
If your garage door repair costs more than 50% of what a new door would cost, replacement is usually the smarter investment. For repairs under $500 on a door less than 15 years old, fixing it almost always makes sense. Advanced Door – Utah’s #1 rated garage door company with 30,000+ five-star reviews and the only lifetime warranty on parts and labor in the state – helps homeowners make the right call every day. Call (844) 971-3667 for a free, honest assessment with no pressure to buy.
In This Guide
- Quick Decision Snapshot
- When Repair Is the Right Choice
- When Replacement Makes More Sense
- Repair vs. Replacement Cost Comparison
- The 50% Rule: A Simple Cost Guideline
- The Age Factor: How Old Is Your Door?
- The Frequency Factor: How Often Are You Repairing?
- The Safety Factor: When Repair Isn’t an Option
- Energy Efficiency and Insulation
- Curb Appeal, Home Value, and Resale
- Utah-Specific Factors That Affect Your Decision
- 7 Questions to Ask Yourself Before Deciding
- Common Mistakes Homeowners Make
- How Advanced Door Helps You Decide
- Frequently Asked Questions
Your garage door is acting up again. Maybe the springs snapped, the panels are dented, or the opener grinds every time you press the button. The question every homeowner eventually asks: should I repair what I have, or is it time for a whole new door?
It is not always obvious. A $300 spring replacement can give your door another 10 years. But spending $300 on a door that needs $500 more in repairs next season is money down the drain.
This guide walks you through the complete decision process. You will learn the cost breakpoints, age thresholds, safety triggers, and Utah-specific factors that make the repair-or-replace question clear. By the end, you will know exactly which path makes sense for your home, your budget, and your long-term plans.
Quick Decision Snapshot
Use this table as a starting point. If your situation matches the left column, follow the recommendation on the right.
| Your Situation | Recommendation | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Door is under 10 years old, single repair needed | Repair | Plenty of life left |
| Broken spring or cable on a solid door | Repair | Springs and cables are wear items |
| One or two dented panels, no structural damage | Repair | Panel swap is cost-effective |
| Opener failure on a good door | Repair (replace opener) | New opener, same door |
| Door is 20+ years old with multiple issues | Replace | Cost of repairs adds up fast |
| Repair estimate exceeds 50% of new door cost | Replace | Better ROI on a new door |
| Three or more repairs in the past 18 months | Replace | Chronic failure pattern |
| Structural damage (bent tracks, warped frame, sagging) | Replace | Structural problems cascade |
| Selling home in the next 12 months | Replace (if worn) | Highest ROI home improvement |
| Uninsulated door in Utah climate | Replace (usually) | Energy savings justify the cost |
When Repair Is the Right Choice
Repair makes sense more often than you might think. Garage doors are built to last 20 to 30 years, and most problems involve individual components – not the door itself. Here are the scenarios where repair is clearly the better investment.
Your Door Is Under 15 Years Old
A well-made steel garage door has a lifespan of 20 to 30 years. If yours is still in its first half of life, repairing individual components keeps a perfectly good door in service. Springs, cables, rollers, and hinges are all designed to be replaced without touching the door itself.
The Problem Is a Single Component
Most garage door service calls involve one failing part. A broken spring, a snapped cable, a set of worn rollers, or a failing hinge – these are routine repairs that restore full function. Think of it like replacing brake pads on a car. You would not buy a new car because the brakes wore out.
The Door Has No Structural Damage
If the panels are straight, the tracks are aligned, and the frame is solid, the door’s structural integrity is intact. Component failures on a structurally sound door are normal wear items, not signs that the door itself is failing.
You Have Already Invested in Quality Components
If you previously upgraded to lifetime warranty springs, nylon rollers, or reinforcement struts, your door has significant invested value. Those upgrades carry over through multiple component repair cycles.
Your Budget Is Tight Right Now
A garage door repair typically ranges from $100 to $500 for common issues. If a new door is not in the budget this year, a quality repair buys you time without compromising safety – as long as the door is structurally sound.
Pro Tip
Before assuming you need a new door, get an honest assessment from a reputable company. Many homeowners spend thousands on replacement when a $200 to $400 repair would have solved the problem. Call Advanced Door at (844) 971-3667 for a free estimate – we will tell you honestly whether repair or replacement makes more sense for your situation.
When Replacement Makes More Sense
Sometimes repair is just delaying the inevitable – and costing you more in the long run. Here are the situations where a new door is the smarter investment.
