5-min read · Springs, panels, openers, cables and tracks — all priced with labor, by state
$150–$300Most repairs
$200–$450Spring replacement
$250–$800Panel repair
$150–$600Opener repair
⚡ Quick Answer
Most garage door repairs cost $150 to $600 with labor included. A broken torsion spring — the #1 repair call — runs $200–$450. Panel replacement is $250–$800. Opener repair averages $150–$300. Emergency after-hours service adds $100–$200 to any job. If total repair cost exceeds 50% of a new door, replacement is the smarter financial move.
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🧮 Repair Cost Estimator — Ballpark Before You Call
Estimated Repair Cost (parts + labor)
Garage Door Repair Cost by Component
All ranges include parts and labor. Emergency surcharges (+$100–$200) are not included.
Repair
Cost (parts + labor)
Time
DIY?
Torsion spring replacement
$200–$450
1–2 hrs
⚠️ Pro only
Extension spring replacement
$150–$300
1 hr
⚠️ Pro only
Opener repair (sensors, remote, board)
$75–$300
30–90 min
DIY possible
Opener full replacement
$300–$600
2–3 hrs
DIY advanced
Single panel replacement
$250–$800
1–3 hrs
DIY possible
Multiple panels (2+)
$600–$1,500
3–6 hrs
⚠️ Pro recommended
Cable replacement
$150–$300
1–2 hrs
⚠️ Pro only
Off-track realignment
$125–$290
1–2 hrs
⚠️ Pro only
Rollers + hinges
$100–$200
1 hr
DIY possible
Track repair / replacement
$125–$400
1–3 hrs
⚠️ Pro recommended
Safety sensor realignment
$75–$150
30 min
DIY easy
Weatherstripping
$50–$150
1 hr
DIY easy
Annual tune-up
$100–$200
1 hr
DIY possible
🚨 Never DIY spring or cable repairs. Torsion springs are under 150–200 lbs of tension. A spring snapping during a DIY attempt can cause severe injury or death — and often destroys the opener and door panels simultaneously, turning a $300 repair into an $800+ job. Cables carry the same risk. The professional cost is genuine safety insurance.
Find a Garage Door Repair Tech Near You
Always get at least 2–3 quotes before authorizing any repair. National chains offer consistent pricing and strong warranties. Independent local techs are often 15–25% cheaper on standard jobs.
A1
A1 Garage Door Service
National chain · 30+ states · 24/7 emergency
Largest garage door service network in the US. Flat-rate pricing, same-day availability in most markets, 1-year labor warranty. Strong in AZ, TX, CO, FL, and the Midwest.
National franchise · 100+ locations · Lifetime spring warranty
Franchise network covering most US metro areas. Known for transparent pricing, free in-home estimates, and a lifetime warranty on springs. Strong in the South, Midwest, and Mid-Atlantic.
One of the oldest and most recognized garage door brands in the US. Distributor network covers most markets. Branded parts with extended warranties. Good for both repairs and full replacements.
Search by ZIP to find local garage door techs with verified reviews, confirmed licensing, and real pricing data. Best for comparing 3+ independent quotes side-by-side before committing.
Good for finding smaller independent operators who often charge 15–25% less than franchise chains. Post your job and receive quotes directly. Strong in suburban and smaller markets.
💡 Chain vs. independent — which is cheaper? Independent local techs are typically 15–25% cheaper on standard jobs. The tradeoff: franchise chains offer stronger warranty coverage (lifetime on springs is common) and more predictable pricing. For a $200–$300 spring job, either works well. For complex multi-component repairs, a chain's warranty may be worth the premium.
Garage Door Repair Cost by State
Labor rates drive most regional price variation. These are real-world ranges for the three most common repairs across major states — torsion spring replacement, opener repair, and single panel replacement.
State
Torsion Spring
Opener Repair
Single Panel
Texas
$180–$320
$100–$250
$200–$600
Florida
$200–$380
$120–$280
$250–$700
Georgia / N. Carolina
$175–$320
$100–$240
$200–$600
Ohio / Michigan
$185–$340
$110–$260
$220–$650
Illinois
$210–$380
$130–$280
$260–$720
Arizona / Nevada
$190–$350
$120–$270
$240–$680
Colorado
$210–$390
$130–$290
$260–$730
New York
$280–$480
$160–$350
$350–$900
New Jersey / CT
$260–$450
$150–$320
$320–$850
Massachusetts
$270–$470
$155–$340
$340–$880
California (LA/SF)
$290–$500
$170–$380
$380–$950
Washington State
$250–$450
$150–$330
$320–$840
What Makes the Final Bill Higher
Emergency / after-hours service: Add $100–$200 for nights, weekends, or holidays. If the car is safely parked inside, waiting until morning saves $150+ on the same repair
High-cycle spring upgrade: Standard springs last ~10,000 cycles (5–7 years for a busy household). High-cycle versions (25,000–50,000 cycles) add $50–$150 but last 2–4x longer — worth it every time
Discontinued door model: Matching panels on older or off-brand doors requires special ordering — add $150–$400 and 1–2 weeks wait time
Hurricane-rated parts (Florida/Gulf Coast): Wind-load rated hardware is mandatory in many counties — costs 15–30% more than standard components
Structural damage found during repair: Header rot, bent framing, or damaged opening can add $250–$2,000 if found mid-job
⚠️ Always ask for an itemized quote. A vague quote like "Service — $400" doesn't tell you if you're paying for labor, parts, travel fees, or hidden charges. Any reputable tech will give you a line-by-line breakdown before starting work. If they won't, call someone else.
The 50% Rule: When to Repair vs. Replace
Single spring on a door under 10 years old: Always repair. $200–$450 vs $1,500–$2,500 for a new door — easy math
Opener failure on a good door: Replace just the opener ($300–$600), not the door
2+ panels severely damaged: Get a full door quote — panel matching on older doors is expensive and looks bad
Door is 15+ years old with multiple failures: Compare repair quote vs new door. If repair exceeds 50% of replacement cost, replace
$1,000+ in repairs within 12 months: You're at end-of-life. Replace now and stop throwing money at a failing door
🚪
Repair cost exceeds 50% of a new door? Time to compare replacement prices.
Most garage door repairs cost $150 to $600 with parts and labor included. The most common repair — broken torsion spring — runs $200–$450. Opener repair averages $150–$300. Panel replacement is $250–$800 per section. Emergency after-hours service adds $100–$200 to any job.
How much does it cost to fix a garage door spring?
Torsion spring replacement (the bar above the door) costs $200–$450 installed. Extension springs (side tracks) run $150–$300. Most techs replace both springs at the same visit even if only one broke — the second spring is near end-of-life and adding it costs only $50–$100 more.
Can I fix a garage door spring myself?
No. Torsion springs are under 150–200 lbs of tension and can cause serious injury or death if they snap during DIY work. Beyond the safety risk, DIY spring failures regularly destroy the opener and panels simultaneously — turning a $300 repair into $800+. Always hire a professional for spring and cable repairs.
Does homeowners insurance cover garage door repair?
Insurance covers sudden accidental damage — backing your car into the door, storm damage, vandalism. Normal wear and tear (spring fatigue, roller wear) is never covered. Before filing a claim, check whether the repair cost exceeds your deductible — small claims can raise future premiums.
How long does a garage door repair take?
Most standard repairs take 1–2 hours. Spring replacement is 1–2 hours. Opener repair is 30–90 minutes. Panel replacement is 1–3 hours per section. Same-day service is available from most national chains and many independent techs, especially for urgent issues like a stuck door.