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Garage Door Repair Cost Guides

Honest, up-front pricing for every garage door service across NYC, Long Island, and New Jersey. Browse 500+ cost guides by service and city.

Garage door repair cost guides

Average Pricing by Service

ServiceTypical CostView Detail
Spring Repair (single)$180-$320View by city →
Spring Pair Replacement$280-$520View by city →
Opener Repair$150-$280View by city →
New Opener Installation$399-$680View by city →
Cable Repair (pair)$180-$320View by city →
Roller Replacement$140-$240View by city →
Off-Track Repair$220-$420View by city →
Tune-Up & Maintenance$129-$179View by city →
New Door Installation$1,200-$3,800View by city →
Panel Replacement$280-$580View by city →
Photo-Eye Replacement$79-$189View by city →

All pricing applies to residential standard doors. Up-front written quote before any work. Free diagnostic with repair.

Cost Guides by City

Detailed breakdowns for every service in 50+ NYC/LI/NJ cities. Pick your city to see local pricing for spring repair, opener replacement, cable repair, and more.

Brooklyn Queens Manhattan The Bronx Staten Island Jersey City Hoboken Newark Yonkers Bayonne Paterson Elizabeth Clifton Passaic Union City Secaucus Fort Lee Hackensack Paramus Edgewater

Plus 30 more cities — each has cost guides for 10 different services.

How Our Pricing Works

We give you a written quote up-front before any tool comes out of the truck. The price you approve is the price on the invoice. No mid-job scope creep. No hidden fees.

Diagnostic is free if you proceed with the repair. We service every neighborhood we list with the same fair rates — we don't price-discriminate by ZIP code. Mention promo code SAVE50 for $50 off any repair over $250.

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Inside Our Trucks — Why First-Visit Completion Hits 92%

National-franchise techs roll up to your house, do the diagnostic, then need to go order parts. We don't. Each of our service trucks is a rolling inventory built around the failure patterns we see across NYC, Long Island, and New Jersey:

  • Torsion springs in 8 IPPT calibrations covering 95% of residential door weights from 130 lb to 320 lb
  • Extension springs in 4 stretch ratings for older 7-foot doors
  • Lift cables in 3 gauges (1/8", 5/32", 3/16") rated for door weights up to 400 lb
  • Full sets of 13-ball-bearing nylon rollers (10 per door) for noise reduction upgrades
  • 10 most common LiftMaster, Chamberlain, Genie logic boards including pre-2018 generation
  • Photo-eye sensor pairs (LiftMaster, Chamberlain, Genie) including the green/red Sears-spec pairs for Craftsman openers
  • Remote transmitters: Security+ 2.0, Genie Intellicode, Chamberlain Smart, Wayne Dalton, Marantec, Linear Megacode
  • 16-foot rolls of EPDM bottom seal in 3 widths plus retainer track and end caps
  • Replacement hinges (#1 through #5), bottom brackets, top brackets, jamb hardware, drum cones
  • Winding bars in matched pairs, calibrated tension gauges, fish tape, multimeter, RF signal analyzer

That inventory is the reason 92% of jobs are completed on the first visit without ordering parts. The remaining 8% are usually obsolete pre-2010 units where a part has to be sourced from a regional distributor — we order same-day and return within 24-48 hours.

Garage Door Safety — UL 325 Standard and Why It Matters

Federal UL 325 is the safety standard governing residential garage door openers. It exists because in the early 1990s, multiple children died in garage door accidents — doors closing on small bodies, doors falling because of broken safety systems. Every modern opener is required to meet UL 325, and we test compliance on every single job:

  • Photo-eye reverse. The two photo-eye sensors near the floor must reverse the door if their beam is broken during closing. We test by walking through the beam path during a closing cycle. If it doesn't reverse instantly, we troubleshoot.
  • Contact reverse. The door must reverse on physical contact with an obstacle. We test by placing a 2x4 block flat on the ground in the door path. The door must reverse upward within 2 seconds of contact.
  • Force calibration. The opener's down-force setting controls how much resistance triggers a reverse. Set too high, the door can crush an obstacle before reversing. We calibrate per UL 325 using a force gauge.
  • Manual release reachable. The red emergency-release cord must be accessible from inside the garage and rated to allow manual disengagement during a power outage.

If your door fails any of these tests, we don't leave until it's fixed — even if you didn't call us about safety. This is non-negotiable. Most "won't close" calls actually trace to a photo-eye misalignment which is a safety system catching a real problem; bypassing it is illegal under UL 325.

When to DIY and When to Call a Pro

We tell every customer the truth: there are some things you can absolutely DIY, and some things you should never touch. Here's the honest breakdown:

SAFE TO DIY:

  • Replacing remote batteries (9V or AA, depending on model)
  • Cleaning and dusting photo-eye lenses
  • Tightening bolts on hinges and brackets if visible (use a 7/16" socket; do not over-tighten)
  • Lubricating tracks, hinges, and rollers with white lithium grease (NEVER WD-40 — it's a solvent and washes lubricant out)
  • Reprogramming HomeLink in your vehicle
  • Resetting the opener via wall-console reset button

NEVER DIY:

  • Spring replacement — the springs hold 800-1,500 lbs of stored energy and have killed DIYers
  • Cable replacement — same stored-energy issue, plus precise tension calibration
  • Track adjustment when off-track — door will fall
  • Opener motor or logic board work — voltage hazard plus calibration issues
  • Anything involving disconnecting the spring stack

If you've already started a DIY repair and the door is now in a worse state, we don't lecture — we just fix it. The "you started it" surcharge does not exist on our invoices.

Our Service Guarantees

When you book a job with OnPoint Pro Doors, you are protected by written guarantees on parts, labor, and arrival timing. We do not hide behind asterisks or fine print, and we do not change the price between the quote and the invoice.

  • 1-year parts and labor warranty on standard springs. If a torsion or extension spring we install fails inside 12 months, we replace it free including the call-out.
  • 3-year warranty on high-cycle springs (25,000-cycle rated). For homeowners who use the door 4+ times a day, we recommend high-cycle springs because the standard 10,000-cycle units fatigue faster. The high-cycle warranty matches.
  • 5-year motor warranty on LiftMaster openers. LiftMaster's factory motor warranty is the strongest in the industry — we honor the full term and handle any motor-related claim ourselves.
  • 1-year full-system warranty on new openers we install. Including motor, rail, trolley, sensors, remotes, wall console, and labor.
  • 90-day repair labor warranty. If the same issue recurs inside 90 days, we come back free, no diagnostic fee.
  • On-time arrival guarantee. If we miss our 2-hour scheduled window without advance notice, the diagnostic fee is waived.
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