Gerda front Doors review

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Nick Dardalis

With a build quality you often only see on aluminium front doors costing two or three times as much, Gerda front doors is a collection of very well-built and designed front doors, using either a combination of steel and aluminium or all aluminium. Quality materials, great design, attractive hardware, with trusted security and protection features.

Gerda front doors were launched in the UK in 2022. They are made in Europe and distributed by the Pioneer Trading Company in Essex via a nationwide network of quality door showrooms and professional home improvement firms.

We’ve seen and tested Gerda doors up close over several visits to the UK distributor showroom, fenestration exhibitions, and via in-depth discussions with representatives from the European manufacturing company. Any of the four models offers a fantastic front door proposition, promising style, durability and a very attractive price. This review focuses on four models from Gerda’s lineup: the Optima, Thermo Prime, Thermo Premium, and Altus.

Gerda Front Doors
modern front doors1

An excellent proposition for general front door replacements and new builds. Gerda front doors have a luxurious look and feel compared to front doors with an inset panel. With impressive security features, excellent thermal performance, and a great choice of designs, Gerda front doors are a sound investment for any homeowner.

Editor's Rating:
5

Pros

  • Optima model priced near composite doors.
  • High-end front door look and feel.
  • Impressive build quality, fit and finish.
  • A range to suit all tastes and budgets.
  • Feels solid, secure and dependable.

Cons

  • No double door option.
  • Side panel sizes are limited.

What are Gerda front doors made from?

The doors come in four models, each differing in price, insulation levels, and design. Three models use an aluminium frame with a steel front door slab, and the top-of-the-range model is made of all aluminium.

The entire collection offers great door designs, standard or low thresholds, and excellent colour, handle and glass options. 

Gerda’s front doors start at a very attractive entry point, with no loss of specifications, leading up to the premium model, designed with a flush and seamless appearance.

trans gerda thermo premium3

What do Gerda front doors look like? Design and aesthetics

Like other quality aluminium front doors, Gerda front doors have a superior design aesthetic compared to a standard aluminium door, such as a decorative panel where the glass would be. That’s to say standard aluminium doors should not be discounted from good brands like Origin, Hallmark, Spitfire S200 and the Dutemänn Haus who will serve you well.

The main benefit of a better-designed door is it looks more solid with a one-piece door leaf. You don’t get the picture frame look of the glaze-in design, which creates a border around the door panel. Gerda doors are engineered and designed so the whole opening leaf is one piece, and this always looks better. The first three models use Deceuninck’s aluminium thermally broken frame. The door leaf is made of steel. The Altus meets the needs of homeowners or developers seeking a high-end design with seamless and flush design both inside and out.

Aluminium and steel front doors with glass

With a Gerda front door, you can choose from many design options, including a solid door or one with glass panel inserts.

Aluminium and steel front door that looks like wood

Yes, that is an option! As well as matching the colour with existing windows in an array of stylish finishes.

The benefit of steel front doors

Steel front doors are unparalleled in strength, service life, and quality compared to other materials. They are widely used for high-security, fire, and protection doors in buildings with special requirements. Virtually impervious to dents, cracks, warping, and attack, steel front doors are formidable.

The rigidity of steel surpasses that of aluminium, PVCu and composite doors. Composite doors, while designed to mimic the best features of wood and modern doors, often fall short of matching the inherent strength of steel doors. Even aluminium, whilst strong, has its limitations by the nature of the material. For years, the best front doors for strength and long service life have been steel, with equal quality in terms of withstanding ageing, impacts and general wear and tear. However, steel doors are often at the top end of the price range and discounted due to cost.

You only need to look at a steel door to see how this material differs from others visibly. The endurance of steel translates into a longer lifespan for the door, proving to be an excellent long-term investment for homeowners. The consistency of steel’s manufacturing process ensures a uniform quality without the natural defects present in wood or the variability found in composite materials. This reliability also extends to performance, with excellent security, thermal performance and noise reduction. Gerda front doors are priced so that the benefits of a strong and stylish front door are within reach of those without large budgets.

