Security and safety: they're major concerns, yet they often fall a bit further down the to-do list than we like to admit. So, let's see what could happen if they didn't get the attention they deserve...
A Door, a Drill, and a Decision
On a rainy Tuesday, a facilities manager named Dana ran a routine fire drill at a mid-size office. The plan looked perfect on paper: evacuate 180 people through three exits in under three minutes. But reality had other ideas. At one door, a delivery cart blocked the way. At another, a visitor hesitated; was that wide metal bar for pushing or did it lock the door? Seconds stretched. A supervisor shoulder-checked the opening and it finally swung free, but the drill time slipped past the target. Afterward, Dana asked a simple question with complicated consequences: “Did we pick the right exit hardware for how this building actually works?”
That moment is why this article matters. Exit hardware—whether a low-profile paddle or a full-width push bar (panic bar)—isn’t just a spec line or an aesthetic choice. It shapes life-safety under stress, forced-entry resistance, day-to-day usability, and compliance with the Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ). The “right” answer changes with occupancy, traffic patterns, abuse levels, and how your doors tie into access control and alarms. Get it wrong, and you risk slow egress, propped doors, nuisance alarms, broken latches, and avoidable liability. Get it right, and evacuations are intuitive, security is stronger, and operations run smoother.
Why your door hardware decision deserves careful attention:
Use the guide below to translate these stakes into a clear, defensible choice between a paddle exit and a push bar, tailored to your building’s risks, codes, and daily realities.
Best for high-occupancy and abuse-prone doors: Push bar (panic bar): more forgiving to use under stress, generally more durable, and easier to integrate with alarms/monitoring.
Best for controlled, lower-traffic commercial spaces: Paddle exit: cleaner look, often lower cost, acceptable where occupancy and abuse are modest.
Security edge: Both can be secure when paired with proper latching, door/frame reinforcement, hinges, and monitoring. Push bars tend to offer better durability under force and clearer life-safety operation.
Bottom line: Choose based on occupancy, door traffic/abuse, code/authority requirements, and how you plan to monitor alarms and after-hours re-entry.
Paddle exit (a.k.a. “lever/paddle latch”):
A flat, wide paddle you press to unlatch the door. It’s typically smaller than a push bar and looks like a low-profile lever. Common on interior commercial doors, smaller suites, or controlled areas where crowds and panic loads are unlikely.
Push bar (a.k.a. “panic bar” or “crash bar”):
A full-width bar across the door you push to unlatch and swing it open. Designed for fast egress during emergencies and for doors that handle higher traffic or potential crowd pressure.
Life-safety note: Building and fire codes often require panic hardware (push bars) on certain doors based on occupancy type and load. Always confirm with your local Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ).
Paddle: Security depends mainly on the quality of the latch and strike plate. On hollow metal doors with reinforced frames and proper strike reinforcements, paddles can be reasonably secure—but their smaller mechanism and trim can be more susceptible to prying/lever attacks if the rest of the opening isn’t reinforced.
Push bar: Commercial panic bars often come with heavier-duty latching (single-point or multi-point/vertical rods). Multi-point models secure the door at the head and/or sill, improving resistance to pry attacks and ram pressure.
Verdict: Slight edge to push bars—especially models with vertical rods or robust latch designs.
Paddle: In busy environments, users may “hip-check” or yank on the paddle, accelerating wear.
Push bar: Built to be pushed anywhere along the rail, distributes force better, and handles abuse common to retail, schools, arenas, and warehouses.
Verdict: Push bars are usually more durable under heavy use.
Paddle: Requires finding and pressing a defined target. Fine in calm conditions; less ideal with smoke, darkness, or crowding.
Push bar: Intuitive—push the door—with a very large activation surface that works even if the user can’t see the hardware.
Verdict: Push bars provide more reliable egress in emergencies.
Both: Can be configured as “exit-only” with no exterior trim, or with keyed/credentialed exterior access.
Push bar advantage: Many models offer electrified latch retraction (ELR) for scheduled unlocks (e.g., business hours) while keeping robust latching when locked.
Paddle setups: Often rely on electrified strikes or locks; totally viable, but pay attention to latch alignment and frame strength.
Verdict: Tie, depending on the electrified strategy, though push bars with ELR are a common, reliable pattern.
Both: Support door position switches (DPS), request-to-exit (REX), and rim-mounted or mortise contact monitoring.
Push bar edge: Many panic bars offer built-in exit alarms, latch monitoring, or dogging status feedback; easier to find off-the-shelf kits for high-traffic use cases.
Verdict: Slight edge to push bars for turnkey alarm/monitoring options.
Paddle: Minimalistic, low-profile, visually clean—often preferred by architects in offices or customer-facing interiors.
Push bar: Larger visual footprint; some architectural series look clean, but the bar is still prominent.
Verdict: Paddle wins on aesthetics.