The Door Is Over 20 Years Old
Garage doors age. Metal fatigues, weatherstripping deteriorates, insulation compresses, and panel joints loosen. A 20-year-old door may still open and close, but it is operating well past its design life. Every repair on an aging door is borrowed time. A complete replacement timing guide explains the full timeline.
Repair Costs Are Stacking Up
Three service calls in 18 months is a pattern, not bad luck. When you are repairing the springs in January, the cables in June, and the rollers in November, the door is telling you something. Total up your repair costs from the past two years. If they exceed $800 to $1,000, that money could have gone toward a new door.
Multiple Systems Are Failing Simultaneously
A broken spring is one thing. A broken spring plus worn rollers plus a grinding opener plus weatherstripping that has disintegrated – that is a door at end of life. When multiple systems fail at once, the repair bill approaches or exceeds replacement cost.
The Door Has Structural Damage
Bent panels, a warped frame, a door hanging crooked, or sections that no longer seal properly indicate structural compromise. Unlike component failures, structural damage cannot be reliably repaired. The door will continue to bind, leak, and stress other components even after cosmetic fixes.
You Are Selling Your Home
A new garage door delivers the highest return on investment of any exterior home improvement – often 100% or more. If your current door is worn, faded, or outdated, replacement before listing can add thousands to your sale price. Buyers notice the garage door before they notice almost anything else.
Your Door Has No Insulation
If you have a single-layer, uninsulated steel door, you are paying for it every month in energy costs. Replacing with an insulated garage door can reduce garage temperature swings by 20 to 30 degrees and lower your energy bills. In Utah’s climate, that matters twelve months a year.
Action Step
If your door is showing two or more of the signs above, schedule a free assessment. Advanced Door technicians will inspect every component and give you an honest repair-vs-replace recommendation with no obligation. Call (844) 971-3667 or request an estimate online.
Repair vs. Replacement Cost Comparison
Understanding the real costs helps you make an informed decision. Here is how common repairs compare to the investment of a new door. For detailed breakdowns, see our repair cost guide and replacement cost guide.
| Service | Typical Cost Range | Lifespan Added | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spring replacement (pair) | $200 – $400 | 7 – 15+ years | Doors under 15 years |
| Cable replacement | $150 – $300 | 10+ years | Quick, high-value fix |
| Roller replacement (full set) | $150 – $300 | 5 – 10 years | Noisy or binding doors |
| Panel replacement (1-2 panels) | $250 – $800 | Matches panel life | Cosmetic/minor damage |
| Opener replacement | $350 – $800+ | 10 – 15 years | Opener failure, good door |
| Track repair/replacement | $150 – $500 | 15+ years | Off-track, bent track |
| Weatherstripping (complete) | $100 – $300 | 3 – 7 years | Drafts, pests, moisture |
| Multiple repairs combined | $600 – $1,500+ | Varies | Consider replacing instead |
| New single garage door (installed) | $1,000 – $3,000+ | 20 – 30 years | Long-term investment |
| New double garage door (installed) | $1,500 – $5,000+ | 20 – 30 years | Long-term investment |
Note: These are industry-typical ranges. Your actual cost depends on door size, material, features, and your specific situation. Call (844) 971-3667 for a free, no-obligation estimate.
The 50% Rule: A Simple Cost Guideline
The most reliable shortcut in the repair-or-replace decision is the 50% rule: if the repair bill exceeds 50% of what a comparable new door would cost, replacement is almost always the better investment.
Here is why the math works:
- A repair at 50%+ of replacement cost only delays the next repair
- A new door comes with fresh warranties, modern safety features, and better insulation
- You eliminate the accumulated wear on every other component
- The new door adds home value that a repair never will
Pro Tip
The 50% rule applies to a single repair estimate. But also add up all repairs from the past two years. If the running total exceeds 50% of a new door, the pattern matters even more than any single bill.
The exception: if the repair is a one-time event on an otherwise excellent door – say, a vehicle backed into a single panel on a 5-year-old insulated door – the 50% rule may not apply. Context matters, and that is why an honest assessment from a professional is worth getting.
The Age Factor: How Old Is Your Door?
Age is the single most important variable in the repair-or-replace equation. Here is a general guideline:
- Under 10 years: Almost always repair. Your door has significant life remaining. Even major component replacements (springs, opener, panels) are worthwhile investments.
- 10 to 15 years: Repair makes sense for single-component failures. Start watching for patterns. If two or more systems need attention, get a replacement quote alongside the repair estimate.
