Somewhere in your West Glendive home right now, there is a closet door that does not work properly. You know exactly which one it is. Maybe it is the bifold in the kids' room that jumps off the track every time someone opens it too fast. Maybe it is the sliding bypass in the master closet that overlaps wrong, leaving a gap on one side and jamming on the other. Maybe it is the mirrored door in the hallway that wobbles every time you touch it, and you have genuinely wondered whether one day it is going to shatter. Maybe it is the barn door that looked incredible when it was installed and has been a source of quiet frustration ever since.
Or maybe — and this is more common than you would think — it is the closet door that you removed from the track three months ago and leaned against the wall because you got tired of fighting with it. It is still there, leaning. The closet is still open. And you have accepted this as normal.
It is not normal. Your closet doors should open, close, and stay on their tracks without requiring special techniques, brute force, or resignation. They should look good, operate smoothly, and be invisible in the best sense — fixtures you use without thinking about because they work every single time.
We are the closet door repair team that West Glendive homeowners call to end the frustration. We fix every type of closet door — bifold, sliding bypass, barn, mirrored, French, pocket, accordion, and standard hinged. We diagnose the actual mechanical failure, replace the worn or broken components, and restore the smooth, reliable operation that makes a closet door disappear into the background of your daily life where it belongs.
Call (888) 611-9875 and tell us which closet door is driving you crazy. We will make it stop.
Closet doors hold a special place in the hierarchy of household frustrations. They break frequently, they are annoying when they do, and most homeowners assume fixing them is either too complicated or not worth the effort. All three of those assumptions are wrong.
Bifold closet doors are the most common closet door type in West Glendive homes, and they are also the most frequently broken. The combination of a lightweight door panel, a thin track channel, small pivot pins, and spring-loaded mechanisms creates a system that works well when everything is in adjustment and falls apart when anything shifts even slightly. A bifold that jumps off its track is not a permanent condition — it is a specific mechanical problem with a specific fix.
Sliding bypass doors — two panels that slide past each other on a double track — develop alignment problems as their rollers wear, tracks bend, and floor guides shift. The panels gap on one side, overlap unevenly, or stick at certain points in their travel. These are frustrating problems that make accessing your closet an exercise in patience, and they are all caused by identifiable, repairable component failures.
Mirrored closet doors add light and visual space to a room, but a mirrored door that wobbles on its track, scrapes against the frame, or looks like it could fall out of its rollers at any moment is more nerve-wracking than attractive. The weight of the mirror-backed panel puts extra stress on rollers and track systems, and the consequences of a failure are more severe because broken mirrored glass creates a significant safety hazard.
Barn-style sliding closet doors are a popular design choice in West Glendive homes, prized for their rustic or modern aesthetic. But the exposed rail and roller hardware that makes them visually appealing is also exposed to dust, misalignment, and wear. Barn doors can drift, stick, refuse to stay in position, and develop rail alignment problems that make them unreliable. The gap between the door and the wall — an inherent feature of barn door design — also creates challenges with light, sound, and privacy that may not have been anticipated during installation.
This is more common than any homeowner wants to admit. The door jumped off the track one too many times, or the rollers gave out completely, or the panel cracked and became a hazard. Rather than repair it, you removed it and leaned it against the wall, where it has remained — an ongoing reminder of a small problem you never got around to fixing. We fix these doors every day. Most repairs take less than an hour. The door goes back on, works properly, and you reclaim both the closet's finished appearance and the dignity of not having a door leaning against your bedroom wall.
Closet door mechanisms are under constant mechanical stress. Rollers carry panel weight while riding in tracks that collect dust and debris. Pivot pins bear rotational loads at small contact points. Springs maintain tension against components that shift with every use. None of these mechanisms improve with age or use — they all degrade. A closet door that jumps off its track today will jump off its track every day from now on, with increasing frequency, until the worn component is replaced. The problem does not resolve — it escalates.
Closet door hardware — the rollers, tracks, pivots, springs, and guides — is typically the lightest-duty hardware used on any door in the house. It is manufactured to a price point that prioritizes economy over durability, and it is expected to perform thousands of open-and-close cycles under the weight of a full-sized door panel. The hardware's design life is simply shorter than most homeowners expect, and in active households, the failure point arrives years sooner than anticipated.