Clean, low-profile design; good for office aesthetics
Typically lower initial cost for the hardware and install
Works well for interior, lower-traffic doors
Compatible with access control (electrified locks/strikes)
Smaller activation surface; less intuitive in emergencies
Can wear faster in abusive environments
Usually single-point latch—frame and strike reinforcement matter more
Fewer integrated alarm/monitoring kits than panic hardware
Intuitive, full-width activation; ideal for emergencies
Heavier-duty construction for high-traffic and abuse
Multi-point options (vertical rods) improve forced-entry resistance
Strong ecosystem of exit alarms, monitoring, ELR options
Larger visual impact; not as sleek
Typically higher cost (hardware + install)
More parts to maintain (especially with vertical rods)
Dogging/ELR features require proper setup and periodic testing
Check code first. If the door serves an assembly area, high occupancy, or certain hazardous use types, panic hardware may be required. Your AHJ trumps every preference.
Assess door abuse and traffic.
High traffic or rough use (schools, retail back-of-house, warehouses): Favor push bar.
Low-to-moderate interior traffic (office suites, conference rooms): Paddle can be fine—if permitted by code.
Define security outcomes.
If you need stronger resistance to prying/ram pressure, consider a panic bar with vertical rods or robust rim/mortise options, paired with reinforced frames and proper strikes.
Integrations & schedules.
Need scheduled unlocks (business hours)? ELR push bar or electrified strike/lock with paddle can both work, pick what your access control platform and door geometry support best.
Need alarms or compliance logging? Off-the-shelf alarmed panic bars and monitored latch options simplify deployment.
Aesthetics and cost. When code and risk allow, a paddle delivers a clean look and may save on your initial budget, just don’t trade away durability where abuse is expected.
Adding chains or surface bolts to egress doors. This is dangerous and typically illegal. If you need delayed egress or controlled egress, use listed hardware designed for that purpose and approved by your AHJ.
Ignoring the frame, hinges, and strike. A strong latch on a weak frame is still weak. Reinforce the opening holistically.
Skipping monitoring. Add door position switches (DPS), REX sensors, and (where useful) exit alarms to detect propped doors, tailgating, or off-hours activity.
Misusing magnets. Electromagnetic locks must be configured to meet life-safety rules (proper egress sensors, manual releases, power loss behavior) and approved by the AHJ.
No maintenance plan. Panic bars and paddles need periodic inspection, lubrication, and functional testing, especially dogging mechanisms, vertical rods, and electrified parts.
Retail exit to alley (high abuse):Rim panic bar with exit alarm, vertical rods if door flex is a concern, DPS to your alarm/access system, kick-plate protection, and hinge/strike reinforcement.
Office suite interior corridor (low traffic): Paddle exit with electrified strike (if access control is needed), DPS to notify if propped, and a modest closer tension to prevent slamming.
Warehouse cross-corridor door (moderate/high traffic): Rim panic bar with ELR for timed unlocks, DPS + REX tied to access control, routine maintenance schedule, and conspicuous egress signage.
Upfront: Paddle hardware is often less expensive; panic hardware typically costs more, especially with vertical rods or ELR kits.
Installation: Push bars can take longer to install, particularly multi-point versions; paddles are simpler.
Maintenance: Panic bars—while designed for abuse—need periodic checks. Paddles may require more frequent repair in the wrong environment due to misuse.
Total-cost perspective: If traffic and abuse are high, push bars generally yield a lower lifetime headache factor despite a higher upfront cost.
Is a paddle exit as safe as a push bar?
It can be safe when properly specified, but for high-occupancy or panic scenarios, push bars are typically required and more reliable under stress.
Which is more secure against forced entry?
All else equal, push bars with robust latching (especially vertical rods) usually resist prying and ramming better than basic paddle setups.
Can I keep a push bar door locked from the outside?
Yes. Use appropriate exterior trim (keyed cylinder or credential reader) for controlled re-entry. Interior egress remains free.
Can both be integrated with access control?
Yes. Push bars often use electrified latch retraction; paddles pair well with electrified locks/strikes. Ensure fail-safe/fail-secure behavior matches code and life-safety needs.
How do I prevent propped doors or tailgating?
Add door position switches, exit alarms, and, if appropriate, video analytics with real-time alerts. Train staff and audit incidents.
If your door must handle crowds or is subject to heavy abuse, or code leans that way: choose a push bar.
If the door serves a controlled, lower-traffic interior area and aesthetics matter: a paddle may be the right fit.
In all cases, treat the whole opening; door, frame, hinges, strike, closer, and add real-time system monitoring. Confirm final selections with your AHJ to ensure compliance.
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Security professionals are constantly looking for innovative ways to secure their facility and provide a safe environment within their budget. And, they are also constantly looking for resources to help them achieve that mission while expert advice is hard to come by.
Fortunately, we have released a considerations guide that will help security professionals perform their own in-house security risk assessment.
What's Inside?
This guide is intended to assist you with performing an in-house physical security risk assessment. In many cases, assistance from a third-party expert, like Theseus Professional Services, is required.
Identification of missing or inadequate physical security measures that safeguard assets (people, property, and information) and critical business functions is of paramount importance. The findings of a security risk assessment are used to measure and communicate the level of risk to the organization.