Bifold Barn Door Hardware Kits

 A close-up of a white bifold barn door system in a hallway, showcasing the hardware's functionality as the doors are partially folded.

Bifold hardware exists for one reason: you want a barn door but you don't have the wall space next to the opening for a standard sliding door to retract onto. Closets, pantries, laundry rooms, and bathrooms are where we ship most of these kits — anywhere the wall beside the opening is too short, interrupted by a return wall, or taken up by a light switch or outlet.

All of our bifold systems are external-mount, meaning the track and doors sit on the wall above and in front of the opening, not inside the jamb. This is important because it changes how you size everything — track length and door coverage are calculated off the door width, not the rough opening. Get the overlap wrong and you'll either have gaps showing the inside of the closet or doors that bind against the wall when they fold.

If you're not sure what you need, email us at info@thebarndoorhardwarestore.com with your opening width, ceiling height, and a photo of the wall and we'll tell you exactly what fits.

Frequently Asked Questions

If the wall beside your opening is shorter than your door width, interrupted by a return wall, or taken up by switches, outlets, or a window, bifold is usually the answer. Standard sliding needs clear wall space next to the opening equal to the door width. Bifold folds back against the opening itself.

It depends on how you want the doors to open, not the size of the opening. 2-door bifolds work for openings up to 93", and 4-door biparting has no minimum size — so for most openings both configurations will physically fit and the choice is about the action and look you want. A 2-door setup stacks all the folded doors on one side of the opening. A 4-door biparting setup splits the folded doors evenly to both sides. See Section 3 for the pros and cons of each, or email us and we'll walk through the tradeoffs for your specific space.

Track length equals total door width, not rough opening width. For a 48" opening with the recommended symmetrical 2-door setup, you'd use two 29" doors (58" total) and a 58" track. See the sizing tables in Section 2 for the full overlap rules.

No. Bifolds pivot on bottom pins, not on floor guides, so you don't need to drill into finished flooring. This makes them a good choice for bathrooms and rooms with tile or hardwood.

Yes, and we ship a lot of them for bathrooms. Just make sure you have a solid header or the ability to install 2x backing — bathroom walls often have plumbing or venting that can complicate mounting. Send us a photo if you're not sure.

The track mounts to studs, a structural header, or 2x backing installed behind the drywall. For mounting boards, we recommend 1x6 hardwood minimum — thinner or softer materials flex under the concentrated pivot load.

Yes, but you'll need a trim clearance kit to hold the track off the wall far enough to clear the baseboard and any door casing above the opening. Measure the depth of your trim before ordering.

Yes. Listed track lengths cover the most common door widths. If your math lands on a size we don't stock, email us — custom lengths are priced the same as the next longest standard track, and anything over 7'6" ships in multiple sections with junction plates included.

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