The 3 lever mortice lock is the standard lock for internal timber doors across the UK. Bedrooms, bathrooms, home offices — anywhere you need privacy without the cost or complexity of a high-security lock. We supply and fit 3-lever sashlocks and deadlocks across South London. Same day, fixed price, no call-out fee.
Fixed prices · No VAT · No call-out fee
A 3 lever mortice lock is a mortice lock containing three flat metal levers inside its case. Like all mortice locks, the body sits inside a rectangular pocket cut into the door edge. The correct key lifts all three levers to their precise heights, aligning three gates with the fence, which allows the bolt to move.
Three levers produce a limited number of key combinations — typically a few hundred. That is enough to prevent a random key from opening the lock, but not enough to resist a determined attempt at picking or manipulation. This is why 3-lever locks are classified as privacy locks rather than security locks.
Not every door in a house needs to withstand a forced entry attempt. The bedroom door, the bathroom, the utility room, the home office — these doors need a lock that stops someone casually walking in, not one that resists crowbars and drill bits. A 3-lever mortice lock does that job reliably, cheaply, and with minimal maintenance. It has been the standard internal door lock in British housing for decades.
The mechanism is simple, the parts are widely available, and the lock fits into the same mortice pocket as its bigger sibling — the 5 lever mortice lock. If you ever need to upgrade an internal door to a higher security level, the mortice pocket is already cut. Read more on our locksmith advice page.
A 3-lever lock is the right tool for the right job. On the wrong door, it is a liability. Here is the honest breakdown.
Found a 3-lever lock on your external door?
It needs upgrading to a 5-lever BS3621 lock. We do this in a single visit — from £180 supplied and fitted. Call 020 8050 2017 or WhatsApp us.
The difference is not just two extra levers. It is a fundamentally different security class.
| Feature | 3-Lever | 5-Lever (BS3621) |
|---|---|---|
| Key combinations | Hundreds | Tens of thousands |
| British Standard | Does not qualify | BS3621 certified |
| Insurance accepted | No — internal only | Yes — required for external |
| Anti-pick features | None | False gates, curtain shields |
| Anti-drill plates | None | Hardened steel standard |
| Key duplication | Easy — any key cutter | Restricted blanks |
| Suitable doors | Internal timber only | All external timber doors |
| Typical cost | WhatsApp for quote | From £180 fitted |
Both have three levers. The difference is whether the lock includes a handle and latch for everyday door operation.
Combines a spring latch (operated by handles) and a deadbolt (operated by key) in one case. Push the handle to open and close the door normally. Turn the key to lock it securely.
This is the most common 3-lever lock. Most internal doors need a handle, and the sashlock provides both the handle mechanism and the lock in a single unit. You fit it once, add a pair of handles, and the door is fully functional.
Best for:
Bedrooms, bathrooms, home offices — any internal door that needs a handle and an occasional lock.
Contains only a deadbolt — no latch, no handle follower. The door is locked and unlocked by key only. Less common on internal doors because most internal doors need a handle to function.
Used occasionally on storage cupboards, under-stairs doors, or utility rooms where the door stays closed and only needs to be locked, not latched. Also seen on some garage-to-house connecting doors paired with a separate latch.
Best for:
Storage rooms, cupboards, utility doors — doors that stay shut and only need key-operated locking.
The mechanism is identical in principle to a 5-lever mortice lock — just with fewer moving parts. Three levers instead of five, fewer key combinations, and no anti-pick features. The simplicity is the point: fewer parts means lower cost, easier maintenance, and perfectly adequate security for a door that does not face the outside world.
1. Key enters the keyway. The key slides through the keyhole and into the key guide, aligning with all three levers.
2. Three levers lift. Each cut on the key lifts one lever to its correct height. Three levers, three heights, three gates that must align.
3. Fence passes through gates. When all three gates line up, the fence clears and the bolt can move.
4. Bolt throws. The cam mechanism pushes the bolt into the keep. Door locked.
An internal door does not need to resist a sustained attack from someone with tools and time. It needs to stop a door from being opened casually — a child wandering into a bathroom, a housemate walking into your bedroom. Three levers provide enough key uniqueness to prevent accidental or opportunistic opening while keeping the lock affordable and easy to service.
Three measurements determine which lock fits your door. Get these right and the replacement drops straight in. Get them wrong and the mortice pocket needs reworking.
The distance from the centre of the keyhole to the edge of the door. Two standard sizes:
The overall width of the lock body that sits inside the mortice pocket. Measured from the faceplate to the back of the case.
The vertical distance between the centre of the keyhole and the centre of the spindle hole (where the handle connects). This must match your existing handles. If you change the lock, the centres must be the same or you need new handles too.
Standard internal doors are 35mm to 40mm thick. Internal fire doors can be 35mm to 54mm. The door must be thick enough to house the lock case without weakening the timber around it. If the door is thinner than 35mm, a mortice lock may not be suitable.
