A loose Olympic bar leaning in a corner is a stubbed toe and a scratched wall waiting to happen, and a 45-pound bar that tips over takes paint, drywall, and sometimes a foot with it. A wall mount fixes all of that for the cost of a few square inches of bare wall, but the version you bolt up decides whether one bar floats vertically out of the way or six bars hang in a tidy horizontal row.
A good wall mount comes down to three things: whether it holds one bar or a whole collection, whether it racks them vertically or horizontally, and how well it shields knurling and plating from steel-on-steel contact. That mix shifts depending on whether you own a single training bar, a growing rack of specialty bars, or a packed garage that needs every bar off the floor. The picks below lead with the best sellers, so the most-bought mounts come first.
The price column shows a general tier only. Prices move often, so tap a link for the live figure on Amazon.
How to choose a wall-mount barbell holder
Every mount here gets a bar off the floor. What separates them is orientation, how many bars they swallow, the strength of the bracket, and how carefully they treat your bar’s finish. Here is what actually changes which one belongs on your wall.
Vertical or horizontal
This is the first fork, and it is mostly about your wall, not your bars. A vertical hanger grips one end of the bar so it stands straight up against the wall, using barely any horizontal space; it is ideal for narrow gaps beside a door, in a closet, or between racks. The catch is ceiling height, a full-length Olympic bar stands about seven feet tall, so a low basement ceiling can rule it out. Horizontal racks cradle the bar across two brackets so it sits like a towel rail. They need a clear run of wall a little longer than the bar, but they shrug off ceiling limits and let you grab and re-rack in one easy motion.
One bar or a collection
Single hangers and single-bar horizontal pairs are cheap, compact, and perfect if you own one training bar. Once you start collecting, an Olympic bar plus a curl bar, a trap bar, a safety squat bar, the math changes fast. A multi-bar rack that holds four or six bars in one bracket costs more up front but takes a single drilling session and a single stretch of wall, instead of peppering the room with separate hangers. Buy for the collection you expect to own, not just the bar in your hands today.
Bar diameter and fit
Vertical hangers slide over the bar shaft, so the prong gap matters. Most of these fit shafts up to 32 or 33mm, which covers standard 25mm and Olympic 28-29mm bars with room to spare, but always check your bar’s shaft, not its sleeve. Horizontal racks are far more forgiving on diameter because the bar simply rests in a cradle; they care more about your bar length and the width of the notch. Specialty bars with thick or oddly shaped handles, axle bars, multi-grip bars, are usually happier on a horizontal cradle than squeezed into a vertical prong.
Capacity and build strength
A single bar weighs roughly 35 to 45 pounds, so even a modest mount has margin for one. The rated capacities here run from around 150 pounds on a single hanger up to 400 to 480 pounds on the multi-bar racks, which is the headroom you want when several loaded-feeling specialty bars share one bracket. Steel thickness is the tell: 4.5 to 7-gauge plate and 5mm brackets resist the slow sag and flex that thinner stamped metal develops over years of racking and unracking.
Finish protection
Bare steel against bare steel chews up knurling and scratches plating, and a marred bar is permanent. The better mounts line every contact point: rubber pads on the budget hangers, and thicker UHMW (ultra-high-molecular-weight) plastic on the premium racks, which is the same low-friction material gyms use precisely because it shields the shaft as you rack and unrack again and again. If a mount ships bare metal with sharp edges, plan to add felt or rubber yourself, or keep a sacrificial bar on it.
Mounting surface and hardware
Almost everything here is meant to bite into wood studs, and the included screws assume exactly that. Hit a stud, not just drywall; a bar that tears out of hollow plaster becomes a falling hazard. For concrete, brick, or masonry you will usually need to source your own anchors, a few mounts include a leveling bubble to keep the bracket square. Measure your stud spacing before buying a multi-bar rack, because the bracket hole pattern has to land on solid framing.
JNIHEEP Single Vertical Olympic Barbell Hanger

