Hidden Roller Barn Door Hardware Kits

Hidden Roller Barn Door Hardware Kits

Hidden roller hardware conceals the full roller assembly behind the door panel — the track and stops remain visible, but the mechanism that makes the door slide is completely out of sight from the front. No wall modification or door routing required; the roller attaches to the back face of the door and rides the same surface-mounted track. One firm requirement before ordering: the top of the door must sit at least 4-3/8 in above the top of the rough opening to accommodate the hardware assembly.

A white paneled interior barn door on a hidden roller track, viewed through a bathroom mirror. The door is positioned in front of a shower/tub area with light grey vertical subway tile, a recessed niche with bottles, and a shower curtain.
Goldberg Brothers

Hidden Roller Barn Door Hardware Kit

$184.50

Watch: Hidden Roller Hardware Install Walkthrough

"Where does the track go?"
"How do the hangers sit?"
"How do I get the door up without scratching it?"

These are the questions we hear most from customers installing hidden roller hardware for the first time — so we worked with @ourhighlandshome to answer all of them in one place.

This walkthrough covers back-mounting technique, critical gap measurements, hanger positioning for a true floating effect, and safely securing the door once it's on the rail. Our team has helped thousands of customers through this exact install, and we're here if you have questions after watching.

Common Questions

The track face, track stops, and mounting hardware remain visible. The roller assembly — the mechanism that makes the door slide — is concealed behind the door panel and not visible from the front.

No. The track mounts to the wall surface at the header — no wall recessing required. The roller assembly attaches to the back of the door — no routing or hollowing required. This is a standard surface mount with the roller assembly relocated behind the door.

Because the roller assembly sits behind the door rather than above it, the door hangs approximately 1 in off the wall. Standard sliding hardware sits at about 3/8 in. For most installs this is a non-issue, but it's worth confirming before ordering if you're working with a tight reveal or a narrow hallway.

No. Hidden roller still requires at least 4-3/8 in of clearance between the top of the door and the top of the rough opening. If your space doesn't allow for that, ceiling-mount hardware is the right direction.

No. Soft close is not compatible with hidden roller configurations.

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