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Garage door weatherstripping seals the gaps along the sides, top, and between panels of your garage door to block drafts, moisture, pests, and debris. Over time, Utah’s temperature extremes – from sub-zero Cache Valley winters to 100-degree St. George summers – crack, compress, and destroy these seals. Advanced Door, Utah’s #1 rated garage door company with 4.9 stars and over 30,000 reviews, replaces all types of garage door weatherstripping with same-day service across the entire state. Call (844) 971-3667 for a free estimate.
Last updated: April 2026
Table of Contents
- 1. What Is Garage Door Weatherstripping?
- 2. Types of Garage Door Weatherstripping
- 3. 7 Signs Your Weatherstripping Needs Replacement
- 4. How to Choose the Right Weatherstripping
- 5. Step-by-Step Replacement Guide
- 6. Utah Climate and Your Weatherstripping
- 7. Weatherstripping Replacement Costs
- 8. DIY vs. Professional Replacement
- 9. How to Make Your Weatherstripping Last Longer
- 10. Frequently Asked Questions
What Is Garage Door Weatherstripping?
Garage door weatherstripping is the flexible sealing material installed along the sides, top, and sometimes between the panels of your garage door. Its job is simple but critical: close the gaps between the door and the frame so that cold air, hot air, rain, snow, dust, insects, and rodents stay outside where they belong.
Most homeowners know about the bottom seal (the rubber strip along the bottom edge of the door), but the side and top seals are just as important. When any of these seals fail, your garage becomes a direct conduit between the outside and your home’s interior, and your energy bills reflect it.
Garage door weatherstripping is different from the bottom seal in several important ways:
- Bottom seal (astragal): Attaches to the bottom edge of the door panel and presses against the garage floor. Covered in our complete bottom seal guide.
- Side seals (jamb seals): Run vertically along both sides of the door frame. They press against the outer face or edge of the door when closed.
- Top seal (header seal): Runs horizontally across the top of the door frame. Seals the gap between the top panel and the header.
- Stop molding: A rigid strip (wood or PVC) attached to the door frame that the door closes against. Often has a flexible seal component.
- Panel seals (inter-panel seals): Flexible strips between each horizontal panel section. Not all doors have these, but they reduce air infiltration significantly.
When your garage door weatherstripping is in good shape, your garage stays warmer in winter, cooler in summer, and cleaner year-round. When it fails, everything changes fast, especially in Utah’s extreme climate.
Utah Note
Utah’s climate is one of the hardest on garage door weatherstripping in the country. We go from single-digit winter temperatures to triple-digit summer heat, with UV exposure at high altitude breaking down rubber and vinyl faster than sea-level states. If you have never replaced your weatherstripping and your door is more than 5-7 years old, there is a very good chance the seals are compromised.
Types of Garage Door Weatherstripping
Not all garage door weatherstripping is the same. The type you need depends on where the seal is located, what material your door frame is made of, and how your door was originally installed. Here is a breakdown of the most common types.
Side (Jamb) Seals
Side seals run vertically along both sides of the garage door opening. They seal the gap between the edge of the closed door and the door frame (jamb). The most common types include:
- Vinyl stop molding with flexible fin: A rigid PVC strip nailed or screwed to the door frame, with a flexible fin that presses against the door face. The most common type on residential installations.
- Bulb-style jamb seal: Features a rounded bulb of rubber or vinyl that compresses when the door closes against it. Provides a tighter seal than a flat fin.
- Brush seals: Dense nylon bristles in an aluminum or PVC channel. Excellent for uneven surfaces and doors that are slightly out of alignment. Common on commercial doors but increasingly popular for residential.
- Magnetic seals: Use embedded magnets to pull the seal tight against a steel door. Provide the tightest residential seal available but only work with steel doors.
Top (Header) Seals
The top seal spans the width of the door opening at the header. When the door is fully closed, the top panel should press against this seal to close the gap. Common types include:
- Flat rubber or vinyl strip: A simple strip screwed or adhesive-mounted to the header. Basic but effective when properly installed.
- Dual-fin seal: Two flexible fins that sandwich the top edge of the door panel. Provides a better seal than a single flat strip.
- Bulb seal on header bracket: Similar to the side jamb bulb, but mounted horizontally. Common on newer installations.