The best seller in this group keeps it simple and does it well: one bar, stood vertically against the wall, in a footprint barely larger than your palm. Heavy steel plate with a thick, coarse powder coat resists rust, and a rubber pad cushions the contact point so your bar’s coating stays intact. The 32mm prong gap takes standard and Olympic shafts in the 25-28mm range, and because it spaces the fingers apart, the bar never grinds against the bracket. It mounts in minutes to wall, stone, or cement, and doubles as a hanger for curl bars, chains, bands, or jump ropes.
Pros
- Tiny vertical footprint slips into narrow spaces
- Heavy steel plate with thick anti-rust powder coat
- Rubber pad protects the bar’s finish
- 32mm gap fits standard and Olympic shafts
- Installs in minutes on wall, stone, or cement
Cons
- Holds a single bar only
- Needs the ceiling height to stand a full bar upright
Best for: anyone with one bar and a sliver of vertical wall to spare.
Budget tier. Check price on Amazon
XZHXFX Single Vertical Barbell Wall Holder

The XZHXFX is the near-twin of the JNIHEEP and goes after the same job at the lowest price in the lineup. You get the same vertical, single-bar design in quality steel plate with a thick coarse powder coat, the same rubber anti-rust pad guarding your bar’s coating, and a slightly wider 33mm prong gap that still suits standard and Olympic shafts in the 25-28mm range. The spaced fingers keep the bar off the bracket, and installation is the usual few-minute job on wall, stone, or cement. If the top pick is out of stock or you simply want the cheapest entry, this is a like-for-like swap.
Pros
- Same compact vertical single-bar design at the lowest price here
- Quality steel plate with thick coarse powder coat
- Rubber pad shields the bar’s finish
- 33mm gap fits standard and Olympic shafts
- Quick install on wall, stone, or cement
Cons
- Single bar only
- Less-established brand than the alternatives
Best for: one-bar owners who want the lowest-cost vertical hanger.
Budget tier. Check price on Amazon
Yes4All Horizontal Barbell Holder (1 Pair)

For a bar that cannot stand upright, this Yes4All pair lays it flat across two heavy brackets like a rail. The standout is the metal: 7-gauge steel, the thickest in this comparison, finished in black powder coat to fight rust and corrosion. A UHMW plastic layer pads the cradle so the bar’s knurling and shaft finish survive countless rack-and-unrack cycles, and the ample opening fits most bars, Olympic and standard, 20kg and 15kg, short bars, aluminum training bars, even axle bars. Hardware is included for wood studs or masonry.
Pros
- 7-gauge steel, the heaviest build here
- UHMW plastic pads protect knurling and finish
- Wide cradle fits Olympic, standard, short, and axle bars
- Black powder coat resists rust and corrosion
- Hardware included for wood or masonry
Cons
- Premium tier for a single-bar holder
- Needs a clear horizontal run of wall
Best for: low-ceiling spaces that need one bar racked horizontally on a tough bracket.
Premium tier. Check price on Amazon
Yes4All Vertical 4-Bar Wall-Mounted Barbell Holder

This is the vertical answer for a growing collection: a single top-mounted bracket that stands four bars upright side by side. The bracket measures about 17.5 inches wide with a stud-friendly hole pattern (2, 12, and 2-inch spacing) sized for 12, 14, and 16-inch wood studs, and it is cut from 4.5mm steel plate with a black coating that holds up for years. It is rated to 200 pounds and takes long or short bars, Olympic, power, curl, and cambered. A thick padded plastic layer cushions the bars and cuts rack noise, and four screws are included for a quick mount.
Pros
- Stands four bars vertically from one bracket
- 4.5mm steel plate rated to 200 pounds
- Stud-friendly hole spacing for common wood studs
- Padded plastic layer protects bars and reduces noise
- Includes mounting screws for a fast install
Cons
- Premium tier pricing
- Vertical mounting needs the ceiling height for full bars
Best for: collectors with high ceilings who want four bars stored in one narrow column.
Premium tier. Check price on Amazon
Luwint Horizontal Single-Bar Storage Rack (1 Pair)

The Luwint pair is the mid-priced horizontal option for a single bar, with one trick the others lack: you set the spacing yourself. Mount the two brackets as far apart as your bar wants, which lets the same pair handle a long Olympic bar or a shorter specialty bar without fuss. Solid, thickened steel resists bending under a loaded bar, and a thick rubber layer with a non-skid texture both buffers the finish and adds friction so the bar will not creep off. All wall hardware is included, and the cradle suits Olympic, standard, deadlift, multi-grip, and trap bars alike.
Pros
- Adjustable bracket spacing fits long or short bars
- Solid thickened steel resists bending
- Thick non-skid rubber layer protects and grips the bar
- Works with Olympic, deadlift, trap, and multi-grip bars
- All mounting hardware included
Cons
- Holds one bar per pair
- You must measure and set the spacing during install
Best for: single-bar owners who want adjustable spacing at a mid-range price.
Mid-range tier. Check price on Amazon
VAIIO Single Vertical Barbell Hanger

