
By Andrew Lee · 12 July 2026
A shelf pulls loose. A mirror crashes overnight.
Almost every failure like that traces back to the same cause: the wrong drywall anchors, or none at all.
Picking the right drywall anchors is not guesswork.
Once you know the weight ratings and the wall type, the choice becomes quick and repeatable. This guide breaks down the five drywall anchors that procurement teams reach for most, how much weight each holds, and how to install one correctly.
Gypsum board handles compression well but struggles under shear stress, and a bare screw creates exactly that kind of stress. Drywall anchors spread the load across a wider patch of board, so the fastener does not tear free.
Skipping an anchor is not a shortcut. It is a bet against the strength of paper-faced gypsum, and gypsum almost always loses that bet.
Most drywall anchors work through expansion. As a screw drives in, the anchor body widens, folds, or splays out behind the wall. That wider bearing surface turns a few square millimeters of thread into a connection rated for tens of pounds.
Not every job needs one, though:
Gypsum wallboard sold in North America follows ASTM C1396, the standard covering wallboard, backing board, and related gypsum panel products. Half-inch wallboard is the default for interior walls and ceilings, rated for framing spaced 16 inches on center. Type X board adds at least one hour of fire resistance on 2×4 studs at that same spacing.
Knowing the board thickness before buying drywall anchors prevents a common mismatch: a heavy-duty anchor bought for a wall too thin to fit it.
Five anchor families cover nearly every job a facilities or procurement team will face. Each one trades off cost, install speed, and holding power differently. Here is a quick look at all five drywall anchors, with their rated capacity:
These plastic drywall anchors are the lightest-duty option on this list. They hold around 10 pounds per pair and install fast, though they fall short for anything that swings.
These self-drilling drywall anchors thread in with no pilot hole needed, which saves time on large jobs. Some models hold up to 75 pounds.
These metal drywall anchors pair a sleeve with a bolt; as the bolt tightens, the sleeve collapses behind the board. The largest hold up to roughly 50 pounds, and mollys suit fixtures that come off the wall often.
Toggle bolts pair a bolt with spring-activated wings. The wings snap open once pushed through the cavity. That wingspan gives toggle bolts the highest capacity on this list, generally 30 to 100-plus pounds.
These winged drywall anchors, sometimes called butterfly anchors, fold flat wings out behind the board. Rated around 25 pounds, they cost less than a molly bolt and hold more than a plain expansion anchor.
| Anchor Type | Typical Weight Capacity | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Plastic expansion anchor | Up to 10 lb | Picture frames, small decor |
| Plastic winged (butterfly) anchor | Up to 25 lb | Light shelving, curtain rods |
| Molly bolt | Up to 50 lb | Removable fixtures, mirrors |
| Self-drilling anchor | Up to 75 lb | Cabinets, larger shelving |
| Toggle bolt | 30 to 100+ lb | TV mounts, grab bars, heavy fixtures |
A screw driven into a wall stud can carry 100 pounds or more, no anchor needed. That makes stud-finding the first real step before reaching for drywall anchors.
Studs sit about 16 inches apart, center to center, and measure roughly 1.5 inches wide.
An electronic or magnetic stud finder locates framing fast by sensing density changes or existing fasteners. Run it slowly and mark both edges of the stud, so the screw lands near the center.
Outlet and switch boxes almost always sit against a stud, so they double as a free reference point. A drilled test hole confirms the rest:
Most drywall anchors fail during installation, not because of a bad product choice. Getting the pilot hole and seating depth right matters as much as the rating on the package.
Before starting, gather a short list of tools:
Check the packaging for the recommended bit size; the hole should sit slightly smaller than the anchor body, so the threads grip the gypsum instead of spinning loose. Hold the drill straight to keep the hole round, since an angled hole weakens the grip.
Tap the anchor into the pilot hole until it sits flush, using a rubber mallet for a snug fit. Drive the screw slowly and stop as soon as it feels snug, since going too far can strip the anchor.
Two questions settle the choice among drywall anchors every time: how much weight will the fixture carry, and is the wall solid framing or open cavity.
Start with the heaviest realistic load a fixture will carry, not its resting weight.
Standard gypsum wallboard built to ASTM C1396 accepts every anchor type above, but thinner board and plaster-and-lath walls need anchors rated for those substrates.
Most failures with drywall anchors come from installation errors, not bad products.
It depends on the type. Plastic expansion anchors hold roughly 10 pounds, winged anchors and molly bolts run 25 to 50 pounds, and toggle bolts top out above 100 pounds.
Not strictly, but finding studs first is worth the extra minute. A fastener driven into framing outperforms any anchor and needs no special hardware.
A molly bolt or toggle bolt can usually be removed and reinstalled in the same hole. A stripped plastic anchor hole should be abandoned in favor of fresh board nearby.
Check the packaging, since sizing varies by brand. The rule of thumb is a bit slightly smaller than the anchor body, so it must be tapped in rather than dropped in loosely.
No. Self-drilling anchors typically top out around 75 pounds, while toggle bolts reach past 100 pounds because their wings spread the load wider.
Choosing among drywall anchors is a five-minute decision once you know the load and the wall type. Match the fixture's fully loaded weight to the rated capacity, confirm whether a stud sits nearby, and follow the pilot-hole and seating steps closely.
A few habits keep every job on track:
Stock those four types, and the next job turns into a quick lookup instead of a guess.
Related categories: Drywall & Plaster Anchors · Drywall Panels · Drywall Screws