Bonuci 20 Pcs Cabinet Door Latch and Catch Hardware Double Roller Catch Cabinet Latches with Spear Strike for Closet Doors Kitchen

20 Pcs Cabinet Door Latch and Catch Hardware Double Roller Catch Cabinet Latches with Spear Strike for Closet Doors Kitchen

Features

  • Stand for Long Term Usage: the cabinet latches are mainly made of galvanized cold rolled steel, reliable and sturdy, not easy to deform or break, resistant to corrosion, with smooth surface, can stand for your long term usage
  • Practical Design: the drawer latch can be opened and closed easily, saving your strength, helping to keep the cabinet door closed and protecting your items from falling, saving your time and energy
  • Sufficient to Use: the package includes 20 pieces of cabinet latches with screws, the size of the latch is about 37 x 8 x 15 mm/ 1.46 x 0.31 x 0.59 inches, the nice combination and appropriate size can meet your daily use and replacement needs
  • Easy to Install: the cabinet door latch is easy to install by yourself; There are 4 installation screws for each roller clip, altogether 80 installation screws, you only need to use the screws to fix them on the cabinet door, simple and convenient
  • Wide Application: the RV closet door latch is suitable for various furniture and places, such as cabinet doors, lockers, dressers, doors, windows and so on, ideal for homes, offices and stores

Specifications

Color Brown Antique Copper
Unit Count 20

This pack contains 20 double-roller cabinet catches with spear strikes in a brown antique copper finish, designed to hold closet and cabinet doors closed. They are made from galvanized cold-rolled steel for corrosion resistance, measure about 37 x 8 x 15 mm, and include four mounting screws per catch (80 screws total) for surface installation.

Model Number: PS-Bonuci-805

Bonuci 20 Pcs Cabinet Door Latch and Catch Hardware Double Roller Catch Cabinet Latches with Spear Strike for Closet Doors Kitchen Review

4.4 out of 5

Why I reached for these

A few of my kitchen cabinet doors had developed that annoying habit of springing open just enough to make the reveal look sloppy—and to invite a curious pet or a toddler hand. I didn’t want bulky child locks, and the magnets I tried were either too weak or too fiddly to align. I switched to the Bonuci double-roller catches and installed them across a run of lower cabinets, a small pantry door, and a couple of utility closet doors in the garage. They’ve been quietly reliable ever since.

What you get and how they’re built

This is a 20-pack of surface-mount, double-roller catches with matching spear strikes, finished in a brown antique copper. The bodies and strike plates are galvanized cold-rolled steel, which in my experience resists the light humidity swings in kitchens and bathrooms. The individual catch housings are compact (roughly 37 x 8 x 15 mm), so they tuck neatly into face frames without calling attention to themselves.

The finish lands somewhere between oil-rubbed bronze and dark copper. On my white shaker doors, they read as a subtle dark accent; on a walnut vanity, they nearly disappear. The coating on my set was consistent, with no flaking during install. Each catch uses four screws, and the pack includes 80 matching screws. I stuck with the included hardware and had no cam-out or head stripping by pre-drilling and using a snug-fitting driver bit.

Mechanically, the design is straightforward: a spring-loaded pair of rollers grips a wedge-shaped spear strike attached to the door. There’s no fancy adjuster—your fine-tuning comes from where you place the parts and, if needed, the tiniest nudge to the strike angle.

Installation: straightforward if you prep

Surface-mount catches rise or fall on alignment. Here’s what worked well for me:

  • I marked the door’s closed position first, then used painter’s tape to hold the spear strike where I wanted it on the door stile.
  • With the door closed, I positioned the catch on the frame so the rollers centered on the strike when the door met the face frame.
  • I drilled pilot holes (this matters—these are small screws going into hardwood or plywood), then drove the two inner screws on the catch to test fit before committing the outer two.

All told, it took me about five minutes per door once I found a rhythm. The lack of a templating jig means you rely on careful marking, but because everything is surface-mounted and visible, any tweaks are simple. If you’ve never installed this style, start on a less visible cabinet to get a feel for the tension.

Holding power and daily use

The latching feel is classic double-roller: a light push yields a positive “click,” and you need a modest pull to open again. On standard cabinet doors with euro hinges, one catch per door is plenty. On a slightly heavier utility closet door in the garage, I used two (top and bottom) to get the same reassuring hold without cranking up the tension too much in one spot.

The goal with this style isn’t security; it’s reliable closure and light resistance. In day-to-day use, they strike that balance well. They keep doors from creeping open, resist the casual nudge of a vacuum bump, and in my kitchen they’ve been effective at discouraging a curious toddler without frustrating adults. If you need true childproofing, pair these with a dedicated child lock, but for everyday containment and a tidy look, they’re ideal.

Adjustability and noise

You can tune the “grab” in a couple of ways:

  • Shift the catch slightly closer to or farther from the strike before setting the final screws.
  • Add a paper-thin shim behind the strike if you need a little more bite.
  • As a last resort, a very gentle tweak of the spear’s wedge angle can increase friction—but go easy so you don’t mar the finish.

Noise is minimal. There’s a soft click on close and on release, quieter than many magnetic catches and much quieter than ball catches.

Finish and aesthetics

If you’re matching oil-rubbed bronze knobs or pulls, this antique copper finish sits comfortably in the same family. It’s less stark than black and less shiny than brass or polished chrome. The compact footprint keeps them visually light, and because both parts are slim, you don’t get the clunky look some larger roller catches impose on small doors.

If you’re after a completely hidden solution, a recessed magnetic touch latch will disappear better. But in most cabinets, the Bonuci catches are discreet enough to blend in.