Inter-Panel (Section Joint) Seals
These seals fit between each horizontal panel section of a sectional garage door. They reduce air infiltration through the joints when the door is closed. Not every door comes with these from the factory, but adding them can make a noticeable difference in insulation performance.
- Tongue-and-groove joints: Built into the panel design. The panels interlock when closed. Common on premium insulated doors.
- Flexible vinyl inserts: Snap or slide into a channel between panels. Available as aftermarket upgrades for doors without factory inter-panel seals.
| Type | Location | Material | Seal Quality | Lifespan | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vinyl Stop Molding | Sides & Top | PVC / Vinyl | Good | 5-8 years | Standard residential |
| Bulb Seal | Sides & Top | Rubber / EPDM | Very Good | 7-12 years | Cold climates, tight seal needed |
| Brush Seal | Sides & Bottom | Nylon Bristles | Good | 5-10 years | Uneven surfaces, dust control |
| Magnetic Seal | Sides & Top | Rubber + Magnets | Excellent | 10-15 years | Steel doors, maximum seal |
| Dual-Fin Header | Top only | Vinyl / Rubber | Very Good | 6-10 years | Doors with top gap issues |
| Inter-Panel Insert | Between panels | Flexible Vinyl | Good | 8-12 years | Insulation upgrade for older doors |
Pro Tip
For Utah homes along the Wasatch Front, EPDM rubber bulb seals are the best all-around choice for side and top seals. EPDM stays flexible in sub-zero temperatures and resists UV degradation at our high altitude better than standard vinyl. The extra cost pays for itself in the first winter.
7 Signs Your Weatherstripping Needs Replacement
Garage door weatherstripping does not fail all at once. It degrades gradually, and most homeowners do not notice until the problems become impossible to ignore. Here are the seven signs that your seals need attention.
1. Visible Light Gaps Around the Door
Close your garage door on a sunny day and turn off the garage lights. If you can see daylight around the sides, top, or between panels, your weatherstripping has failed. Even small light gaps mean air, water, and pests have a clear path inside. This is the simplest and most reliable test you can do.
2. Drafts and Cold Air in the Garage
If your garage feels noticeably colder than it should in winter or hotter than it should in summer, compromised weatherstripping is a likely culprit. Hold your hand near the sides and top of the closed door. If you feel air movement, the seals are not doing their job. In Utah’s winters, this is not just an inconvenience. It can freeze pipes, damage stored items, and spike heating bills for rooms adjacent to the garage.
3. Water, Snow, or Dust Intrusion
Finding puddles, snow, or dust piles inside your garage along the door perimeter is a sure sign of failed seals. In northern Utah, wind-driven snow can pile up several inches inside a garage with bad weatherstripping during a single storm. In southern Utah, fine desert dust accumulates relentlessly.
4. Cracked, Brittle, or Flattened Seals
Physically inspect your weatherstripping. Vinyl and rubber seals should be flexible and springy. If they are cracked, hard, brittle, or permanently flattened (compression set), they have lost their ability to form a seal. Utah’s UV exposure at 4,000-7,000 feet of elevation accelerates this degradation significantly compared to lower-altitude states.
Action Step
Do the pinch test: grab a section of your side seal and squeeze it between your fingers. If it springs back to shape, it is still functional. If it stays compressed or cracks when you squeeze, it needs to be replaced.
5. Pests Getting Into Your Garage
If you are finding mice, spiders, earwigs, or other pests in your garage, check your weatherstripping first. Even a quarter-inch gap is enough for mice to squeeze through, and insects need even less. Failed seals are the number one entry point for garage pests in Utah, especially in fall when rodents are looking for warm shelter before winter.
6. Rising Energy Bills
A garage with failed weatherstripping is essentially an open window in your home’s thermal envelope. If your garage shares a wall with your living space (which is the case for most Utah homes), the temperature in the garage directly affects your heating and cooling costs. Studies show that properly sealed garage doors can reduce adjacent room heating costs by 10-20% in cold climates.
7. Noise From Outside Is Louder Than Usual
Weatherstripping provides a surprising amount of sound insulation. If you have noticed that street noise, wind, or your neighbor’s activities seem louder in the garage than they used to be, deteriorated seals may be the reason. This is particularly noticeable in neighborhoods with busy roads or during Utah’s notorious wind events along the Wasatch Front.
