By Evan Christensen · Owner, The Barn Door Hardware Store
Published June 14, 2024 · Updated May 2026
Evan has owned and operated The Barn Door Hardware Store since 2016. A 32 in opening is one of the most common sizes he helps customers size hardware for — the numbers are straightforward once you know the rules. He and the team are available 7 days a week at info@thebarndoorhardwarestore.com.
For a 32 in opening, you need a barn door that is at least 36 in wide — and a track that is at least 72 in long. That's the short answer. The rest of this post explains where those numbers come from, when to go larger, what height to use, how much wall space you need beside the opening, and how much room to leave above it. For sizing across other opening widths and configurations, see our complete barn door size guide.
Door width for a 32 in opening
A barn door hangs in front of the opening rather than inside it — it needs to be wider than the opening to overlap the wall on each side and eliminate visible gaps around the edges.
| Room type | Overlap per side | Door width |
|---|---|---|
| Standard rooms (living room, hallway, pantry) | 2 in per side | 36 in |
| Bedrooms and bathrooms | 3 in per side | 38 in |
| Minimum functional overlap | 1/2 in per side | 33 in |
The 2 in per side standard accounts for walls that aren't perfectly square and looks intentional. The 3 in per side privacy sizing ensures edge gaps aren't noticeable when the door is closed. The 1/2 in minimum is technically enough to cover the opening edge but leaves no margin for wall irregularities — only use it if you have no other option.
One measuring note: if your opening has casing or trim around it, measure from the outside edges of the casing, not the drywall opening — the door has to overlap the trim to close the gaps. A cleanly drywalled (uncased) opening is measured straight across.
For a 32 in opening, 36 in is the practical recommendation for most rooms, 38 in for bathrooms and bedrooms. Both are standard door widths readily available off the shelf.
Door height
Door height should be opening height plus 1 in. For a standard 80 in opening, that's an 81 in door. The extra inch provides coverage at the top while maintaining the required 3/8 in floor clearance at the bottom for the door to slide without dragging.
Never size the door to exactly match the opening height — you need that floor gap for the door to operate correctly.
| Opening height | Door height |
|---|---|
| 80 in (standard) | 81 in |
| 84 in | 85 in |
| 96 in | 97 in |
Track length
Track length must be at least 2× the door width — not 2× the opening width. A 36 in door needs at minimum a 72 in track. A 38 in door needs at minimum a 76 in track — round up to the next standard length available.
| Door width | Minimum track length |
|---|---|
| 36 in | 72 in |
| 38 in | 76 in (round up to next standard length) |
Size the track as close to 2× the door width as your standard lengths allow. A door that travels significantly past the opening edge looks unintentional — the door should clear the opening cleanly without unnecessary extra travel.
The most common ordering mistake for a 32 in opening is buying a 64 in track — 2× the opening rather than 2× the door. At 64 in, a 36 in door can only travel 28 in before the door edge reaches the track end, leaving 8 in of the opening still covered. Always measure from the door panel, not the rough opening.
Wall clearance beside the opening
For the door to slide fully open, you need at least the full door width of clear wall space beside the opening on the slide side. For a 36 in door, that means 36 in of unobstructed wall. For a 38 in door, 38 in.
Because the door slides completely clear of the opening when open, a 36 in door on a 32 in opening still leaves the full opening usable as a walk-through — the overlap only matters when the door is closed.
Walk the full path the door will travel before ordering. Check for light switches, outlets, corners, windows, and anything else that would block or be covered by the door. A 32 in opening with a 36 in door is a common configuration — it fits most standard hallway and bedroom walls — but it's always worth confirming before the hardware ships.
If you don't have enough wall space beside the opening for the door to stack, a bypass configuration or bifold hardware may be the right solution instead.
Space above the opening
The last fit check is vertical: the track and hanger mount above the door, so you need clear space between the top of the door and the ceiling. On Goldberg Brothers standard duty hardware, plan for at least 4 in above the top of the door for a straight strap, straight top mount, or horseshoe hanger, and 4-1/2 in for a J-strap or J top mount. Since the door sits about 1/2 in above the opening, that's roughly 4-1/2 to 5 in above the opening itself.
If the ceiling is too low for a wall-mounted track, ceiling-mount hardware removes the header-height requirement. Clearance needs vary by hanger — confirm the figure for your kit in its instruction manual before ordering.
Choosing hardware for a 32 in opening
Once you have your door width and track length, the remaining hardware decision is hanger style — which depends on your door weight. Most standard interior doors in the 36–38 in width range weigh 25–100 lbs depending on construction. Here's how that maps to our Goldberg Brothers standard duty lineup:
| Door weight | Recommended hanger |
|---|---|
| Up to 75 lbs | Straight top mount or J top mount — most minimal look, no straps on door face |
| Up to 125 lbs | Straight strap — flat profile, front face mount |
| Up to 200 lbs | J-strap — most popular style, front face mount |
| Up to 250 lbs | Horseshoe — multi-wheel, front face mount |
Not sure what your door weighs? A standard hollow-core interior door runs 25–35 lbs. A lightweight solid-core door runs 50–80 lbs. A solid wood slab starts around 80–100 lbs. Use our hardware finder to confirm the right kit for your door, or browse our single track hardware collection.
Quick reference — 32 in opening
| Measurement | Standard rooms | Bathrooms & bedrooms |
|---|---|---|
| Door width | 36 in | 38 in |
| Door height (80 in opening) | 81 in | 81 in |
| Minimum track length | 72 in | 76 in (round up) |
| Wall clearance needed | 36 in beside opening | 38 in beside opening |
Ready to order or need a second opinion?
If you know your door width and weight, our hardware finder will recommend the right kit. If your wall situation is unusual or you want to confirm your numbers before ordering, email us at info@thebarndoorhardwarestore.com — a 32 in opening is one we help customers size every day. Available 7 days a week.


