Types of Locks: A Complete Guide to Lock Mechanisms
Most locks fall into eight types: pin tumbler, wafer, dimple, tubular, disc detainer, lever, padlock, and smart locks. Each resists opening with a different internal mechanism, and each calls for a different picking approach. This guide explains how every type works, where you will run into it, and how the eight compare on security.
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The eight mechanisms below cover almost every lock you will meet from one day to the next. Each entry explains how the lock works, where it shows up, how secure it is, and how pickers approach it.
1. Pin tumbler locks
A pin tumbler lock holds its plug in place with stacked pin pairs: a key pin that the key touches, and a spring-loaded driver pin above it. The correct key lifts every pair until the gap between the two pins lines up with the shear line, the seam where the plug meets the housing. The plug is then free to turn. Linus Yale Jr. patented the modern version in 1861, and it is still the most common lock on earth.
2. Wafer locks
A wafer lock swaps the pin stacks for single flat wafers, each pushed by a spring so it juts into a slot in the housing and blocks the plug. The correct key pulls every wafer back flush with the plug so it can rotate. Wafers are cheap and quick to manufacture, which is why the mechanism turns up wherever cost matters more than security. Early versions date to Philo Felter's 1868 patent.
3. Dimple locks
A dimple lock is a pin tumbler in a different orientation. Instead of a toothed edge, the key has dimpled pockets milled into its flat faces, and the pins press against those faces from the side or underneath. Dimple locks often carry more pins than a standard cylinder and machine them to tighter tolerances, which makes the mechanism noticeably harder to pick.
4. Tubular locks
A tubular lock arranges its pins in a ring around a central post and reads them with a cylindrical key. All of the pins, usually seven or eight, must reach their shear point together. The circular layout shrugs off ordinary picks, but it is also highly predictable, so a tool built to match the geometry can open and even decode the lock quickly.
5. Disc detainer locks
A disc detainer lock uses rotating discs in place of spring-loaded pins. The key turns each disc to a precise angle until a slot in every disc lines up and a sidebar drops into the channel, releasing the core. With no springs to corrode or freeze, the mechanism thrives outdoors. Emil Henriksson invented it in 1907, and Abloy still makes the best-known examples.
6. Lever locks
A lever lock stacks pivoting levers, each with a gate cut into it. The bolt is trapped until the key raises every lever to the one height that aligns all the gates and lets the bolt slide. Robert Barron patented a double-acting lever lock in 1778. The mechanism still guards doors, safes, and older padlocks across the UK and Europe, often as the backup behind a euro cylinder.
7. Padlocks
A padlock is a form factor rather than a mechanism. It is a portable, self-contained lock with a shackle, and inside it can run any core covered on this page: pin tumbler, wafer, disc detainer, or a combination dial. A padlock's security therefore depends on two separate things: the strength of that internal mechanism, and how well the shackle and body resist cutting, prying, and shimming.
8. Smart locks
A smart lock replaces or supplements the key with electronic credentials: a keypad code, a phone app, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, RFID, or a fingerprint. Most models still hide a physical cylinder for backup, so a smart lock is only as strong as the weakest of three things: its software, its wireless link, and that mechanical fallback. The convenience is real, and so is the larger attack surface.
How the eight lock types compare
A quick reference for the eight mechanisms above. Security is rated from 1 (weakest) to 5 (strongest) for a typical example of each type. Build quality varies widely inside every category.
| Lock type | Common use | Security (1 to 5) | Best pick tool |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pin tumbler | Homes, doors, most padlocks | 2 / 5 - easy to learn on | Standard lock pick set |
| Wafer | Cars, cabinets, lockers | 1 / 5 - easiest to pick | Pick set or wafer jiggler |
| Dimple | Euro doors, security padlocks | 3 / 5 - moderate | Dimple lock pick set |
| Tubular | Vending machines, bike locks | 3 / 5 - needs the right tool | Tubular lock pick |
| Disc detainer | High-security padlocks, bikes | 4 / 5 - hard, specialist only | Disc detainer pick |
| Lever | UK doors, safes, old padlocks | 3 / 5 - moderate | Two-in-one or curtain lever pick |
| Padlock | Gates, sheds, lockers, tools | Varies by core | Matches the core mechanism |
| Smart lock | Modern doors, rentals, offices | Not a picking target | Not applicable (electronic) |
Ratings describe typical consumer-grade locks. A high-security version of any mechanism outperforms a budget one. Pickability notes are a guide for locksport practice, not a security endorsement.
Which type of lock is the most secure?
For everyday use, the disc detainer lock is the most secure mechanism on this list. The best examples, from makers like Abloy, combine false gates, hardened steel, and tight tolerances that defeat all but specialist tools and very experienced pickers. A well-managed smart lock can match that in practice. For a standard door, the strongest practical choice is a dimple or pin tumbler deadbolt fitted with spool and serrated security pins and backed by an independent grade rating.
Which type of lock is the easiest to pick?
The wafer lock is the easiest common mechanism to open. Its single flat wafers and loose tolerances give way to simple raking, or to a wafer jiggler, in seconds. Basic pin tumbler locks without security pins are the next easiest, which is why a clear pin tumbler practice lock is what most people learn on first.
Frequently asked questions about lock types
What is the most common type of lock?
What is the most common type of lock?
The pin tumbler lock is by far the most common. It secures the majority of residential deadbolts, door knobs, and padlocks worldwide. Linus Yale Jr. patented the modern design in 1861, and most keys you carry today operate a pin tumbler mechanism.
What type of lock is the hardest to pick?
What type of lock is the hardest to pick?
Among common mechanisms, a quality disc detainer lock is the hardest to pick. Top examples from makers like Abloy use false gates and tight tolerances that defeat all but specialist tools and experienced pickers. High-end dimple and lever locks with security features are close behind.
What is the difference between a wafer lock and a pin tumbler lock?
What is the difference between a wafer lock and a pin tumbler lock?
Both block a rotating plug, but a pin tumbler uses stacked spring-loaded pin pairs while a wafer lock uses single flat wafers. Wafer locks are cheaper, faster to make, and far easier to pick. Pin tumbler locks offer more security and accept upgrades like spool and serrated security pins.
What kind of lock is best for a front door?
What kind of lock is best for a front door?
A front door is best served by a quality pin tumbler or dimple deadbolt with security pins, ideally one carrying an independent grade rating. Many homeowners add a smart lock for convenience and access logs. Whatever the mechanism, fit matters: a good lock in a weak door or strike plate is still weak.
Are smart locks more secure than traditional locks?
Are smart locks more secure than traditional locks?
Not automatically. A smart lock adds convenience, remote access, and an audit trail, but it also adds an attack surface across its firmware, wireless connection, and app. Most smart locks keep a mechanical backup cylinder, so they are only as strong as that fallback. Managed well they are a solid layer; managed poorly they are not.
How can I tell what type of lock I have?
How can I tell what type of lock I have?
Look at the key. A toothed edge means a pin tumbler or wafer lock. Dimpled pockets on a flat key mean a dimple lock. A round key with notches around a tube means a tubular lock. A long flat key with a single bit usually means a lever lock. No key at all, just a keypad or app, means a smart lock.
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