Utah Note
If you live in Cache Valley, the Tooele Valley, or the west side of Salt Lake County near the Great Salt Lake, salt air and mineral-laden dust accelerate weatherstripping degradation. Homeowners in these areas should inspect seals at least twice a year, in spring and fall, rather than the standard once annually.
How to Choose the Right Weatherstripping
Choosing the right garage door weatherstripping depends on your door type, your climate zone within Utah, and your budget. Here is what to consider.
Match the Profile to Your Door Frame
Before buying replacement weatherstripping, identify what is currently installed. Most residential garage doors in Utah use vinyl stop molding on the sides and a flat or fin-style header seal on top. Measure the profile dimensions (width and thickness) and take a piece of the old seal to the hardware store if possible. Installing the wrong profile means the seal will not make proper contact with the door.
Choose the Right Material for Utah
Material matters more in Utah than in moderate climates. Here is what works best:
- EPDM Rubber: The best all-around choice for Utah. Stays flexible from -40 degrees to 250 degrees F. Resists UV, ozone, and weathering. More expensive than vinyl but lasts significantly longer in our climate.
- Vinyl (PVC): The most common and least expensive option. Works well for 3-5 years but hardens and cracks faster in cold temperatures and high UV exposure. Acceptable for budget-conscious homeowners who are willing to replace it more frequently.
- Silicone: Premium material with the widest temperature range and longest lifespan. Expensive, but may be worth it for heated garages or workshops where a tight seal is critical.
- Nylon Brush: Best for commercial applications or residential doors with uneven surfaces. Does not seal as tightly as rubber or vinyl but handles misalignment well and lasts a long time.
Pro Tip
If your garage is attached to your home and you use it as a workshop, home gym, or regularly park warm cars inside during winter, invest in EPDM or silicone seals. The temperature differential between a warm garage and cold outside air puts enormous stress on cheap vinyl seals, causing them to fail in as little as 2-3 years.
Measure Before You Buy
You will need three measurements for a complete weatherstripping replacement:
- Side seal length: Measure from the garage floor to the top of the door frame on both sides. Standard single-car doors need about 7 feet per side (14 feet total). Standard double-car doors need 7-8 feet per side.
- Top seal length: Measure the width of the door opening. Standard single-car is 8-10 feet. Standard double-car is 16-18 feet. For a full guide to garage door dimensions, see our garage door sizes guide.
- Profile dimensions: Measure the width and height of the existing seal channel or mounting surface. Take a cross-section photo to match at the store.
Buy 10-15% more than your measurements to account for waste and fitting errors. Weatherstripping is inexpensive enough that having a little extra is better than coming up short mid-project.
Step-by-Step Replacement Guide
Replacing garage door weatherstripping is one of the more accessible DIY garage door projects. You do not need to work near springs, cables, or any components under tension. Here is how to do it for each seal type.
Safety Warning
Weatherstripping replacement is safe DIY work, but DO NOT attempt to adjust the door, tracks, springs, or cables while you have the door open for this project. If you notice spring or cable issues during inspection, stop and call a professional. For spring safety information, see our spring warning signs guide.
Tools You Will Need
- Tape measure
- Utility knife or heavy scissors
- Pry bar or flathead screwdriver (for removing old stop molding)
- Hammer and galvanized nails (for nail-on seals) or drill and screws (for screw-on seals)
- Caulk gun and exterior silicone caulk (optional, for extra sealing)
- Step ladder
- Safety glasses
- Work gloves
Replacing Side (Jamb) Seals
- Close the garage door fully. You need the door in the closed position so you can set the new seal to make proper contact.
- Remove the old seal. If it is nailed-on stop molding, use a pry bar to carefully pull it away from the frame. If it is a slide-in channel type, pull the old seal out of the channel.
- Clean the mounting surface. Remove old nails, scrape off old caulk or adhesive, and wipe the surface clean. This ensures a solid attachment for the new seal.
- Position the new seal. Start at the top and work down. Press the seal firmly against the closed door face so it makes full contact along the entire length. The seal should compress slightly, about 1/4 inch, when the door is closed.
- Secure the seal. Nail or screw every 8-12 inches, starting from the top. Keep the seal pressed against the door as you fasten. Do not over-tighten screws, as this can deform the seal.
- Test the door. Open and close the door several times. The door should move freely without catching or dragging on the new seals. If it catches, you may need to adjust the seal position slightly.
- Repeat on the other side. Make sure both sides have even contact and compression.