Not sure what size you need? Take a photo of the existing lock and the door edge, then send it to us on WhatsApp. We will confirm the exact specification before coming out.
If a 3-lever lock is currently fitted on any door that leads directly to the outside, it needs upgrading. There is no grey area here. Your insurer requires BS3621 certified locks on external doors, and a 3-lever lock cannot meet that standard regardless of brand or condition.
Builder fitted 3-lever on a back door
Common in new-build and extension projects where the builder uses the cheapest lock available. The homeowner only discovers the problem during an insurance renewal or after a break-in.
Old house, never changed
Many South London Victorian and Edwardian terraces still have the original 3-lever locks from decades ago. At the time they were fitted, BS3621 did not exist. The lock may still work mechanically but is not insurer-compliant.
Landlord unaware of tenant door security
Rental properties sometimes have 3-lever locks on external doors because they were never audited. Landlords have a legal and insurance obligation to ensure entry doors meet minimum security standards.
We remove the old 3-lever lock, check whether the existing mortice pocket is large enough for a 5-lever case (it usually is — most 3-lever and 5-lever locks share the same case dimensions), enlarge the pocket if needed, and fit a BS3621 certified 5-lever mortice lock. The whole job takes 30–45 minutes. From £180 supplied and fitted. We photograph the Kitemark for your insurance records.
For a full property assessment, visit our about us page or contact us to book a free security audit.
Cause: The latch spring inside the sashlock has weakened or broken. Alternatively, the spindle connecting the two handles is worn or the wrong length.
Fix: Replace the lock case (if the spring is internal) or replace the spindle. Often the whole sashlock is replaced because a new one costs less than a repair.
Cause: Dirt, dust, or rust inside the lever mechanism. Common in bathroom doors where humidity accelerates corrosion, or in older properties where the lock has never been serviced.
Fix: Remove, clean, and lubricate. If the levers or springs are corroded beyond recovery, replace the lock.
Cause: The latch and strike plate are misaligned. The door has dropped on its hinges, or the frame has moved. The latch hits the face of the strike plate instead of entering the keep.
Fix: Adjust hinges to lift the door, or reposition the strike plate. Sometimes the keep hole needs deepening.
Cause: Key has snapped inside the lock, or the lever pack has seized due to corrosion. Particularly common in infrequently used rooms where the lock sits idle for months.
Fix: Professional extraction and lock replacement. From £120 for broken key extraction, or £135 for internal room lockout.
Fresh mortice cut into your internal timber door. Lock case, strike plate, handles, and escutcheons fitted. 30–45 minutes.
Existing lock removed, new 3-lever fitted into the same mortice pocket. Matched to existing backset and case size. Usually 15–20 minutes.
Stiff mechanisms serviced, misaligned strike plates adjusted, broken keys extracted. Diagnosis on-site with honest recommendation.
Found a 3-lever on an external door? We upgrade to BS3621 5-lever in one visit. From £180. Insurance compliance sorted.
Tell us which internal door needs a lock. Send a photo on WhatsApp if you can — we will confirm the size before coming out. Fixed price given on the phone.
We aim for 30 minutes across South London. On arrival, we inspect the door and confirm the work before starting.
Lock fitted, tested with all keys, handles checked, strike plate aligned. You pay the price we quoted. Card or cash accepted.
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Based across South London. Same-day as standard.
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All prices are fixed and include labour. No VAT. No call-out fee. Card or cash accepted.
"Needed five bedroom doors fitted with 3-lever sashlocks in a house we are converting to an HMO. Lloyd came out, measured all five doors, fitted the locks and handles in one afternoon. Every door closes and locks smoothly. Clean work, fair price, and he even advised which doors would need 5-lever upgrades for the HMO licence."
Karen P.
Mitcham
"The bathroom lock jammed with my daughter inside. Called in a panic on a Saturday morning and they arrived in 25 minutes. Got the door open without damaging it, replaced the old corroded 3-lever lock with a new one, and fitted it all before lunch. Genuinely grateful for the fast response."
Andrew J.
Norbury
"Insurance surveyor flagged that our side door had a 3-lever mortice lock on it. Lloyd confirmed it on WhatsApp from the photo I sent, came out two days later, and upgraded it to a Union BS3621 5-lever deadlock. He also spotted that the back door lock was non-compliant and did both for a fair price."
Laura S.
Purley
We carry 3-lever sashlocks and deadlocks on the van and cover every South London postcode. Same-day fitting as standard.
Call for a fixed-price quote or send a photo of your door on WhatsApp. We carry 3-lever locks on the van and fit same day across South London. If your external door has a 3-lever that needs upgrading, we handle that too.
No call-out fee · Fixed prices · Card or cash accepted