When you call our office about a repair, you want a straight answer on price. The truth is there’s a range because garage doors vary in size, weight, hardware, and condition.
On average, the cost for garage door repairs are between $300 to $800 depending on the repair but vary based on a number of factors.
What Influences Garage Door Repair Cost?
Door Size and Weight
Larger or heavier doors require longer shafts, larger springs, stronger cables, and heavier drums. Those parts cost more and take additional time to install. A single-car door repair usually starts in the lower range, while double doors or wood and glass models tend to run higher due to their extra weight.
Spring Type
Depending on the type of spring your garage door has, the spring type can determine how complex the job will be.
Torsion springs are more modern, standard, quiet, reliable, and easy to service. Most technicians stock these parts, keeping repairs quick and affordable.
Extension springs are typically found on older systems. They’re noisier and work independently on each side, which can cause uneven lifting. If safety cables are missing, the setup can be unsafe. Many homeowners choose to convert these to torsion for smoother, safer operation. Extension setups are being phased out in most modern garages because of safety risks and uneven lift.
TorqueMaster springs are a proprietary design by Wayne Dalton with springs hidden inside a tube. Parts are less common, so many technicians recommend converting to torsion. Conversions typically run about $1,200 dollars for single doors and around $1,500 for doubles. That conversion replaces roughly ten parts, including the cables, drums, plates, shaft, and bearings, so the cost reflects a full rebuild rather than just a spring swap.
Common Garage Door Issues
Section Damage
When a panel is bent, cracked, or creased, the cost depends on whether the manufacturer still makes matching sections. If the design is discontinued, you might need to replace several panels to maintain appearance, which can approach the cost of a full door replacement.
Quality of Replacement Parts
Upgraded components raise the upfront price but lower long-term maintenance.
- High-cycle springs last roughly twice as long as builder-grade versions and cost only slightly more.
- Premium rollers and bearings reduce noise and friction, extending opener life.
- Extra struts or operator brackets strengthen the door and prevent top-section cracking over time.
Materials and Insulation
Steel doors range from basic hollow-pan designs to insulated, double-layer steel builds with polyurethane cores. Three-layer doors are sturdier and quieter. Aluminum resists rust, while wood and glass add weight and labor time, increasing overall cost.
Site Conditions and Layout
Limited headroom or overhead storage may require low-headroom track systems, rear torsion setups, or special hardware. Garages with car lifts often need high-lift or extended-radius tracks, which add both material and installation time.
Climate and Maintenance
Cold weather makes springs more brittle, increasing break rates in winter. Heat and humidity can shorten the life of opener electronics. Lubricating springs annually and checking door balance helps prevent failures and keeps repair costs down.
Real Numbers: Garage Door Repair Costs
Garage door repair costs vary with parts, labor, and system type, but most homeowners fall within these ranges. Knowing what’s typical helps you budget realistically and spot prices that are unusually high or suspiciously low.
- Spring replacement: Around $500 dollars for a single door and $700 for a double.
- Full opener replacement: Usually starts near $1,000 dollars and increases with model features or smart controls.
- Torsion conversion: Approximately $1,200 for a single door and $1,500 for a double.
- Sensor or wiring repair: On the lower end of the cost scale, depending on what the technician finds on site.