Don't get stuck with a door that won't open. Learn the early warning signs of spring failure before it becomes an emergency.
Your garage door springs are under extreme tension and won't last forever. Most torsion springs last 10,000-15,000 cycles (about 7-10 years of normal use). Here are the signs yours are on the way out:
1. The door feels heavier than usual. If your door suddenly seems harder to lift manually, the springs are losing tension. A properly balanced door should stay in place when lifted halfway.
Sensor issues, track problems, or something else? We break down the common causes and what you can safely fix yourself.
A garage door that won't close is frustrating and a security risk. Before you call for service, here are the most common causes. Some you can fix yourself.
Safety sensor misalignment: This is the #1 reason. Your door has two sensors at the bottom of the tracks. If they're bumped out of alignment, the door reverses or won't close. Check that both sensor lights are solid (not blinking). Clean the lenses and gently adjust until aligned.
A quick monthly inspection can extend your door's life by years. Here's exactly what to check and how to do it.
Your garage door is the largest moving part of your home, averaging 1,500 cycles per year. A quick monthly check keeps it running safely and prevents costly repairs.
Visual inspection (2 minutes): Stand inside with the door closed. Look at the springs, cables, rollers, and pulleys for signs of wear. Check for frayed cables, rusted springs, or cracked rollers.
Sometimes a repair makes sense. Sometimes replacement saves money long-term. Here's how to decide.
When your garage door gives you trouble, the big question is: fix it or get a new one? Here's a straightforward framework to help you decide.
Repair makes sense when: The door is less than 15 years old. The issue is a single component (spring, cable, opener, roller). The panels are in good shape. A repair typically costs $150-$400 depending on the part.
Phantom openings are creepy and a security risk. Here's what causes them and how to stop it.
Your garage door opening on its own is more than annoying, it is a security risk. Here's what's probably causing it and how to fix it.
Radio frequency interference: Nearby devices (a neighbor's opener, ham radio) can sometimes trigger yours. Reprogram your opener to a new frequency or code.
Massachusetts winters are tough on garage doors. These tips will help prevent freeze-ups and cold-weather failures.
Massachusetts winters bring freezing temperatures, ice, and salt. All are enemies of your garage door. Here's how to prepare.
Lubricate moving parts before winter: Cold weather thickens lubricant and causes metal to contract. Apply silicone-based lubricant to springs, hinges, rollers, and tracks before the first freeze.
Real pricing ranges for common garage door repairs in the Greater Boston and Central MA area, so you know what to expect before you call.
One of the most common questions we get is 'how much will this cost?' Here are honest price ranges for the most common garage door repairs in Massachusetts as of 2026.
Spring replacement: $275 - $450. Torsion springs are the most common repair we do. Price depends on door size and whether it's a single or double spring system. We always replace springs in pairs to prevent the second one from breaking weeks later.
Your garage door weighs 150-400 pounds and moves multiple times daily. Here's how to keep your family safe around it.
A garage door is the heaviest moving object in most homes, averaging 150 to 400 pounds. It cycles over 1,500 times per year. Understanding basic safety can prevent serious injuries.
Never walk under a moving door. It sounds obvious, but trying to duck under a closing door is one of the most common causes of injury. Wait for the door to fully open or close before passing through.
Material, insulation, style, and budget — here's everything you need to know before buying a new garage door.
A new garage door is one of the best home improvement investments you can make. But with so many options, choosing the right one can feel overwhelming. Here's what actually matters.
Material options: Steel is the most popular choice — durable, low-maintenance, and available in every style. Wood is beautiful but requires regular staining and upkeep. Aluminum is lightweight and rust-resistant, great for modern homes. Fiberglass resists denting but can crack in extreme cold.
Chain drive, belt drive, screw drive, or wall-mount? Compare the pros and cons of each opener type.
Your garage door opener does the heavy lifting every day. If yours is old, noisy, or unreliable, here's what to know about the four main types before you upgrade.
Chain drive openers are the most affordable and most common. They use a metal chain to pull the door along a rail. The downside? They're the noisiest option. If your garage is detached or you don't mind some noise, a chain drive is a solid, reliable choice. Expect to pay $200-$350 for the unit.
Prepare your garage door for the seasons ahead with this spring and fall maintenance checklist for Massachusetts homeowners.