- 15 to 20 years: Evaluate carefully. Individual repairs can still make sense, but the door is entering its final phase. Factor in energy efficiency, safety features, and curb appeal when deciding.
- Over 20 years: Lean toward replacement unless the door is high quality and well maintained. At this age, one repair is often followed by another within months. The cascading failure pattern is real.
Don’t know how old your door is? Check the manufacturer label on the inside of a panel near the hinge. Most list a manufacture date. If there is no label, a technician can estimate age based on the hardware, springs, and construction style. Our guide to how garage doors work explains the components to look for.
The Frequency Factor: How Often Are You Repairing?
A single repair is maintenance. Repeated repairs are a warning sign.
Track your repair history. If you have called for service three or more times in 18 months, you are dealing with a door in systemic decline. Each component failure stresses the others: worn rollers strain the opener, a weak spring stresses the cables, and an unbalanced door accelerates wear on everything.
Action Step
Start a simple repair log. Write down every service call: date, what was repaired, and cost. When it is time to decide repair or replace, you will have the data to make a clear-eyed decision instead of relying on memory.
The compounding cost of frequent repairs also carries hidden expenses: time off work to meet the technician, the inconvenience of a car stuck in (or out of) the garage, and the stress of wondering what will break next. A new door eliminates that entire cycle.
The Safety Factor: When Repair Isn’t an Option
Some situations remove the repair option entirely. If any of the following apply, replacement is not just recommended – it is necessary for your family’s safety.
- The auto-reverse doesn’t work: If your door does not reverse when it contacts an object, the safety system has failed. This is a building code violation and a serious hazard for children and pets.
- The door free-falls when released: A door in free-fall means the counterbalance system (springs) has completely failed. A standard double garage door weighs 150 to 250 pounds. Free-fall is life-threatening.
- Structural components are compromised: Cracked bottom brackets, split cable drums, or a fractured torsion tube cannot be safely patched. These components hold the door’s full weight under extreme tension.
- The door lacks modern safety features: Doors manufactured before 1993 may not have the photo-eye sensors that federal law requires. Retrofitting an older door with modern safety features can cost nearly as much as replacement.
Safety Warning
Never attempt to repair torsion springs, cables under tension, or bottom brackets yourself. These components are under extreme force and can cause serious injury or death. Always call a professional. Advanced Door offers same-day emergency service across Utah: (844) 971-3667.
Energy Efficiency and Insulation
If your current door is uninsulated, the repair-vs-replace math shifts heavily toward replacement – regardless of the door’s mechanical condition.
An uninsulated single-layer steel door has an R-value near zero. A modern insulated garage door with polyurethane core delivers R-12 to R-18, reducing temperature transfer dramatically. In Utah, where summer temperatures exceed 100 degrees F and winter lows hit single digits, that insulation matters every single day.
The energy impact goes beyond the garage itself. An uninsulated garage door lets heat pour into (or out of) any room that shares a wall with the garage – bedrooms, living rooms, home offices. Many Utah homeowners report noticeable comfort improvements and lower energy bills after upgrading to an insulated door.
You can add insulation to an existing door, but retrofit insulation kits add weight that can stress springs and openers not designed for it, and they never match the performance of factory-insulated doors. If energy efficiency is a priority, replacement with a properly insulated door is the more reliable path.
Pro Tip
When getting a replacement quote, ask about insulation levels. The difference between an R-6 polystyrene door and an R-18 polyurethane door may only be $200 to $400 – but the energy savings and comfort improvement are significant, especially for attached garages in Utah. See our insulated garage door guide for details.
Curb Appeal, Home Value, and Resale
Your garage door accounts for up to 30% of your home’s front-facing exterior. When it looks tired, faded, or dated, the whole house looks that way – no matter how nice the landscaping or front door.
According to the Cost vs. Value Report, garage door replacement consistently delivers the highest return on investment of any home improvement project – often exceeding 100% return. For Utah homeowners in the Wasatch Front’s competitive housing market, that return can be even higher.
If you are planning to sell within the next one to three years, replacement almost always beats repair for a worn door. A new garage door in a modern style transforms curb appeal in a single day. Buyers making drive-by decisions notice immediately.
Even if you are not selling, curb appeal matters for daily satisfaction. You see your garage door every time you come home. If it is dented, faded, mismatched, or outdated, that daily impression adds up. Sometimes the best reason to replace is simply that you deserve a door you are proud of.