Wood and MDF closet door panels absorb moisture from West Glendive's humid air and swell, changing the door's fit within the opening. A swollen bifold panel may not fold properly because the increased width creates binding. Sliding panels may drag on the track or rub against each other. Hinged closet doors may stick against the frame. MDF is particularly vulnerable to moisture — the edges swell, soften, and can crumble when exposed to persistent humidity, which is the default condition in most West Glendive homes.
As West Glendive homes settle, closet openings shift just as other door openings do. But because closet doors use lightweight hardware with minimal tolerance for misalignment, even small shifts in the opening geometry can cause significant operational problems. A bifold track that was installed level in a square opening may bind or gap when the opening shifts by as little as a quarter inch. Sliding bypass doors may ride unevenly, causing one panel to sit higher than the other.
Closet doors are subjected to rougher daily use than most other doors in the home. They are yanked open by kids in a hurry. They are pulled while arms are full of clothes. They are pushed shut while attention is elsewhere. They catch on items hanging too close to the opening. Laundry baskets are shoved through openings that are not quite wide enough. This accumulated rough handling stresses lightweight mechanisms that were not designed for aggressive use.
In many West Glendive homes — particularly those built by production builders — the closet door hardware that was installed during construction was the lowest-cost option available. Builder-grade tracks are thin and flex easily. Builder-grade rollers use minimal bearing surfaces. Builder-grade pivot hardware uses small-diameter pins in shallow sockets. This hardware functions adequately when new but reaches its failure point faster than homeowners expect. Replacing builder-grade components with better-quality hardware during a repair provides significantly longer service life.
Every closet door type. Every problem. Usually under an hour.
Call (888) 611-9875The most common closet door type in residential construction — two panels hinged together that fold against each other to open and ride on a track at the top of the opening.
A single pair of panels covering one side of the closet opening. The most basic and most common bifold configuration.
Wider closet openings use two or three pairs of bifold panels to cover the full width. These multi-pair systems require coordinated operation and alignment across all panel pairs.
Bifold panels come in various styles — full louver for ventilation, half louver with a solid panel below, and fully paneled for a traditional look. Each style has the same mechanical repair needs, and we service all of them.
Two or more panels mounted on parallel tracks that slide past each other horizontally. Bypass doors are common in bedrooms and hallways.
The most common configuration — two panels on a double track, each sliding to cover the opening the other reveals.
Wider closets may use three panels on a triple track, allowing any two panels to cover the opening while the third slides behind them.
Bypass doors with full-length mirror panels — heavier than standard panels and requiring more robust rollers and tracks.
Single or double panels mounted on an exposed rail system above the opening, sliding laterally to open and close.
One panel covering the full opening, sliding to one side to open.
Two panels meeting at the center of the opening, each sliding to opposite sides to open.
Two barn-style panels on parallel rails, sliding past each other — combining the barn door aesthetic with the bypass functionality needed for wider openings.
We repair mirrored closet doors in bypass, bifold, and hinged configurations. Mirror panel replacement, roller and track service, frame repair, and safety upgrades are all within our scope.
Paired hinged doors that swing open from the center of the closet opening. We repair hinges, alignment, latches, and panel damage for French and double-hinged closet installations.
Multi-panel folding doors that collapse to one side of the opening. We repair track mechanisms, panel connections, and alignment for accordion-style closet doors.
Closet doors that slide into a wall cavity. We access and repair pocket door tracks, rollers, and guides with minimal wall disruption.
Standard swing doors on traditional hinges. We address sticking, sagging, latch failure, and all other hinged door issues for closet applications.
The number one bifold complaint. The door's top guide roller pops out of the track channel, and the door hangs at an angle or falls into the opening. This is caused by worn track channels, misaligned guides, bent tracks, improperly positioned pivot brackets, or panels that have shifted out of alignment. We identify the specific cause and correct it — not just pop the door back into the track where it will jump again next week.
Bifold doors rotate on pivot pins at the top and bottom of the jamb-side panel. The bottom pivot pin sits in a floor-mounted bracket, and the top pivot sits in an adjustable bracket mounted in the track. When pins wear, brackets shift, or mounting hardware loosens, the door loses its anchor point and becomes unstable. We replace worn pins and brackets, resecure mounting hardware, and restore stable pivot operation.