Replacing the Top (Header) Seal
- Close the garage door. The top panel must be in position against the header.
- Remove the old header seal. Pry off old molding or slide out old seal material.
- Clean the header surface thoroughly. The top of the frame collects more dust and debris than the sides.
- Cut the new seal to length. Measure the opening width and cut the seal 1/2 inch longer than the opening on each end to overlap with the side seals slightly.
- Install from one side to the other. Press the seal against the top panel and secure with fasteners every 8-12 inches.
- Check the overlap. The header seal should meet or slightly overlap the top of each side seal. This prevents gaps at the corners, which are the most common leak points.
Action Step
After installing all new weatherstripping, do the light test again. Close the door, turn off the lights, and check for daylight around the entire perimeter. If you see light, adjust the seal in that area. Pay special attention to the two top corners, as this is where most DIY installations leave gaps.
Adding Inter-Panel Seals
If your door does not have seals between the panels and you want to add them:
- Open the door partially so you can access each panel joint.
- Clean the hinge area and panel edges. Remove dust and debris.
- Measure the width of each panel joint. Cut vinyl inserts to length.
- Insert the seal. Most inter-panel seals slide into a channel or press-fit between panels. Follow the manufacturer’s instructions for your specific seal type.
- Check that the seals do not interfere with the hinges or the door’s ability to fold along the tracks when opening.
Inter-panel seals are especially valuable on insulated garage doors where you want to maximize R-value, and on older non-insulated doors where panel gaps let cold air whistle through.
Call (844) 971-3667 for a Free Estimate
Utah Climate and Your Weatherstripping
Utah’s climate is uniquely destructive to garage door weatherstripping. Understanding the specific threats in your area helps you choose the right materials and set the right replacement schedule.
Northern Utah (Logan, Ogden, Layton, Salt Lake City)
The Wasatch Front and Cache Valley experience some of the coldest temperatures in the lower 48 states. Cache Valley regularly drops below 0 degrees F in January, and Logan has recorded temperatures as low as -40 degrees F. This extreme cold causes several problems for weatherstripping:
- Vinyl becomes rigid and brittle below 20 degrees F, losing its ability to form a seal. This is why EPDM rubber is strongly recommended for northern Utah installations.
- Freeze-thaw cycling cracks seals from the inside out. Water gets into micro-cracks during warm days, then freezes and expands overnight, widening the cracks.
- Snow accumulation against the sides of the door pushes against seals and can dislodge poorly secured weatherstripping.
- Road salt and brine tracked in on tires accelerates degradation of rubber and vinyl at the bottom of the side seals.
For Logan and Cache Valley homeowners, we recommend EPDM bulb seals on the sides and top, inspected every spring after the freeze-thaw season. For Ogden and Davis County homeowners, the same recommendation applies, with extra attention to salt air degradation from the Great Salt Lake.
Central Utah (Provo, Lehi, Sandy, West Jordan)
The Utah County and South Valley corridor gets cold winters but not as extreme as Cache Valley. The bigger challenge here is the temperature swing. Daily temperature variations of 30-40 degrees are common in spring and fall, causing constant expansion and contraction cycles that wear out seals faster than steady cold.
- Point of the Mountain wind drives dust and debris into side seal gaps between Lehi and Draper.
- Construction dust in fast-growing areas like Eagle Mountain, Saratoga Springs, and Herriman abrades seal surfaces.
- UV exposure at 4,500+ feet of elevation degrades vinyl 30-40% faster than sea-level installations.
Southern Utah (St. George, Hurricane, Cedar City)
In St. George and Washington County, the challenge flips from cold to heat. Summer temperatures regularly exceed 110 degrees F, and garage door surfaces can reach 150+ degrees in direct sun.
- Heat causes permanent compression set in vinyl and cheap rubber seals. The seal softens in the heat, compresses under the door’s weight, then hardens in that compressed position as the temperature drops.
- UV radiation at southern Utah’s lower humidity and high sun angle is the most intense in the state. Vinyl seals can become chalky and crumble within 2-3 years.
- Sand and fine desert dust acts as an abrasive on seal surfaces, accelerating wear.
- Monsoon moisture in late summer drives water horizontally through failed seals.
For southern Utah, silicone-based seals or high-grade EPDM are the best investments. Standard vinyl will need replacement every 2-3 years in Washington County versus 5-7 years in Salt Lake County.