Utah-Specific Factors That Affect Your Decision
Utah’s unique climate and housing patterns add several factors to the repair-or-replace equation that national guides miss.
Temperature Extremes Stress Every Component
Utah sees annual temperature swings of 80 to 100 degrees – from below zero in Cache Valley winters to triple digits in St. George summers. This constant expansion and contraction fatigues metal, shortens spring lifespan, cracks weatherstripping, and accelerates wear on every moving part. Doors in Utah work harder than doors in moderate climates, which means they reach end-of-life sooner.
Road Salt and Corrosion
UDOT applies millions of tons of road salt annually along the Wasatch Front. Cars track that salt into garages, and it attacks the bottom panels, hardware, and tracks. If you are seeing rust and corrosion on the bottom section of your door, check whether the damage is cosmetic (surface rust) or structural (deep pitting, holes). Surface rust can be treated. Structural corrosion means replacement.
Builder-Grade Doors in New Construction
Utah’s construction boom from 2015 to 2022 produced tens of thousands of homes with the cheapest possible garage doors – single-layer 25-gauge steel with minimal hardware. These doors are now 5 to 10 years old and entering their failure window. If you are in Eagle Mountain, Saratoga Springs, Herriman, Daybreak, or any newer subdivision, your builder-grade door was designed to last about 10 years. A builder-grade upgrade with quality components is one of the best investments you can make.
Canyon Winds and Storm Exposure
Homes near canyon mouths (Provo Canyon, Weber Canyon, Parley’s Canyon, Spanish Fork Canyon) face wind events that stress garage doors far beyond normal use. If your door has been damaged by storm or hail damage, replacement with a wind-rated door may be smarter than repairing the same vulnerability. Our wind load ratings guide covers what to look for.
Selling in Utah’s Competitive Market
Utah’s housing market remains competitive, especially along the Wasatch Front. A worn garage door stands out in listing photos and during open houses. If you are preparing to sell, check our home inspection guide and best time to replace guide for strategic timing.
Utah Note
Utah homeowners face harsher conditions than national averages suggest. If a national guide says “replace at 25 years,” plan for 18 to 22 in Utah. Our climate is beautiful but brutal on garage doors. Advanced Door serves every county in Utah from Logan to St. George. Call (844) 971-3667 for a free assessment.
7 Questions to Ask Yourself Before Deciding
Use this checklist to organize your thinking. If you answer “yes” to three or more of these questions, replacement is likely the better investment.
- Is my door more than 15 years old? – Older doors have less remaining life to justify major repairs.
- Have I spent more than $500 on repairs in the past two years? – Cumulative repair costs signal systemic decline.
- Is my repair estimate more than 50% of a new door? – The 50% threshold is the clearest financial tipping point.
- Is my door uninsulated? – Replacement adds energy efficiency that repair cannot. See our insulated door guide.
- Am I planning to sell within three years? – New doors deliver the highest ROI of any exterior improvement.
- Does my door have visible structural damage? – Bent panels, warped sections, and frame damage are replacement triggers.
- Am I embarrassed by how my door looks? – Curb appeal matters for daily quality of life, not just resale.
Action Step
Still not sure? That is exactly what a free estimate is for. Advanced Door technicians evaluate your door, explain every option, and give you honest pricing for both repair and replacement. No pressure, no hidden fees, no obligation. Call (844) 971-3667 to schedule.
Common Mistakes Homeowners Make
After thousands of service calls across Utah, we see the same costly mistakes again and again. Avoid these:
1. Choosing Based on Price Alone
The cheapest option is not always the most economical. A $200 repair on a door that needs $800 in additional work next year costs more than a $2,000 replacement that lasts 25 years. Always ask for BOTH a repair estimate and a replacement quote so you can compare the true long-term cost. Our guide to why estimates differ explains what to look for.
2. Ignoring Warning Signs
A door that is getting louder, a door that is losing balance, or springs that show signs of failing – these are not inconveniences to live with. They are early warnings. Addressing them early gives you time to plan. Ignoring them leads to emergency calls and rushed decisions.
3. Repairing a Door You Plan to Replace Anyway
If replacement is in your 6-to-12-month plan, do not spend $500 on repairs now. Basic safety fixes are always worth doing, but cosmetic repairs on a door you are about to replace are wasted money.
4. Replacing When Repair Would Do
The opposite mistake is just as expensive. Some companies push replacement because the margins are higher. A broken spring on a 10-year-old door does not require a new door. If a company refuses to discuss repair options, get a second opinion.