Massachusetts homeowners deal with everything from humid summers to freezing winters. Your garage door needs different attention depending on the season. Here's a breakdown of what to do and when.
Spring maintenance (March-April): Winter takes a toll. Start the season by inspecting weatherstripping for cracks — cold weather hardens rubber seals. Clean the tracks of salt, sand, and debris that got kicked up over winter. Lubricate all moving parts (springs, hinges, rollers) with silicone spray. Test the balance and safety reversal.
Find out how insulated garage doors save energy, reduce noise, and protect your belongings — especially in Massachusetts winters.
If your garage is attached to your home — and most in Massachusetts are — an uninsulated garage door is one of the biggest energy leaks in your house. Here's what you need to know about garage door insulation.
How much heat are you losing? An uninsulated single-layer steel door provides almost zero thermal resistance. In a Massachusetts winter, your garage temperature can drop to near-freezing, which affects the rooms above and beside it. An insulated door (R-16 or higher) can keep your garage 20-30 degrees warmer than outside.
Grinding, rattling, or squeaking? Learn the most common causes of garage door noise and how to quiet things down.
A noisy garage door is more than annoying — it's usually a sign that something needs attention. The good news is that most noise issues are fixable, and catching them early prevents bigger problems down the road.
Worn rollers are the #1 noise culprit. Steel rollers grinding against metal tracks create that familiar scraping sound. Nylon rollers are dramatically quieter and last longer. Replacing steel rollers with nylon ones is one of the most popular upgrades we do — most homeowners notice the difference immediately.
Wi-Fi enabled openers let you control and monitor your garage from anywhere. Here's what to know before upgrading.
Smart garage door openers have become one of the most popular home upgrades in recent years. The ability to open, close, and monitor your garage door from your phone adds convenience and security that traditional openers can't match.
What makes an opener 'smart'? A smart garage door opener connects to your home Wi-Fi and pairs with a smartphone app. You can open and close the door remotely, receive alerts when the door opens or closes, set schedules for automatic closing, and check the door's status from anywhere.
Your garage door is the largest entry point to your home. Here's how to make sure it's not the weakest link in your security.
Your garage door is the largest entry point to your home, and burglars know it. According to security experts, an unsecured garage is one of the most common ways intruders gain access to a home. Here's how to lock it down.
Secure the emergency release. The red emergency release cord inside your garage can be triggered from outside using a coat hanger through the top of the door. A simple zip tie or emergency release shield ($15-$20) prevents this. If your garage doesn't have an interior door to the house, this is especially critical.
Some garage door fixes are safe to handle yourself. Others absolutely require a professional. Here's how to know the difference.
We get it — not every garage door issue needs a service call. Some things you can safely handle yourself. But knowing where to draw the line between DIY and professional repair can save you money, time, and potentially prevent a serious injury.
Safe for DIY: Lubricating hinges, rollers, and springs with silicone spray. Tightening loose bolts and brackets with a socket wrench. Cleaning and aligning photo-eye sensors. Replacing remote control batteries. Clearing debris from tracks. Replacing the bottom weatherstrip seal.
Commercial doors cycle thousands of times per year. A proper maintenance plan prevents costly downtime and extends door life.
Commercial garage doors operate in a completely different league from residential doors. A warehouse or loading dock door might cycle 20,000+ times per year compared to 1,500 for a typical home. That kind of usage demands a structured maintenance approach.
Why commercial maintenance matters more: A stuck commercial door doesn't just inconvenience one homeowner — it can shut down receiving, block emergency exits, compromise climate control, and cost thousands in lost productivity per hour. Preventive maintenance is exponentially cheaper than emergency downtime.
Massachusetts nor'easters and severe storms can damage unprotected garage doors. Here's how to prepare and protect yours.
Massachusetts may not be hurricane country, but nor'easters, severe thunderstorms, and occasional tropical storm remnants bring winds strong enough to damage garage doors. A compromised garage door during a storm can lead to catastrophic structural damage to your entire home.
Why garage doors are vulnerable: Your garage door is the largest opening in your home's envelope. When high winds breach a garage door, the sudden pressure change inside the garage can blow off the roof or collapse walls. This isn't theoretical — it's one of the most common failure modes in windstorm damage.