The Gerda front doors range

All four models have some visibly better features in their design and specifications than the standard aluminium doors, particularly other doors such as the S200 Spitfire Door, Origin and Hallmark brands. Gerda front doors also have many identical features across the range, from the entry-level door Optima 60 to the top-of-the-range model Altus.

Gerda Optima 60 steel and aluminium front door

The entry-level model is the Optima 60. The immediate appeal of this product is that it offers a significantly better steel and aluminium front door at the price of a premium composite door. There is no advantage to choosing a composite front door when you have an all-metal front door manufactured with two of the strongest door materials available, together with a superior look, feel and quality.

Gerda front doors in the Optima 60 model give a great choice of both modern and traditional styles.

gerda optima 60 front door to illustrate the door for gerda front doors review
Gerda Optima 60 steel & aluminium front door

Gerda Thermo Premium 75 steel and aluminium front door

Selecting the Thermo Premium 75 model is an upgrade from the Optima 60.

With this model, you get all the same high specifications and the aluminium and steel construction in a thicker, even more, robust feeling door due to its deeper frame and door leaf.

The U-Values are lower and the maximum sizes exceed most standard door widths and heights required.

gerda front doors showing thermo premium model in modern grey design
Gerda Thermo Premium 75 steel and aluminium front door

Gerda Thermo Prime 75 steel and aluminium front door

When you want even better U-Values and an upgrade in the insulation, Gerda Thermo Prime 75 is manufactured with more advanced polyurethane insulation between the two steel skins, resulting in an increase in thermal performance.

This model comes in exactly the same styles as the Thermo Premium model and can go a little taller.

gerda front door thermo prime 75 sample image
Gerda Thermo Prime 75 steel and aluminium front door

Gerda Altus aluminium front door

Altus is the top-of-the-range model within the Gerda front doors range with a completely flush styling.

The Altus’s all-aluminium construction has an even thicker frame and door leaf and the lowest U-Values down to Passivhaus standards if required.

Altus also uses the polyurethane insulation method with the respected and even more secure Führ German locking system.

gerda front doors showing altus model in brown woodgrain finish
Gerda Altus aluminium front door

Gerda front doors compared

Which Gerda front door model you choose depends on your budget, the design aesthetics, door size, U-values and level of insulation, and finally, whether you prefer the aluminium and steel combination or an all-aluminium door. We’ve summarised the four Gerda entrance door models for a quick overview:

OPTIMA 60THERMO PREMIUM 75THERMO PRIME 75ALTUS
DOOR CONSTRUCTIONAluminium Frame
Steel Door Leaf
Aluminium Frame
Steel Door Leaf
Aluminium Frame
Steel Door Leaf
Aluminium Frame
Aluminium Door Leaf
DESIGNS AVAILABLEModern & ClassicModernModernModern
DOOR THICKNESS60mm75mm75mm88mm
INSULATIONStyrofoamStyrofoamPolyurethanePolyurethane
U-VALUE1.3Wm2K1.1Wm2K0.9Wm2K0.81Wm2K
SECURITY RATINGPAS 24PAS 24PAS 24PAS 24
MINIMUM SIZE840 x 1950mm840 x 1950mm840 x 1950mm920 x 2010mm
MAXIMUM SIZE1130 x 2200mm1130 x 2200mm1130 x 2400mm1250 x 2400mm
Gerda aluminium and steel front doors comparison table

Gerda front doors technical information

You can find the full technical information on the Gerda UK website (see further reading); here are the significant technical details.

  • Tested to PAS 24, RC2 or RC3 security standards
  • Thermally insulated aluminium frames using the quality Deceuninck system
  • Tedee smart locking option, the smallest on the market
  • 11 separate certifications for quality, security and components
  • Professionally applied colour finishes to the latest quality standards

Handle, security and hardware options

Gerda manufactures its own hardware. The company is well-known in the door security space through a separate business providing security solutions.

The handle and hardware options with Gerda front doors are premium quality, with a modern overall look and a positive, solid feel. Handles operate smoothly with no dropping or wobble. The range includes one-piece locks, handles with separate escutcheons, and optional smart home-operated locking options. The handle options are metallic anodised, with Platinum Anode, Silver Anode and Blade Anode available as colour options. Anti-burglary Class 6 cylinders come as standard.