Utah Note
For homeowners in Park City, Heber City, and mountain communities above 6,000 feet, weatherstripping takes the worst of both worlds: extreme cold in winter, intense UV in summer, and heavy snow loads pressing against seals. Budget for EPDM or silicone seals and plan on inspecting twice per year.
Weatherstripping Replacement Costs
Garage door weatherstripping is one of the most affordable garage door maintenance items, especially compared to the energy savings and protection it provides.
| Item | DIY Material Cost | Professional Installed | Lifespan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vinyl side seals (both sides) | $15 – $30 | $75 – $150 | 3-5 years (Utah) |
| EPDM rubber side seals (both sides) | $25 – $50 | $100 – $200 | 7-10 years (Utah) |
| Top (header) seal | $10 – $25 | $50 – $100 | 5-8 years (Utah) |
| Stop molding (PVC, both sides + top) | $20 – $40 | $100 – $200 | 5-8 years (Utah) |
| Inter-panel seals (4-panel door) | $20 – $45 | $75 – $150 | 8-12 years |
| Magnetic seals (both sides + top) | $50 – $100 | $150 – $300 | 10-15 years |
| Complete perimeter replacement | $50 – $120 | $150 – $400 | 5-10 years avg. |
These are industry-typical ranges. Your actual cost depends on your door size, material choice, and whether additional frame repair is needed. Call (844) 971-3667 for a free estimate specific to your garage door.
Pro Tip
Weatherstripping replacement is often bundled with a professional maintenance tune-up. If you are already having a technician inspect your door, springs, and opener, adding weatherstripping replacement to the visit is the most cost-effective approach. Ask about it when you schedule your service.
DIY vs. Professional Replacement
Weatherstripping replacement is one of the few garage door projects where DIY is a perfectly reasonable choice for most homeowners. Unlike spring replacement or cable repair, there are no high-tension components involved.
That said, there are situations where calling a professional makes more sense:
DIY Is a Good Choice When:
- You are comfortable with basic tools (hammer, drill, tape measure)
- Your door frame is in good condition with no rot, rust, or structural damage
- You are replacing like-for-like (same type and profile of seal)
- Your door is properly aligned and the gap is consistent around the perimeter
- You have 1-2 hours to spare on a weekend
Call a Professional When:
- The door frame is damaged. Rotted wood, rusted metal, or cracked framing needs repair before new weatherstripping can seal properly.
- The gap is uneven. If the gap on one side is significantly larger than the other, the door may be misaligned, which is a track or alignment issue that needs to be fixed first.
- You are upgrading to a different type. Switching from stop molding to magnetic seals or changing the mounting method may require frame modifications.
- You notice other problems. If you discover worn rollers, damaged tracks, or spring issues while inspecting, do not attempt those repairs yourself.
- You want it done right the first time. A professional can assess the entire door system, identify why seals failed prematurely (door alignment, settling, track issues), and address root causes.
Safety Warning
If your weatherstripping is failing because the door is sagging, binding, or sitting unevenly in the frame, the root cause is likely a spring, cable, or track problem, not just worn seals. Replacing weatherstripping on a misaligned door is a temporary fix at best. A professional can diagnose and fix the underlying issue so your new seals actually work. Call (844) 971-3667 if your door is not sitting squarely in the frame.
How to Make Your Weatherstripping Last Longer
With proper care, you can significantly extend the life of your garage door weatherstripping, even in Utah’s demanding climate.
1. Clean Seals Twice a Year
Wipe down all weatherstripping with a damp cloth in spring and fall. Remove dirt, dust, salt residue, and debris that accumulates in the seal surfaces. For northern Utah homes, a spring cleaning after the last freeze removes road salt and brine that accelerate rubber and vinyl degradation.
2. Apply Silicone Lubricant Annually
A light application of silicone-based lubricant (not WD-40, not petroleum-based products) keeps rubber and vinyl seals flexible and prevents them from sticking to the door or frame. Apply in fall before the first hard freeze. For details on proper garage door lubrication, see our complete lubrication guide.
Safety Warning
Never use WD-40, petroleum jelly, or oil-based lubricants on weatherstripping. These products break down rubber and vinyl, causing swelling, softening, and accelerated failure. Use only silicone-based lubricants specifically labeled safe for rubber and vinyl.
