SFSpecFits

Plastic expansion anchor vs toggle bolt

Use a plastic expansion anchor for masonry and concrete walls. Use a toggle bolt for hollow drywall or plaster walls. In drywall, a plastic expansion anchor provides very little holding strength — the toggle bolt is the far better choice.

Side-by-side comparison

PropertyPlastic expansion anchorToggle bolt
Best for wall typeMasonry, concrete, brickHollow drywall, plaster
How it holdsExpands to grip hole wallsWing opens behind the wall panel
Pilot hole requiredYes — sized to anchor ODYes — must be large enough for folded toggle
Typical shear load (drywall)~10–20 lbs (unreliable)50–300 lbs
Typical load (concrete)25–55 lbsNot applicable
Can screw be removed?YesNo (spring toggle falls in wall)
Skill requiredMinimalModerate

The common mistake: plastic anchors in drywall

Plastic expansion anchors are widely sold in general hardware kits and are frequently used in drywall — this is incorrect. Drywall gypsum is too soft and crumbly to hold an expansion anchor reliably under any significant load. The anchor simply works through the material and the fastener pulls out. For hollow walls, use a toggle bolt or a dedicated drywall anchor (self-drilling Toggler or E-Z Anchor type).

Quick decision guide