Best Drywall Anchors (2026)
By The DIYPicks Team ยท Updated July 2026
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Drywall has no real strength of its own, so the anchor and the load rating are what keep your shelf on the wall. We picked anchors for three real jobs: heavy mounts, medium household items, and deep or awkward cavities. Match the anchor to the weight, not the other way around.
The strongest, most reliable drywall anchor for heavy mounts, but overkill and pricey for light picture frames.
- Heavy loads
- Drywall
- Tv mount
Pros
- Highest holding power of any hollow-wall anchor tested, easily handles heavy TV mounts
- Metal straps snap flush so the bolt can be removed and re-installed without losing the toggle behind the wall
- Only needs a 1/2 in hole and a screwdriver or drill, no need to fish a spring toggle through
Cons
- The 1/2 in hole is large and hard to patch cleanly if you reposition
- Real-world safe load is a fraction of the 265 lb ultimate rating, so derate for repeated pull
- Costs several times more per anchor than plastic or self-drilling types
A fast, foolproof no-drill anchor for medium household loads on drywall, but not a substitute for a toggle on truly heavy items.
- Medium loads
- Drywall
- No drill
Pros
- No pre-drilling, one-piece design threads straight into drywall with a Phillips bit
- Nothing falls behind the wall during install, unlike loose spring toggles
- Rated for ceilings, which many plastic anchors are not
Cons
- 100 lb rating is a pull-out maximum, not a working load, so it is not for a heavy TV
- Only works in drywall, useless in wood, plaster over lath, or masonry
- Once driven and removed it strips the hole, leaving a larger patch than a small anchor
The classic budget spring toggle for heavier hollow-wall loads, at the cost of a fiddly one-shot install.
- Heavy loads
- Hollow wall
- Budget
Pros
- Very low cost per anchor in a 50-pack, cheapest way to get real toggle strength
- Spring wings open wide, so it grips in deep or irregular wall cavities where other anchors bottom out
- Available in many bolt lengths to match different wall and fixture thicknesses
Cons
- The wings drop into the wall cavity if you ever remove the bolt, so it is not reusable
- You must hold the fixture up while starting the bolt, awkward as a one-person job
- Needs a 1/2 in hole that is hard to hide and the bolt must pass through the fixture first
Still deciding? Compare them
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the strongest drywall anchor?
- A metal channel toggle like the TOGGLER SNAPTOGGLE holds the most, up to about 265 lb ultimate in 1/2 in drywall. Treat rated numbers as maximums and use well under them for safety, especially for anything overhead.
- Do I still need to hit a stud for a TV?
- For a large or heavy TV, always fasten the mount into studs if you can. Use heavy toggles only when studs are not where you need them, and never exceed the mount and anchor ratings.