3. Keep the Garage Door Track Clean
Dirt and debris in the tracks can cause the door to sit unevenly, putting unequal pressure on the weatherstripping. Regular track cleaning (part of a standard maintenance routine) helps weatherstripping wear evenly.
4. Address Door Alignment Issues Promptly
If your door starts sitting unevenly or you notice one side seal is compressing more than the other, get the alignment checked before the uneven pressure destroys the new seals. Door alignment problems come from worn cables, weakening springs, or settling foundations.
5. Inspect After Severe Weather
After major windstorms (common along the Wasatch Front), heavy snow events, or hail, check your weatherstripping for displacement or damage. Wind-driven debris can tear or dislodge seals, and hail can damage the door surface that seals press against.
6. Replace the Bottom Seal at the Same Time
If you are replacing side and top seals, it is worth checking the bottom seal at the same time. All perimeter seals tend to wear at similar rates. Replacing everything at once ensures complete protection and saves a second project or service visit.
Recommended Inspection Schedule for Utah
- Northern Utah (Cache Valley, Weber County): Inspect in April (after freeze-thaw season) and October (before first hard freeze)
- Wasatch Front (SLC, Utah County): Inspect in April and September
- Southern Utah (Washington County, Iron County): Inspect in March (before summer heat) and October (after monsoon season)
- Mountain communities (Park City, Heber, Midway): Inspect in May (late spring thaw) and September (before early mountain winter)
Include weatherstripping inspection as part of your seasonal garage door maintenance. For a complete maintenance checklist, see our spring maintenance guide or fall maintenance guide.
Call (844) 971-3667 – Free Estimates
Frequently Asked Questions
How often should I replace garage door weatherstripping in Utah?
In Utah, plan to replace vinyl weatherstripping every 3-5 years and EPDM rubber every 7-10 years. Homeowners in extreme climate zones (Cache Valley cold, St. George heat, or mountain communities above 6,000 feet) may need to replace vinyl as often as every 2-3 years. Inspect all seals at least once per year, ideally in spring and fall.
What is the best weatherstripping material for Utah’s climate?
EPDM rubber is the best all-around choice for most Utah homes. It stays flexible in sub-zero temperatures, resists UV degradation at high altitude, and handles Utah’s extreme temperature swings better than vinyl. For southern Utah, silicone-based seals offer the best heat resistance. Vinyl is acceptable for budget-conscious homeowners but expect a shorter lifespan.
Can I replace just the side seals or do I need to replace everything?
You can replace seals individually, and it often makes sense to replace only the section that has failed. However, if one seal has degraded, the others are likely close behind since they are all exposed to the same conditions. Replacing all perimeter seals at once gives you a consistent seal and saves a second project or service visit later.
Is garage door weatherstripping the same as the bottom seal?
No. The bottom seal (also called an astragal or bottom weatherstrip) is a separate component that attaches to the bottom edge of the door and seals against the garage floor. Weatherstripping refers to the seals along the sides, top, and between panels of the door. Both are important, but they use different materials and mounting methods. See our bottom seal replacement guide for that component.
Why does my garage still have drafts after replacing the weatherstripping?
If you have replaced the perimeter seals and still feel drafts, check these common culprits: the bottom seal may also need replacement, the door may be misaligned (causing uneven gaps the seals cannot bridge), there may be gaps at the corners where side and top seals meet, or the door panels themselves may have cracks or gaps. A professional inspection can identify the source.
Will new weatherstripping help my garage stay warmer in winter?
Yes, significantly. Properly sealed weatherstripping can reduce air infiltration by up to 50%, which translates to a noticeably warmer garage and lower heating costs for rooms that share a wall with the garage. For maximum insulation performance, pair new weatherstripping with an insulated garage door and a sealed bottom seal.
Can weatherstripping stop mice and pests from getting in?
Intact weatherstripping is one of the most effective barriers against garage pests. Mice can squeeze through gaps as small as 1/4 inch, and insects need even less. Replacing cracked, compressed, or missing seals eliminates the most common pest entry points around the garage door. For additional pest prevention, see our garage door security guide.
How much does it cost to have a professional replace all the weatherstripping?
Professional complete perimeter weatherstripping replacement (both sides, top, and stop molding) typically ranges from $150 to $400 depending on door size, material choice, and whether frame repairs are needed. This includes materials and labor. Call (844) 971-3667 for a free estimate tailored to your specific door.
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