Durability and corrosion resistance

So far, the rollers haven’t loosened, the springs are still snappy, and the finish looks the same as day one. The galvanized steel construction is a good match for kitchens, bathrooms, and laundry rooms. I would not choose them for an outdoor kitchen or a marine application, but indoors—including moderately humid spaces—they’re a sensible pick. I also installed a pair in an RV galley; they’ve kept doors shut while driving, though I wouldn’t rely on a single catch for a heavy, fully loaded door in high vibration. Again, doubling up is a neat way to share the load.

Where they shine—and where they don’t

What they do well:
- Keep doors closed consistently without heavy force to open.
- Install quickly with standard tools and no mortising.
- Provide a uniform, attractive finish that plays nicely with dark hardware.
- Offer great coverage in a 20-pack—handy for whole-room refreshes.

Limitations to note:
- These aren’t heavy-duty security latches. Determined pets or strong tugs can overcome a single catch on a large door.
- There’s no built-in micro-adjust. Alignment is manual, so pilot holes and careful placement matter.
- The included screws are small by design; pre-drilling is essential in hardwoods to avoid splitting or head damage.

Roller vs. magnetic alternatives

I keep both styles in the shop. Magnets are quiet and can be fully concealed, but you need very precise door gaps, and they lose some effectiveness if debris builds up or the metal plate isn’t perfectly aligned. Double-roller catches like these are more forgiving: the rolling action self-centers the strike as the door closes, and the hold force is more consistent across small misalignments. If you want a very light touch to open, magnets can be nicer. If you want a positive, tactile latch that still opens easily, rollers win.

Value and pack size

A 20-pack makes sense if you’re refreshing a kitchen, outfitting an RV, or tackling a mix of closets and built-ins. Cost per latch ends up low, and having spares is helpful when you run into an odd door that wants a second catch. For a one-off repair, a smaller pack could be more economical, but I appreciated having enough on hand to do every problem door at once and to keep a couple in a drawer for future projects.

Tips from the install bench

  • Always drill pilot holes, especially near door edges.
  • Use a self-centering bit for the catch if you have one; it helps keep the screw heads centered in the slots.
  • Test-latch before driving all four screws; move the catch in tiny increments to dial in the feel.
  • If a heavy door still wanders open, add a second catch rather than overtightening one.
  • Rub a little paste wax on the strike if the action feels scratchy—it makes the engagement buttery without reducing hold noticeably.

Bottom line

I recommend the Bonuci roller catches for anyone who wants a reliable, tidy way to keep cabinet and closet doors closed without resorting to bulky hardware. They’re compact, corrosion-resistant, easy to install, and offer a positive, repeatable latch that suits everyday use. They’re not heavy security devices or foolproof child locks, but for wrangling wandering doors across a kitchen or utility space, they strike the right balance of hold, feel, and value.



Project Ideas

Business

Etsy Shop: Handcrafted Jewelry Boxes

Design a line of small, handcrafted jewelry boxes and shadow boxes using the antique-copper roller catches as a signature hardware element. Market them as vintage-inspired or heirloom-quality; sell finished pieces and DIY kits (including screws and a tiny installation guide) to capture both gift buyers and hobbyists.


Bulk Replacement Packs for RV & Camper Owners

Package smaller multi-packs or curated replacement kits targeting RV, camper and boat owners who need corrosion-resistant door catches. Include clear instructions for common door types, a small screwdriver, and marketing aimed at the outdoor/vanlife community to drive repeat purchases.


Furniture Restoration Service & Parts Sales

Offer a local furniture restoration service that replaces worn cabinet latches with matching antique-copper roller catches, and sell the 20-piece packs online for DIY restorers. Promote before/after photos, simple installation tutorials, and a parts-only option for professionals who want to buy hardware in bulk.


Pop-Up Market Display Solutions

Build and sell portable retail display boxes and small cabinets for market vendors that use roller catches to secure doors during transport but allow quick access at the stall. Sell assembled units and flat-pack versions with hardware included; emphasize durability, corrosion resistance and the finished antique look.


DIY Kit Subscription or Online Course

Create a subscription box or paid online course that teaches small woodworking projects (mini-cabinets, secret boxes, dollhouse doors) and ships a hardware pack of roller catches each month. Upsell video lessons, printable templates and community support; the included hardware keeps production costs predictable and recurring revenue steady.

Creative

Miniature Furniture & Dollhouse Doors

Use the small double-roller catches to make working doors and cabinets for dollhouses, scale models, and shadow boxes. The 37 x 8 x 15 mm size and antique copper finish give a realistic, vintage look — include a few matching screws and pre-drilled pilot holes to make assembly easy for hobbyists.


Hidden Compartment / Secret Panel

Build a hidden panel or secret compartment into a jewelry box, keepsake chest or DIY bookshelf by mounting a roller catch to hold the panel closed securely. The sturdy galvanized steel construction ensures long-term use while the antique finish blends in with reclaimed wood for a discreet, handcrafted effect.


Upcycled Vintage Boxes & Trinket Cases

Transform thrifted wooden boxes, cigar boxes or old drawers into boutique trinket cases with a period-correct closure. Install the brown antique-copper roller catches for an instant vintage upgrade; sand, stain, and distress the box for a cohesive artisan product.


Custom Kitchen/Dresser Hardware Refresh

Refresh small cabinet doors, dresser doors or interior closet doors in upcycled furniture projects by replacing worn catches with these corrosion-resistant roller latches. They’re easy to install and give a consistent, professional-looking finish across a full furniture set.


Interactive Craft Projects & Classroom Kits

Create hands-on kits for makers and students to learn basic carpentry and hardware installation — include a few roller catches, screws, pre-cut wood panels and step-by-step instructions so learners build a functioning mini-cabinet or secret box. The low-cost bulk pack makes it affordable to include hardware in multiple kits.