5. DIY on High-Tension Components
Homeowners who attempt their own spring replacement or cable repairs risk serious injury. The money saved is not worth the danger. Routine maintenance like lubrication is safe DIY. Spring and cable work is not.
6. Not Getting Multiple Estimates
Always get at least two to three estimates for major work. Compare not just price but scope, warranty, parts quality, and timeline. Our guide to choosing a garage door company walks you through what to evaluate.
7. Forgetting About the Opener
If you are replacing your door, consider the opener at the same time. An older opener may not have the lifting power for a heavier insulated door, and bundling saves on labor. See our opener types comparison for current options.
Pro Tip
Watch out for garage door repair scams. Some companies quote an artificially high repair price to push you toward replacement. An honest company will present both options clearly and let you decide. If a technician pressures you or will not put the estimate in writing, walk away.
How Advanced Door Helps You Decide
At Advanced Door, we built our reputation on honest recommendations – not upselling. Here is what happens when you call us for a repair-or-replace assessment:
- Full inspection: Our technician inspects every component – springs, cables, rollers, hinges, panels, tracks, opener, weatherstripping, and hardware.
- Honest assessment: We tell you exactly what we find. If a $250 repair gives you another 10 years, that is what we recommend – even though a new door would be a bigger sale.
- Both options, clearly priced: When replacement is worth considering, we provide both a repair estimate and a replacement quote so you can compare side by side.
- No pressure, ever: We leave the decision with you. No same-day-only pricing, no scare tactics, no artificial urgency.
- Lifetime warranty: If you do choose repair, our lifetime warranty on parts and labor means you will not pay for the same repair twice. And our springs are rated for 2 to 3 times the cycle count of standard springs – meaning longer life and fewer future repairs.
We serve every community in Utah from Logan and Cache Valley to St. George and Washington County. Wherever you are, we will give you an honest answer.
Get a Free Estimate from Advanced Door
Not sure whether to repair or replace? We will give you an honest assessment with both options clearly priced.
Serving Ogden, Salt Lake City, Provo, Park City, Logan, and all of Utah
Call for a free estimate. No pressure, no hidden fees.
Current offers: $100 off any new door or 10% off any service call
(Offers cannot be combined)
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it cheaper to repair or replace a garage door?
Individual repairs are almost always cheaper upfront – most cost $100 to $500. But if you are facing multiple repairs or the door is near end-of-life, replacement often costs less over the long term. Use the 50% rule: if repairs exceed half the cost of a new door, replacement is usually the smarter financial move.
How long does a garage door last before it needs to be replaced?
A quality garage door lasts 20 to 30 years with proper maintenance. In Utah, expect 18 to 25 years due to extreme temperature swings, road salt, and UV exposure. Builder-grade doors installed in new construction may only last 10 to 15 years.
Can you replace just one panel of a garage door?
Yes, if the manufacturer still makes your panel style and the rest of the door is in good condition. Single-panel replacement typically costs $250 to $800. If multiple panels are damaged or the door is discontinued, full replacement may be more practical. See our panel replacement guide for details.
Should I replace my garage door before selling my house?
If your door is visibly worn, dented, faded, or outdated, yes. Garage door replacement delivers the highest ROI of any exterior improvement – often exceeding 100%. Even if the door still works, cosmetic condition matters enormously for curb appeal and buyer first impressions.
Is it worth replacing a 20-year-old garage door?
In most cases, yes. A 20-year-old door is past its design life, lacks modern insulation and safety features, and is likely showing wear on multiple components. Replacing it with a modern insulated door improves energy efficiency, security, and curb appeal while eliminating the growing repair cycle.
What is the average cost to replace a garage door in Utah?
Garage door replacement costs vary widely based on size, material, insulation level, and features. Call (844) 971-3667 for a free, no-obligation estimate specific to your door and your home. We provide clear, itemized pricing with no hidden fees.
Can I keep my old opener when I get a new garage door?
Sometimes. If your opener is under 10 years old, in good working condition, and has enough lifting power for the new door, it can often stay. Heavier insulated doors may require an opener upgrade. Our technician will evaluate compatibility during the estimate. See our opener installation guide for more.
How long does it take to install a new garage door?
Most residential garage door installations take 3 to 5 hours. If you are also replacing the opener or adding structural modifications, allow a full day. Our installation guide covers the complete process from start to finish.