The thin metal track at the top of the bifold opening can bend, dent, and warp from impact, panel weight, and repeated derailments. A damaged track cannot guide the door's roller reliably, leading to chronic jumping and binding. We straighten damaged tracks when possible and replace them when the damage is too severe for reliable repair.
The top pivot on many bifold doors uses a spring-loaded pin that can be retracted to remove the door and extends under spring tension to engage the track bracket. When the spring weakens, breaks, or the pin corrodes, the door loses its upper anchor. We repair and replace spring-loaded pivot mechanisms to restore secure engagement.
When bifold panels are properly aligned, they fold flat against each other and sit flush within the opening when closed. Misaligned panels gap at the center fold, hang unevenly, or do not close fully. We adjust pivot positions, track alignment, and panel height to achieve the clean, flush appearance that properly operating bifolds deliver.
Bifold panels — particularly hollow-core and louvered panels — can crack, split, or break at their hinge connections, pivot points, or louver sections. We repair cracked and split panels when the damage is repairable, and we supply replacement panels when the damage is too extensive.
Bypass door rollers carry the panel weight along the track and allow smooth lateral movement. When rollers wear out — flat spots, corroded bearings, broken axles — the door drags, sticks, and requires force to move. We replace bypass door rollers with quality units that restore effortless sliding.
The double or triple track system at the top of the bypass opening can become bent from impact, corroded from humidity, or obstructed by debris. We repair, clean, or replace tracks to restore smooth roller travel.
The floor guide at the base of the opening keeps bypass panels aligned and prevents them from swinging outward. When the guide is broken, missing, or improperly positioned, the panels swing freely and cannot align properly. We install or reposition floor guides for proper panel tracking.
Bypass panels should overlap evenly at the center and sit at the same height in the opening. When rollers wear unevenly or track positions shift, the panels ride at different heights and overlap incorrectly. We adjust roller heights and track positions to achieve uniform panel alignment.
Some bypass systems include anti-jump clips or track retention devices that prevent the roller from popping out of the track channel. If these devices are missing or worn, we install them to prevent derailment.
Barn door rails are mounted to the wall above the opening and must support the full weight of the door panel. When mounting hardware loosens — particularly if the rail was not anchored into wall studs during installation — the rail shifts, sags, or pulls away from the wall. We resecure rail mounting with proper anchoring into structural framing.
Barn door rollers and hangers ride on the exposed rail. When they wear, corrode, or develop flat spots, the door does not roll smoothly. We replace rollers and hangers with quality units matched to your rail profile.
Rail stops and end caps prevent the door from rolling off the end of the rail. When these are missing, loose, or improperly positioned, the door can overtravel and bang into the wall or, in extreme cases, roll off the rail entirely. We install and adjust stops for proper travel limits.
Barn doors require a floor guide to keep the bottom of the door from swinging outward from the wall. Without a properly positioned floor guide, the door swings freely, creates gaps, and cannot align with the opening. We install floor guides that keep the door tracking parallel to the wall.
Heavy barn door panels — solid wood, reclaimed lumber, or oversized panels — can exceed the load capacity of the rail and hardware they were installed with. When the hardware is undersized for the door weight, the rail sags, the rollers strain, and the system degrades prematurely. We upgrade hardware to appropriate load ratings when the existing components are inadequate for the door's weight.
Mirrored closet door panels are heavy and fragile. When cracked or broken, they present both a safety hazard and an unsightly appearance. We replace broken mirror panels with new tempered mirror glass that matches the existing installation dimensions.
For mirrored doors that wobble or feel insecure in their frames, we tighten mounting hardware, replace worn frame components, and can apply anti-shatter safety film that holds the mirror together if it breaks, preventing dangerous glass fragments from scattering.
The frames that hold mirrored panels and the rollers that carry them are under extra stress due to the weight of the mirror glass. We repair and upgrade frame hardware and rollers to handle the load reliably.
Older mirrored closet doors may use non-tempered glass that breaks into large, dangerous shards. If your mirrored doors use non-tempered glass, we recommend upgrading to tempered mirror panels or applying safety film as a protective measure — particularly in children's bedrooms.
French and hinged closet doors sag, stick, and misalign for the same reasons as other hinged doors — worn hinges, stripped screw holes, and frame shifting. We repair hinges, reinforce screw holes, and realign doors for proper closure.
