
Introduction
If an internal door feels rattly, closes badly, sticks at the latch, or never quite feels solid when shut, the mortice latch is often a bigger part of the problem than people realise.
A good mortice latch helps an internal door close cleanly, keeps the handle action smooth, and makes the whole door feel firmer and better fitted. A poor one can feel rough, noisy, weak on spring return, or wear out surprisingly quickly. The problem is that many latches look similar in listings, so it is easy to buy the wrong backset, the wrong case depth, or a latch that is simply too flimsy for the door it is going into.
This guide explains the best mortice latches for internal doors in the UK, what actually matters when choosing one, and when replacing the latch is the right move versus when the door problem is really down to alignment, handles or strike plate position. Because size confusion is one of the most common reasons for bad purchases, this article includes a quick latch sizing and suitability section before the buying advice.
If you are still diagnosing the wider issue rather than buying parts immediately, Door Handles, Latches and Hardware Fixes (UK Guide) is the main cluster hub. If the door already has a closing problem and you are unsure whether the latch is the true fault, How to Fix a Door That Won’t Stay Shut (Latch Alignment) is the best first guide before ordering hardware.
Quick Recommendation
For most UK internal doors, the best choice is a good-quality tubular or mortice latch with a smooth sprung action, a sensible backset for the door and handle position, and stronger build quality than the cheapest budget options.
For most homes, that means prioritising:
- the correct latch size
- smooth handle return
- solid spring action
- clean bolt movement
- better internal quality over lowest price
A slightly better latch usually makes a bigger difference than people expect. On an internal door, the latch affects how the handle feels, how securely the door shuts, and whether the door feels neatly fitted or just “a bit off”.
Product Comparison Table
| Product Type | Best For | Main Strength | Main Weakness | Best Buy For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Tubular Mortice Latch | Most internal doors | Simple, common and widely compatible | Quality varies a lot at the cheaper end | Most household replacements |
| Heavy-Duty Mortice Latch | Frequently used internal doors | Better spring and longer service life | Costs more than basic models | Busy family homes |
| Adjustable Mortice Latch | Replacement work where handle position is awkward | More fitting flexibility | Not always needed for standard doors | Retrofit work and imperfect openings |
| Quiet-Close / Smoother Action Latch | Bedrooms and better-finish interiors | Less rattly and smoother feel | Usually more expensive | Homeowners wanting better day-to-day feel |
| Budget Basic Latch | Quick low-cost fixes | Cheap and easy to source | Often weaker spring and poorer overall feel | Low-priority or temporary repairs |
Best Options Explained
Standard Tubular Mortice Latches
This is the main category most homeowners will be choosing from.
A standard tubular mortice latch is usually the right answer when you are replacing a worn internal latch or fitting one into a normal bedroom, bathroom, lounge or cupboard door. When correctly sized and reasonably well made, they offer a good balance of price, availability and ease of fitting.
They are a strong choice when:
- the door is a typical internal timber door
- you want a straightforward like-for-like replacement
- the current latch size and handle position already work well
- you need something reliable without overcomplicating the job
If the handle itself also feels poor or loose, How to Fix a Loose Door Handle (Latch Issues) is worth reading before replacing the latch on its own.
Heavy-Duty Mortice Latches
These are worth considering where the door gets constant use. Hallway doors, kitchen doors, frequently used bedroom doors and shared living spaces often benefit from stronger spring action and better internal latch quality.
A heavy-duty latch is particularly useful when:
- the door is used many times a day
- the existing latch has worn or become sloppy quickly
- the handle return needs to feel firmer
- you want a longer-lasting hardware upgrade
This can be a smarter long-term choice than repeatedly replacing cheaper latches.
Adjustable Mortice Latches
These are most helpful in replacement situations where the backset or existing preparation is not ideal. They are not essential for every job, but they can be useful where you want extra flexibility during fitting.
They suit:
- older properties
- imperfect previous door prep
- replacement work where exact matching is difficult
- doors where handle position and latch size need more care
Smoother or Quiet-Close Latches
Some better-quality latches feel notably cleaner in use. The bolt action is smoother, the spring return is stronger, and the door can feel less tinny or rattly. This is especially worthwhile if you are trying to improve the general feel of the door rather than just make it functional again.
Budget Basic Latches
These can work for a quick fix, but quality varies widely. On a lightly used door they may be acceptable, but on a busy household door they often show their weaknesses sooner.
How to Choose the Right Option
Get the Size Right First
This matters more than brand.
You need to match the latch to the door thickness, the handle position and the existing mortice preparation if you are replacing rather than starting from scratch. The key sizing point for many DIY users is the backset, because that affects where the spindle sits relative to the edge of the door.
If the backset is wrong, the handle position can feel awkward or fail to line up with the existing prep.
Think About Handle Quality and Return Spring
The latch and the handle work together. A weak or rough latch can make even a decent handle feel poor. Likewise, if the handle itself is worn or damaged, a new latch may not fully solve the problem. If you are replacing both, How to Measure for a Replacement Door Handle (PZ, Centres) is the most relevant companion guide.
Match Quality to Door Usage
A spare room door and a busy kitchen door do not place the same demands on hardware. A better latch is usually worth it on frequently used doors.
Latch Sizing and Suitability Guide
Before buying, check the following:
| Check | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Is this a like-for-like replacement or a fresh fit? | Replacement work usually needs closer size matching |
| What is the existing backset? | Affects handle position and compatibility |
| Is the current problem really the latch, or the strike plate or handle? | Prevents buying the wrong part |
| How often is the door used? | Helps decide between basic and better-quality latches |
| Does the current latch feel weak, noisy or rough in use? | Helps confirm that upgrade quality matters |
That third point matters. If the latch is sound but the strike plate is misaligned, the real solution may be How to Adjust a Strike Plate rather than buying a new latch.
What Makes a Good Mortice Latch?
Smooth Bolt Action
A good latch should retract and return cleanly without graunching, grinding or sticking.
Better Spring Strength
The spring return affects how solid the handle feels and how confidently the latch re-engages.
Consistent Build Quality
A better-made latch tends to feel less sloppy in use and hold up better over time.
Suitability for Internal Doors
For most homeowners, the best internal latch is one that fits correctly, operates smoothly and does not create extra fitting complications.
Common Buying Mistakes
Buying by Appearance Alone
Many latches look broadly similar online but differ in size, feel and spring quality.
Ignoring Backset
This is one of the easiest ways to order the wrong latch.
Replacing the Latch When the Real Problem Is Alignment
If the door is not meeting the strike plate properly, a new latch may not help much.
Choosing the Cheapest Possible Latch for a High-Use Door
This often leads to a poor feel and earlier wear.
Forgetting the Handle-Latch Relationship
A good latch improves door feel, but it cannot fully compensate for a damaged or poor-quality handle set.
When You May Not Need This Product
You may not need a new mortice latch if:
- the strike plate only needs adjustment
- the latch just needs cleaning or suitable lubrication
- the handle is the real source of the problem
- the door has dropped and the latch is only catching badly because of alignment
- the door rubs the frame and is creating closing pressure that feels like latch failure
In those cases, How to Fix a Door That Won’t Latch Properly, How to Fix a Door That Rubs on the Frame or How to Fix a Stiff Door Handle may be more relevant than replacing the latch.
Related Fix Guides
- Door Handles, Latches and Hardware Fixes (UK Guide)
- How to Fix a Door That Won’t Stay Shut (Latch Alignment)
- How to Fix a Loose Door Handle (Latch Issues)
- How to Adjust a Strike Plate
- Best Adjustable Door Latches (UK)
- How to Fix a Door That Won’t Latch Properly