Salt air eats hardware. Anyone who lives near the coast and has watched a screen door hinge bloom with rust within a season knows the frustration of replacing the same cheap parts over and over, and that is the exact corner of the market iHinge has decided to own. The site sells stainless steel hardware for door and shutter applications, aimed squarely at people in salt-spray climates who are tired of corrosion winning. That focus shows in the products, not in slogans about quality.

What the catalog covers

The iHinge catalog splits into three lines, and the split is logical once you spend a few minutes clicking through it. The Coastal Series covers screen door hardware: hinge kits in black, white, and a standard finish, turnbuckles such as the TB-46 at $36.50, and door springs (the DS at $21.95). Full screen door kits land between $42.95 and $45.95. The marine-grade 316 stainless callout is the specific detail a coastal buyer will notice, because 316 is the grade that resists chlorides, and seeing it listed plainly tells you iHinge understands the corrosion problem at a material level, which generic coastal-branded hardware rarely does.

The second iHinge line is the Stainless Steel Shutter Hardware range, and it is the deepest part of the shop. Pintles come in plate and narrow versions. There are straight and angle straps, with a 10-inch straight strap priced from $38.00 to $45.50. Locking slide bolts are listed, including a 12-inch SB-12 at $45.50. Lag hold backs come in propeller, rat tail, and S-style shapes, running $39.50 to $46.50, and there is a stainless bullet catch sold by the pair at $23.50. This is an inventory a restoration carpenter or a homeowner with functional shutters would dig through, and the iHinge selection extends to the little catches and bolts, going deeper than the showy strap pieces that most competitors lead with.

Third comes the Economy Series, which is a smart inclusion. These are lower-cost stainless equivalents: economy plate pintles at $24.50 to $29.50, economy angle straps at $25.50 to $27.50, an economy lag hold back in the S shape at $35.50, and an economy 8-inch locking slide bolt at $28.95. Offering a budget tier in the same corrosion-resistant material is honest pricing, because it lets a buyer choose between the premium parts and a cheaper stainless option without being steered toward a coated mild-steel product that would fail in the same conditions. The iHinge economy line stays in stainless, so the savings come from a different spec point, not from switching to a metal that will fail at the coast.

Site resources and pricing

Beyond the shop itself, the site carries an Installation and Measuring guide, which is the section that adds the most practical value. Hardware like pintles and straps lives or dies on correct measurement, and a seller who walks customers through how to size and fit the parts is reducing returns and frustration before they happen. There is also a Gallery, presumably showing the hardware in place on real buildings, which helps a buyer picture how a propeller hold back or an S-style stay looks once mounted. For a product category where a photo of the finished install answers more questions than a paragraph of description, that gallery is doing useful work.

Pricing transparency is one of iHinge's stronger marks. Real numbers sit next to almost every item, in clear ranges where size or finish changes the cost, so a visitor can build a parts list and know roughly what the order will run before reaching a cart. That openness is not universal among small hardware sellers, many of whom hide pricing behind a quote request, and iHinge skipping that friction is a point in its favor. The 30-day full refund policy on unused, undamaged returns is stated plainly too, which gives a first-time buyer a reasonable safety net on an order of parts they may be unsure about sizing.

On reaching the company, there is no hunting involved. A phone number and two email addresses appear in both the header and the footer. For a niche specialty retailer, that level of openness counts for a lot, because a customer ordering iHinge shutter pintles is fairly likely to have a measuring or fitment question before buying, and being able to call changes the experience considerably. One of the email addresses appears to be a personal name, which gives the whole operation a small-business, talk-to-a-real-person feel that suits the product.

Outside reputation

Where iHinge is harder to read is outside the site itself. A search for independent reviews across the usual platforms came up empty: nothing of substance on Google, Trustpilot, Yelp, or the BBB tied specifically to this business. The Facebook page shows a single review with no visible rating, too little to draw any conclusion from. None of that is evidence of a problem, and a tightly specialized seller in a small niche simply will not generate the review volume a general retailer does. It does mean a cautious buyer is leaning on the site's own clarity and the refund policy, with no crowd of past customers to cross-check against.

iHinge gets the match between audience and goods right. Everything points at one customer: someone near the water who needs hardware that will not corrode and who wants the right shape of pintle, strap, or hold back without sorting through a giant general catalog. The 316 stainless emphasis, the measuring guide, the spread from premium to economy, and the published prices all line up with that customer. The product depth is real, the costs are visible, and contact options are immediate. The gap is reputation history, where the public record is close to silent, so a buyer is trusting iHinge on the strength of how the shop presents itself. The hardware is priced item by item, the return window is thirty days, and the phone number is right there at the top of the page. That combination is either enough or it is not, depending on how much weight you put on crowd-sourced track records before spending forty dollars on a pintle.


Business address
United States

Contact details
Phone: 1.800.997.8189