The VAIIO is a vertical single-bar hanger that pays attention to the details of getting it on the wall straight. The bracket is built from 5mm-thick steel plate under a coarse, durable powder coat, and a patterned protective pad cushions the bar against scratches. What sets it apart is the included horizontal bubble level, so the hanger goes up parallel to the floor on the first try, plus the full hardware kit with screws, rubber expansion plugs, and an L-wrench for wood or concrete walls. It is built to clear the clutter of Olympic bars, curl bars, and axle or specialty bars from your home gym.
Pros
- Sturdy 5mm steel plate with durable powder coat
- Bubble level included for a square install
- Complete hardware kit for wood or concrete walls
- Patterned protective pad guards the bar’s finish
- Fits Olympic, curl, and axle or specialty bars
Cons
- Holds a single bar
- Vertical orientation needs adequate ceiling height
Best for: DIY installers who want a level guide and full hardware in the box.
Budget tier. Check price on Amazon
ANOSWXG Horizontal 4-Bar V-Hook Wall Mount

The ANOSWXG hangs four bars horizontally on extended V-shaped brackets, and that V is the point: it cradles the shaft deep so a bar cannot slip off the wall even when bumped. Sturdy steel construction is rated to a generous 480 pounds, the highest capacity here, which is reassuring with four bars sharing the mount. The wide bracket opening welcomes curl bars, deadlift bars, and trap bars alongside your Olympic bar, and thick durable plastic pads the contact points to spare plating and collars. Hardware is included for mounting straight into wall studs, with a note to check that your bars clear the opening size.
Pros
- Holds four bars horizontally in one mount
- Deep V brackets keep bars from slipping off
- Rated to 480 pounds, the highest here
- Wide opening fits curl, deadlift, and trap bars
- Padded contact points protect plating and collars
Cons
- Must confirm thick specialty bars fit the opening
- Needs a clear horizontal run of studded wall
Best for: garages stacking several heavy bars on one secure horizontal mount.
Mid-range tier. Check price on Amazon
Luwint Horizontal 3-Bar Storage Rack

The Luwint 3-bar rack is the simple, solid middle ground for a small collection. Tall hooks rise high so bars settle in deep and stay put even if knocked, and the black-painted steel body is sturdy enough to keep three bars off the floor without drama. Mounting hardware is included and the install is straightforward; you measure for the handle section and set the right spacing. One honesty note worth knowing: this is bare painted metal with no plastic protectors, and the maker flags that the edges are a touch sharp, so pad the contact points if your bars have premium finishes, and keep hands and children clear. It suits Olympic, standard, deadlift, multi-grip, and trap bars.
Pros
- Holds three bars in one horizontal rack
- Tall hooks keep bars secure when bumped
- Sturdy black-painted steel build
- Mounting hardware included
- Fits Olympic, deadlift, trap, and multi-grip bars
Cons
- No plastic protectors; edges run a little sharp
- Bare metal may mark premium bar finishes
Best for: budget-minded garages racking three bars who do not mind adding their own padding.
Mid-range tier. Check price on Amazon
ironvib Vertical & Horizontal Barbell Hanger

The ironvib’s draw is flexibility: a single-bar hanger you can mount vertically or horizontally, so you decide whether the bar stands up or lays flat based on your wall and ceiling. The steel bracket carries rubber pads to keep the bar’s finish clean, and it fits 35mm Olympic and standard bars. Beyond barbells, it is pitched as a general gym-wall organizer for resistance bands, dumbbells, and kettlebells, making it a tidy catch-all for a clutter-free corner. Note that the listing quotes its capacity inconsistently in the 150 to 160-pound range, ample for a single bar, but a figure to confirm before loading heavier.
Pros
- Mounts either vertically or horizontally
- Steel build with rubber pads to protect the bar
- Fits 35mm Olympic and standard bars
- Doubles as a rack for bands, dumbbells, and kettlebells
- Budget-friendly single-bar solution
Cons
- Holds one bar
- Listing states capacity inconsistently; confirm before heavy loads
Best for: anyone unsure of orientation who wants one hanger that does both.
Budget tier. Check price on Amazon
Titan Fitness Horizontal 6-Bar Wall-Mounted Rack

