative hardware alternatives from Taiwan and India may carry lower tariff rates than Chinese products.
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