• Toggle anchor installs behind 3/8"- to 3-5/8"-thick hollow materials including gypsum board, drywall, and concrete block to provide a secure hold from within the mounting material
  • Anchor affixes to the wall before adding the bolt and fixture, allowing one-person installation and fixture changes
  • Made in USA, and includes 3/16"-24 UNC-threaded bolts
  • Ultimate tensile strength is 238 lb. in 1/2" drywall and 802 lb. in concrete block with a 3/16"-24 UNC bolt
  • Use one-fourth or less of listed maximum values for safe working loads (as required by local regulations)

I use these everyday to mount TV’s, you should definitely pick up #10 X 1inch fender washers. The heads of these will not grab TV mount holes, they are too small and the head slides through the bracket hole (on most TV mounts), those washers fit great. But I’ve purchased a couple hundred of these always been happy. Going to post a video to help all the reviews that seem to be somehow installing these incorrectly

My toilet paper holder and towel rack started hanging out of the wall. I thought I was going to have to get some sort of drywall repair done in order to fix this problem. But these toggle anchors made repairing these problems very easy. I didn't have a drill but I was able to get these anchors into my existing holes by wiggling them around and hammering them in. I used a pair of pliers to help wiggle them when they got stuck. One issue to watch out for is if your existing holes are near studs. These anchors need some additional clearance on the sides. This can get tricky if you need to put multiple anchors close to each other. Another issue to watch out for is that the hole needs to be big enough fir the plastic round part to fit into. This is particularly important if you are installing this without a drill.

Used 2 of these to mount a 6U rack against a wall with metal studs. The rack itself isn't light and it's holding a 2U UPS as well as other things and I was really concerned about it coming off the wall. These seem to be doing the job really well. I know they're not supposed to need the studs at all, but I didn't want to risk it so I drilled through the metal studs and put them in there.

I gotta say I was a little skeptical about these as far as how well they would work. But I gotta tell you they exceeded my expectations. I used these to secure towel holders in my kids bathroom. The way they were installed was with a large screw Into the drywall. Of course having kids they pull on them and the whole thing pulled out of the drywall. That’s when these came in. I installed these in literally 1 min. Super easy and simple. I tightened it and put everything back together. I yanked on the towel holder not super hard but just with enough force and you can definitely tell that it is very secure on there and it is not going anywhere. I just had my house built about 6 months ago and I wish that all the towel holders had been installed with these because they are awesome. I will replace the rest of them and the old ones tear out.

I have been using those silly plastic smush nuts that always seem to fall out of the drywall. When a buddy told me to try these, I was skeptical. The ONLY bad thing about these is the fact that you have to poke a 1/2 hole to make it work. That's fine for a heavy product, but might be overkill for something smaller.

I needed to hang a wall mount for a monitor and there was no stud where I needed one, so I tried these wall anchors and they were perfect for the job. I can't speak to the weight capacity of these things--my whole monitor setup is less than 10lbs--but the installation was super easy and straightforward, and once installed the anchors seem rock solid. For context, I'm pretty hopeless at home improvement stuff yet I installed these on the first try with no issues and didn't even swear once.

The price is a bit much, but well worth it. Very simple to install & simple instructions. Extremely solid and works great for not only sheetrock, but also for those thin flimsy steel studs on newer apartments/condos. A friend attempted to hang a wall mount for her TV using just the small lagbolts that were included with the mounting kit. A week later, things were sagging. I reinstalled her mount using these (drilling through the sheetrock and metal studs). Orientated the bracing horizontally so they were using the surface area of the metal studs, and the Mount/TV are SOLID. I plan on picking up more in different sizes, as the ones I purchased are overkill for hanging smaller things. Great product! Worth the few extra bucks.

Purchased these to anchor half of a VESA TV mount to the wall above my mantle and was incredibly pleased with how easy and fast these were to use. The standout that houses my gas fireplace insert and mantle was framed with 24-inch centered studs and my older, but fantastic swiveling VESA TV mount is only wide enough to span 16-inch centered studs. While this mount/TV combo weighs in north of 90 lbs, I felt it safe to bolt one side of the mount into an available stud, and decided to try these to anchor the other side in the drywall. Installation was truly a breeze per the the included instructions and they seem rock solid in the drywall. I've used many variants of molly/toggle bolts in the past and have found myself repeatedly grumbling, cussing and even having to shift over and retry as a result of them not grabbing properly and/or spinning in the drywall. Unless I come across a wall in the future that won't support these SNAPTOGGLE anchors for some reason, I believe I've found a new go-to for this application.

I forgot how I stumbled onto these things, but for a very long time I've agonized over how to SOLIDLY mount things to drywall. To make matters worse, in our house we have steel studs which really limits what we can mount to walls (a self-tapping metal screw in a steel stud does not hold as well as a wood screw in a wood stud). I've used these to mount 50 feet of Rubbermaid FastTrack rails, Ikea wall shelves, Ikea wall lamps, wall hooks, towel bars, toilet paper holders, and a few other things. Toggler even makes a ceiling hook version of these which I've used to mount a pot rack over the kitchen. Everything I've attached to a wall with these has attached very solidly - there is no "if-i-ness" about the strength of these at all! And a big benefit of these Snaptoggles is that you can completely unscrew the item from the wall (say, if you want to paint the wall), then hang the item back up when you're done since the back-toggle won't fall down inside the wall. A note for those with steel studs: I've actually mounted these inside a steel stud. You need to drill the 1/2" hole through the stud, then you can insert the Snaptoggle though that hole and have a super-secure attachment point.

I never even heard of these until I saw someone using them in a youtube video hanging a TV. I bought these to secure a TV mount in a metal stud and worked great for what I needed. I wound up using all 10 for various different projects and all of them went in with no problem. I also had to remove the screw from one and reinstall it, and had no issues doing that. I used to buy the anchors that would screw into the wall, which worked good, but I like the fact that these have toggles in the back and can be used on different thicknesses and also can be reused. Only thing to be aware of is that you have to predill a 1/2" hole into the wall. We originally only had a 3/8" drill bit for the metal stud and the anchor would not go in no matter how hard we tried to force it. Once we got the 1/2" bit and redrilled, it went in easily.