Skip to content

Wall Screw Anchors

Buy Wall Screw Anchors Online in Australia

Wall Screw Anchor Selection — Quick Reference

Wall screw anchors = DIRECT-DRIVE screws engineered for MASONRY + CONCRETE substrates. NO PLUG REQUIRED — screw cuts threads in concrete during installation. Faster + cleaner than plug-and-screw. Workshop + trade + construction.

Wall Screw Anchor Type Best For
Hex Head Concrete Screw Wrench drive + high torque
Phillips / Pan Head Screwdriver drive + lower profile
Countersunk / Flat Head Flush mount
Torx Drive Maximum torque + no cam-out
Galvanised Steel Indoor + light corrosion
304 / 316 Stainless Outdoor + chemical + marine
Common Diameters (6mm-10mm) Workshop + light structural
Lengths (40-200mm+) Match to fixture + embedment

Critical: Drill hole DIAMETER per spec (typically 1mm under screw diameter). Clean dust from hole. Don't re-use hole — second installation has reduced grip. Concrete strength minimum 20 MPa typical. Companion: concrete screws, masonry screw anchors, concrete anchors.

Wall Screw Anchors for Australian Masonry and Concrete Fastening

Wall screw anchors are direct-drive screws engineered for masonry and concrete substrate — they thread directly into pre-drilled holes without requiring a separate plastic or metal plug. The screw's specially-formed thread cuts into the masonry or concrete as it's driven, creating a strong fixing in a single operation. For Australian construction, renovation, and trade workers fastening into masonry, screw anchors offer faster installation than plug-and-screw systems with comparable load capacity. AIMS Industrial supplies wall screw anchors for trade and industrial customers.

How wall screw anchors work

The screw has a hardened thread profile specifically designed for masonry — typically a stepped thread with widely-spaced threads optimised for cutting into concrete, brick, or hollow block. Drill a pilot hole at the specified diameter, insert the screw, and drive it home — the thread cuts into the substrate as the screw turns, creating its own thread engagement. The result is a fastening as strong as plug-and-screw systems but with significantly faster installation.

Where wall screw anchors earn their place

  • Construction fitouts — fast fastening of fittings, rails, and accessories to masonry walls
  • Service runs — securing electrical conduit, plumbing, and HVAC runs to concrete and masonry
  • Equipment mounting — fixing equipment, brackets, and accessories to walls and floors
  • Renovation work — adding fixings to existing masonry without dust-collecting plug installation
  • Production assembly — high-volume fastening operations where installation time matters

Wall screw anchors versus plug-and-screw

  • Wall screw anchors — single-step installation; no separate plug; faster on production work
  • Plug-and-screw — proven technology; wider range of substrate types and load capacities

For everyday masonry and concrete fastening at moderate loads, wall screw anchors are economical and fast. For higher loads, varied substrates, or specialty applications, plug-and-screw or sleeve anchor systems may be more appropriate.

Sizing

Wall screw anchors come in standard metric sizes:

  • 6mm × 40mm-100mm — light-duty fixings into general masonry
  • 7.5mm × 60mm-130mm — medium-duty general-purpose fastening
  • 10mm × 80mm-150mm — heavy-duty fixings for larger loads
  • 12mm and larger — structural-grade screw anchors for heavy applications

Each size has a specific drill bit size — typically 1mm under the screw's nominal thread diameter. Using oversized drill bits reduces fixing strength significantly.

Materials and finishes

  • Zinc-plated steel — the everyday choice for indoor and protected outdoor use
  • Stainless steel 410 — improved corrosion resistance for outdoor and damp applications
  • Stainless steel 304/316 — for marine and aggressive corrosive environments

Installation practice

Drill the pilot hole at the specified size — most manufacturers' product packaging lists the drill size for each screw size. Drill perpendicular to the wall surface (angled holes reduce fixing strength). Clear drilling debris from the hole before inserting the screw. Drive the screw with an impact driver or socket wrench to the specified seating depth. Don't over-torque — that strips the masonry threads and reduces holding strength.

Working in concrete

Wall screw anchors work well in concrete provided:

  • The concrete has reached design strength (typically 28 days from pour)
  • The hole is drilled with a hammer drill or rotary hammer (impact-only drilling produces oversized holes)
  • Embedment depth meets the manufacturer's specification
  • Edge distances are adequate (typically 100mm minimum from the edge for full strength)

Brands stocked at AIMS

Wall screw anchors are stocked from quality fastener manufacturers across the standard sizes and finishes. For specific brands (Hilti HUS, Spit, etc.) or specialty applications, sourcing through our distribution channels covers most options.

Companion ranges at AIMS

Wall screw anchors sit alongside our broader masonry fastener range — see wall plugs, Mungo plugs, sleeve anchors, and mushroom nail-in anchors for the related products.

Need help speccing wall screw anchors for specific substrate or load requirements? contact our team — we'll match by substrate, screw size, and embedment.

Quote Cart