When a corner bar leaning fix turns into organizing an arsenal, the Titan Fitness rack is the heavyweight answer. Two heavy-duty bent-steel brackets, each standing 32 inches tall with a 5.4-inch depth, hold up to six Olympic-sized bars horizontally with a combined 400-pound capacity. Thick UHMW lining shields every bar from scratches as you rack and unrack, and the wide cradle fits most bars, Olympic and standard, 20kg and 15kg, short bars, axle bars, safety squat bars, and multi-grip bars. Wood mounting hardware is included; concrete or masonry hardware is sold separately. At roughly 17 pounds of steel, it is built for a serious, packed garage gym.
Pros
- Holds up to six bars in one horizontal rack
- Heavy bent-steel brackets, 400-pound capacity
- Thick UHMW lining protects every bar
- Fits Olympic, axle, safety squat, and multi-grip bars
- From an established fitness brand
Cons
- Most expensive pick by a wide margin
- Concrete or masonry hardware not included
Best for: packed garage gyms that need to organize a full collection of bars.
Premium tier. Check price on Amazon
The verdict
Best overall
The JNIHEEP Single Vertical Olympic Barbell Hanger takes the top spot. It is the best seller in this comparison, and the reasons are plain: it solves the most common problem, one loose bar with nowhere to live, in the smallest possible footprint, with heavy powder-coated steel and a rubber pad that protects the finish, all at a budget price. It fits standard and Olympic shafts, mounts in minutes on almost any wall, and suits the largest share of buyers, which is exactly why it sells the way it does. Check price on Amazon
Best value
The XZHXFX Single Vertical Barbell Wall Holder wins on value. It mirrors the top pick almost feature for feature, the same vertical single-bar design, quality powder-coated steel, and a finish-protecting rubber pad, at the lowest price in the group. If you want the proven vertical-hanger formula for the least money, this is it. For storing several bars on a budget, the ANOSWXG 4-Bar V-Hook is the value standout, packing four-bar capacity and the highest weight rating here into a mid-range price. Check price on Amazon
Best premium
The Titan Fitness Horizontal 6-Bar Rack is the premium pick. Nothing else here organizes a whole collection like it does: six bars on two heavy bent-steel brackets, a 400-pound capacity, and thick UHMW lining that protects every shaft through years of racking. If your bars have outgrown single hangers, this is the one-and-done wall solution. For a high-ceiling space that prefers to store bars upright, the Yes4All Vertical 4-Bar Holder is the premium alternative. Check price on Amazon
Frequently asked questions
Should I store a barbell vertically or horizontally?
It comes down to your wall and ceiling. Vertical hangers use almost no horizontal space and tuck into narrow gaps, but a full Olympic bar stands about seven feet tall, so you need the ceiling height to clear it. Horizontal racks lay the bar flat and ignore ceiling limits, but they need a clear run of wall a bit longer than the bar. If your ceiling is low, go horizontal; if your wall space is tight, go vertical.
Will these mounts fit my Olympic bar?
For vertical hangers, what matters is your bar’s shaft diameter; most here fit shafts up to 32 or 33mm, which covers standard 25mm and Olympic 28-29mm bars. Always measure the shaft, not the rotating sleeve. Horizontal racks are more forgiving on diameter because the bar simply rests in a cradle, so they suit thicker specialty bars more easily. Either way, check your bar length against the rack’s opening before buying.
Do I have to mount these into wall studs?
For wood-frame walls, yes, anchor into the studs, not bare drywall, because a bar that tears out of hollow plaster becomes a falling hazard. The included screws assume wood studs. For concrete, brick, or masonry, you will usually need to buy suitable anchors separately, since most kits include only wood hardware. A few mounts add a bubble level to help you set the bracket square.
Will a wall mount scratch my barbell’s knurling or finish?
A well-padded mount will not. The hangers and racks here that line their contact points with rubber or UHMW plastic protect the shaft, knurling, and plating through repeated racking. The exception is a bare-metal rack with no protectors, where the maker even notes the edges run sharp; on those, add felt or rubber padding yourself to keep a premium finish safe.
How many bars can one wall mount hold?
It ranges widely. Single hangers and single-bar horizontal pairs hold one bar each. Multi-bar racks here hold three, four, or up to six bars in a single bracket, with capacities running from about 200 pounds up to 400 to 480 pounds. If you own or plan to own several bars, a multi-bar rack saves both wall space and drilling compared with a row of single hangers.
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