Double bypass hardware runs two to four doors on parallel tracks in front of each other — the right solution when you need to cover a wide opening but don't have enough wall space beside it for the panels to sit side by side. Because the doors stack fully in front of each other rather than beside the opening, both sides of a pass-through can be kept clear simultaneously, making double bypass the preferred choice for hallways, room dividers, and any opening that needs to function from both sides. See our double sliding barn door guide for sizing and configuration help.
Double bypass hardware uses two separate parallel tracks, one per door, so each door moves independently. Available in both Goldberg Brothers and our house value line. If you've come from the single bypass page and are deciding between the two, the comparison section below covers the key differences before you commit to either.
Double bypass works for 2 to 4 doors and is optimized for pass-through setups — where you move one door to access part of the opening while the other stays in place. All double bypass products support full door stacking — doors run on separate tracks so their rollers never collide. Telescoping action (where one door engages and carries the other) is only available on the Goldberg Brothers kit.
Single bypass vs. double bypass — which one do you need?
| Single bypass | Double bypass | |
|---|---|---|
| Track setup | One shared track | Two separate parallel tracks |
| Door movement | Doors linked — one engages the other when travel is exhausted | Doors move fully independently |
| Center overlap | Mandatory 6–9 in overlap when closed | No mandatory overlap — approximately 2 in recommended |
| Full door stacking | Not possible — rollers on shared track collide before doors fully stack | All double bypass products support full stacking |
| Hardware profile | Slimmer — one track assembly | Bulkier — two track assemblies |
| Best for | Telescoping motion across full span; slimmer hardware profile | Independent door movement; no mandatory overlap; full stacking option |
Neither configuration achieves a center seal or flush closure — that's a shared limitation of all bypass hardware.
For a deeper walkthrough of when to choose each, see our single vs. double bypass guide.
Telescoping and full door stacking
All double bypass kits support full door stacking. Because each door runs on its own separate track, the rollers never collide — the doors can travel completely past each other and stack fully behind one another. This is what single bypass cannot do: on a shared track, the rollers of both doors physically collide before the doors can stack completely.
Telescoping is a separate capability — and it's only available on Goldberg Brothers double bypass kits. With the telescoping add-on, one door engages and carries the other when its travel is exhausted, creating a coordinated opening motion across the full span. Without the add-on, each door moves independently and stays where you leave it.
If full stacking is the goal and telescoping isn't required, any double bypass kit gets you there. If you want both full stacking and telescoping, the Goldberg Brothers kit with the telescoping add-on is the only option across all bypass configurations.
Weight capacity and door thickness
| House value line | Goldberg Brothers | |
|---|---|---|
| Weight capacity | 220 lbs total system | Up to 250 lbs per door with horseshoe roller |
| Door thickness | Up to 1‑3/4 in | Standard duty: 1‑3/8 to 1‑3/4 in. Need up to 2‑1/4 in? Email us for heavy duty Goldberg Brothers options. |
| Telescoping add-on | Not available | Available |
| Lead time | Ships in 2–3 business days | 10–15 days (made to order) |
If your door is thicker than 1‑3/4 in or heavier than 220 lbs total system weight, Goldberg Brothers is the only option in this collection. Email us your door specs and we'll confirm the right configuration before you order.
Track length
Track length follows the same logic as single bypass — it depends on whether you want pass-through access or full clear opening.
| Goal | Number of doors | Track length formula |
|---|---|---|
| Pass-through | Any | Slightly longer than opening width |
| Clear opening | 2 doors | 3× door width |
| Clear opening | 3 doors | 5× door width |
| Clear opening | 4 doors | 6× door width |
Not sure which track length applies to your opening? Email us your opening width, door count, and whether you need full clearance or pass-through access — we'll confirm before anything ships.
For the full bypass sizing formulas including door width calculations, see our bypass measuring guide and track length guide.
Floor guides
All double bypass kits include the necessary floor guides. Because double bypass is optimized for pass-through setups where doors move independently, kits come with floor-mounted guides — the same T guide style included with standard sliding hardware.
If your flooring rules out floor screws, double bypass is a tricky situation — in a pass-through setup there's often no wall surface in the right position for a wall-mounted guide to work. Email us before ordering if finished flooring is a concern and we'll advise on the best path forward for your specific setup.