We repair and replace the latch hardware — magnetic catches, ball catches, roller catches, and knob-and-strike sets — that keeps hinged closet doors closed.
Closet door panels can warp from humidity exposure, particularly in bathrooms and laundry areas. We address warped panels through adjustment, planing, or replacement depending on the severity.
Pocket closet doors that become stuck inside the wall cavity or derail from their track are among the most frustrating closet door problems. We access the track and roller system — typically through the door opening itself or through a small access point — and restore the door to its track.
The track system inside the wall cavity can develop bent sections, loose connections, and roller failures. We access and repair these concealed components with minimal wall disruption.
Floor guides and end bumpers that keep pocket doors aligned and prevent them from traveling too far into the wall are replaced when worn or missing.
Closet openings can shift out of square from settling, have damaged jamb surfaces from hardware mounting, or develop trim and casing problems. We repair closet door openings to provide the square, stable framework that door hardware depends on.
We repair and replace all closet door hardware — handles, pulls, knobs, finger cups, and flush pulls — matching existing finishes or upgrading to new styles.
New flooring changes the clearance between closet doors and the floor. We trim closet door panels to the proper height for the new flooring surface, ensuring smooth operation without dragging.
Bifold, bypass, barn, mirrored — fast repairs, quality parts.
Call (888) 611-9875Your master closet is used multiple times daily and should operate smoothly for the morning and evening routines. We repair master closet doors with the priority they deserve.
Kids are hard on closet doors. We repair the damage and upgrade hardware to withstand the realities of daily use by children and teenagers.
Guest room closets should be presentable and functional for visitors. We repair guest room closet doors to maintain a welcoming, finished appearance.
Hallway and linen closet doors are among the most frequently used closet doors in the home. We address the wear that high-frequency use produces.
Laundry closet doors — often bifold or bypass — must operate reliably while enduring elevated humidity from washer and dryer operation. We address moisture-related issues specific to laundry closet environments.
Pantry closet doors see heavy daily traffic and must operate smoothly in tight kitchen spaces. We repair pantry doors with attention to clearance and high-frequency use.
Office closets that conceal supplies, equipment, or storage require functioning doors for a professional work-from-home environment. We keep these doors operational and presentable.
We examine the door, the track or hinge system, the frame opening, and all hardware to identify the specific component failure causing the problem. Many closet door issues are caused by a single worn or misaligned component, and finding that component is the key to a lasting repair.
Closet door repairs are among the most affordable door repairs we perform. Most repairs involve replacing small, inexpensive hardware components — rollers, pivots, guides, track sections — with labor measured in minutes to an hour. We provide exact pricing after assessment, and most homeowners are pleasantly surprised at how little it costs to fix a problem they have been living with for months.
We replace worn components with quality parts, and when appropriate, we upgrade from builder-grade hardware to better-quality alternatives that will last longer under daily use. We adjust every component for proper alignment, smooth operation, and secure retention in the track.
After repair, we cycle every door multiple times, testing operation, alignment, track retention, and closure. We adjust roller heights, pivot positions, guide locations, and track alignment until every panel operates smoothly and sits properly in the opening.
We clean up all debris from the repair and invite you to operate the doors yourself. Your satisfaction with the results is our standard for completion.
Most closet door repairs completed in under an hour.
Call (888) 611-9875The vast majority of closet door problems are caused by worn hardware — rollers, pivots, tracks, guides — not by failures of the door panels themselves. Replacing a $5 roller or a $10 pivot pin restores full function to a door that would cost $100 to $300 to replace. Repair is the right answer for almost every closet door problem.
Replacement is warranted when door panels are severely damaged, warped beyond adjustment, or water-damaged to the point of structural failure. It may also make sense when the homeowner wants to change the door style entirely — converting from bifold to barn, from bypass to French, or from standard doors to a walk-in opening with no doors at all.
If you are tired of a door style that does not suit your taste or your usage pattern, we can convert your closet opening from one door type to another. Bifold-to-barn conversions are among the most popular upgrades in West Glendive homes right now.
Closet door repair is one of the most affordable home improvements available. Most repairs cost less than a family dinner out. The return on that small investment — doors that work smoothly, rooms that look finished, frustrations that disappear — is disproportionately large.
Cost depends on the door type, the specific components needing replacement, the number of doors being repaired, and whether frame work is needed. Most closet door repairs involve inexpensive hardware components with modest labor requirements.