Gerda doors offer three hinge options, with a concealed roller and butt hinge design. As you can see from the images, the locking systems look secure and dependable, with numerous bolts engaging on the lock side and in the head. Whilst all doors now come with secure locks, steel doors benefit from using larger and thicker bar bolts compared to hook locks.

Gerda front doors – what you don’t get

As good as these doors are, they are limited in a few areas. First, there is no double-door option—Gerda tells us a door-and-a-half option is currently under development. The second is the sidelight and toplight fixed glazing, which, if chosen, does come with size limitations below what is available with other doors.

While the minimum and maximum door sizes will meet most customer requirements, the doors don’t go as small or as large as some other door products in a similar design. For example, the Schüco AD UP Series of front doors can go up to 3 metres with many models, as does Pirnar, Reynaers Masterline and Urban Front. These larger doors are significantly more expensive at these larger sizes.

Other brands to compare with Gerda front doors

There are numerous front doors on the market from equally established brands, so you certainly have a lot of choices. There isn’t really any bad aluminium front door on the market. The products we think are the most similar to Gerda doors in terms of design and materials are:

Spitfire aluminium front doors

Unlike other door manufacturers, Spitfire is quite secretive about where their doors are made. You can compare the Spitfire S200 with the Thermo Premium or Optima. The Spitfire S500 model is worth comparing with the Gerda Altus model. Spitfire doors are more expensive and are all aluminium.

Hörmann aluminium front doors

Hörmann is a highly respected front door with some funky styles available in addition to the popular ones. Their solid door with no glass has a higher security rating. Like Gerda, Hörmann also offers a steel door option with the polyurethane foam insulation of the Thermo Prime 75 and the Altus models. We think these are the most similar to Gerda doors because they have the same aluminium frame and steel door leaf concept.

We have deliberately left out Origin front doors, Dutemann and Hallmark simply because these doors have inset panels and don’t offer the same all-in-one styling.

Gerda front doors review conclusion

gerda front door in a showroom showing a handles, locks and hardware
Part of the Gerda Showroom at Pioneer Trading Co, one of several locations where we’ve reviewed Gerda Doors.

You realise there is no bad door when you do a like-for-like comparison and see most of the door brands on the market. Modern design, good hardware, and build quality ensure you’ll always get a fit-for-purpose product. Every door manufacturer will praise their doors, and today’s aluminium front doors all have good insulation, security and a great choice of designs. So how do you choose? Price is, of course, one factor. Where you are not totally limited by price, how a door looks and feels in use is an excellent indicator of good design and quality.

If you are in the market for a metal composite front door, choose the Gerda Optima. An aluminium and steel construction needs no comparison to a PVCu frame, glass-reinforced plastic slab and wood insert. You only need to look at the various door fitter forums to read people’s frustrations with warping or twisting on many composite doors – something Gerda doors won’t suffer from. And considering the price of premium composite door brands versus the Optima model, it is a no-brainer.

The same applies to choosing front doors like Origin or Hallmark, which are essentially doors with a panel in place of glass. Nothing is bad about these doors. The Optima model again proves how you can get a substantially better, more authentic-looking door than any aluminium door using the glaze-in panel concept. And some of these simpler doors are more expensive. Overall, the Optima model is available to people who think they can only afford a composite door.

The Thermo Prime, Thermo Premium and Altus sit at the sweet spot of doors where budget isn’t the crucial factor, yet you still want value with quality. Again there is no bad door on the market. When using the Gerda product, having also seen Spitfire doors many times, we noticed Gerda doors feel better, more premium, more solid and, especially with that final closing and latching action. The closing action reminds you of the solid thud of luxury car doors. The locks, hinges, handles, panel designs and overall feel give a positive and reassuring experience.

Choosing a front door can sometimes feel like you’re going down a rabbit hole, navigating the marketing messages, features and claims of everyone’s door being the ‘best’. When you study the value proposition, build quality, look and feel of Gerda front doors, we think you will be impressed. Take a look at our article for general information about aluminium doors.

Contact us for more information about Gerda front doors and details of a local showroom and supplier.