Single bifold door repair — including pivot, track, and alignment work — typically ranges from $75 to $200. Sliding bypass roller and track repair runs $75 to $200 per opening. Barn door roller and rail service ranges from $100 to $250. Mirrored door roller and track repair runs $100 to $250. Mirror panel replacement is $150 to $400 depending on size. Pocket door service ranges from $100 to $300. Hardware, handle, and pull replacement is typically $50 to $150. We provide exact pricing after assessment.
| Repair Type | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Bifold Door Repair | $75 — $200 |
| Bypass Roller & Track | $75 — $200 |
| Barn Door Rail & Roller | $100 — $250 |
| Mirrored Door Service | $100 — $250 |
| Mirror Panel Replacement | $150 — $400 |
| Pocket Door Service | $100 — $300 |
| Hardware & Pulls | $50 — $150 |
If you have multiple closet doors that need repair — and most West Glendive homes have at least two or three — addressing them all in a single service visit is the most cost-effective approach. We offer competitive pricing for multi-door repairs that makes fixing every problem closet door in your home an easy decision.
When a closet door panel needs to be replaced rather than repaired, standard bifold panels range from $30 to $100 per panel. Bypass panels run $50 to $150 each. Mirrored panels range from $100 to $300. Barn door panels vary widely based on material and style — from $150 to $500 or more. Installation labor is additional. Complete opening conversions — changing from one door type to another — are priced individually based on scope.
Closet door repair is a core part of our business, not a sideline service we stumble through. Our technicians understand the specific mechanisms, hardware, and failure modes of every closet door type, and they repair them with the focused expertise these often-neglected doors deserve.
We carry replacement parts for all common closet door systems — rollers, pivots, tracks, guides, springs, brackets, floor guides, and hardware — enabling same-visit repair for the vast majority of closet door problems.
Most closet door repairs are completed in under an hour. We work cleanly in your bedrooms and hallways, protect your flooring, and leave the area spotless.
We repair the components that are actually causing the problem. We do not replace hardware that is still functional, and we do not recommend replacing doors that can be effectively repaired.
We are a local West Glendive business. Our customers are our neighbors, and our reputation depends on every closet door we fix. We take that responsibility seriously.
Multi-door discounts. Fast repairs. Quality parts.
Call (888) 611-9875We provide closet door repair throughout every neighborhood in West Glendive — from newer construction with builder-grade hardware that is ready for an upgrade to older homes with vintage track systems that need specialized attention.
Our service area extends to the surrounding communities throughout the greater West Glendive metro. Call (888) 611-9875 to confirm coverage and schedule your closet door repair.
Caused by worn track channels, misaligned guides, bent tracks, shifted pivot brackets, or panel misalignment. A specific mechanical fix stops it permanently — not just popping it back in.
Most repairs range from $75-$250. Bifold repair: $75-$200. Bypass roller/track: $75-$200. Barn door service: $100-$250. Mirror panel replacement: $150-$400. Most repairs are cheaper than you think.
Yes. We replace broken mirror panels, repair rollers and tracks, tighten frames, and can apply anti-shatter safety film. We also upgrade non-tempered glass to tempered for safety.
Repair is right for most problems — replacing a worn roller or pivot pin costs far less than a new door. Replace when panels are severely damaged, warped, or you want a style change.
Yes. We repair rail mounting, rollers, stops, floor guides, and hardware. We also upgrade undersized hardware when the rail system can't handle the door's weight.
Yes. We rehang removed doors, replace failed components, and restore smooth operation — usually in under an hour.
Yes. Fixing all problem closet doors in a single visit is the most cost-effective approach. We offer competitive pricing for multi-door repairs.
Yes. We convert between door types — bifold to barn, bypass to French, and other configurations. Bifold-to-barn is one of the most popular upgrades right now.
You have been working around broken closet doors for long enough. The bifold that derails. The bypass that sticks. The barn door that drifts. The mirrored door that wobbles. The door leaning against the wall. All of them — fixed, in a single visit, for less than you think.
Call (888) 611-9875 and let us know how many closet doors need attention. We will schedule a convenient time, show up with the parts, fix every problem door in your house, and leave you wondering why you waited so long.
Life is too short to fight with your closet doors. Let us end that fight today.