You close your bedroom door at night and it bounces back open because the latch does not reach the strike plate anymore. The bathroom door scrapes across the tile every time you push it. The closet bifold has jumped off its track again and hangs at an angle. The pantry door sticks so badly in the summer that your teenager just stopped closing it. Someone put a doorknob-sized hole through the guest room door. And the pocket door in the hallway has been stuck inside the wall for six months because nobody wants to deal with it.
These are the small, persistent frustrations that most Paulden homeowners learn to live with — working around doors instead of fixing them, compensating with an extra shove or a resigned shrug. But you should not have to fight the doors inside your own home. Every interior door should open smoothly, close fully, latch securely, and operate with the effortless reliability that you notice only when it is missing.
We are the interior door repair team that Paulden homeowners call to make every door in the house work the way it should. We fix sticking doors, sagging doors, doors that will not latch, doors that will not close, damaged doors, pocket doors, bifold doors, French doors, and every other interior door problem you can name. We diagnose the actual cause — not just the symptom — and deliver precise, lasting repairs that restore proper function to every door we touch.
If you have interior doors that are not working right, the fix is simpler and more affordable than you probably think. Call (888) 611-9875 and tell us what your doors are doing. We will take care of the rest.
Interior doors are the most-used and least-maintained fixtures in any home. You interact with them dozens of times a day without thinking about them — until they stop working properly. Understanding why they fail and why timely repair matters helps you appreciate the value of getting them fixed.
Interior doors fail for predictable, understandable reasons. Buildings settle over time, shifting door frames out of square and causing doors to bind against jambs they once cleared easily. Humidity causes wood components to swell and contract, changing the door's fit within the frame from season to season and year to year. Hinges loosen from thousands of open-and-close cycles, allowing doors to sag and drag. Latch mechanisms wear out. Hardware loosens. And physical damage — holes, cracks, dents, delamination — accumulates from daily life, kids, pets, and the occasional accident.
None of these causes are mysterious or unusual. They are the natural consequences of a mechanical object operating in a dynamic environment for years without maintenance. And all of them are fixable.
A single door that does not work properly might seem like a minor inconvenience. But the cumulative effect of multiple problem doors throughout a home is significant. You adjust your behavior around them — slamming harder, lifting while pushing, avoiding certain doors, leaving doors open that should be closed. These compensations become habits, and the habits become invisible. You stop noticing the extra effort, the noise, the lack of privacy, and the drafts. It is not until every door is repaired and working smoothly that homeowners realize just how much the broken doors were affecting their daily experience.
Paulden's climate is uniquely punishing to interior doors. High humidity causes wood doors and frames to absorb moisture and swell, creating sticking and binding that worsens during the most humid months. The constant cycling between air-conditioned interiors and humid outdoor conditions creates expansion and contraction stress that loosens hardware and shifts alignments. Moisture-prone rooms — bathrooms, kitchens, laundry rooms — expose doors and frames to even higher humidity levels than the rest of the home. And Paulden's soil conditions contribute to foundation settling that shifts door frames throughout the house over time. These factors combine to make interior door problems more frequent and more persistent in Paulden than in many other regions.
The vast majority of interior door problems are caused by specific, fixable issues — a loose hinge, a misaligned strike plate, humidity swelling, a stripped screw hole, or a damaged section of the door surface. These problems do not require a new door — they require a skilled repair that addresses the root cause and restores proper function. Replacement is only warranted when the door is structurally compromised beyond practical repair, when the door style is being changed for aesthetic reasons, or when damage is so extensive that repair costs approach replacement costs. In most cases, we can make your existing door work perfectly for a fraction of the cost of a new one.
Wood is hygroscopic — it absorbs and releases moisture in response to the humidity of the surrounding air. In Paulden's persistently humid climate, wood doors and frames absorb atmospheric moisture and expand. This expansion changes the clearances between the door and the frame, causing the door to rub, stick, or bind against the jamb, header, or threshold. The problem is often seasonal — worst during the most humid months and somewhat better during drier periods — but in Paulden, where humidity is elevated year-round, many doors never fully return to their original fit.
Over years of repeated swelling and partial contraction, the door can warp permanently — twisting, bowing, or cupping in ways that create chronic misalignment with the frame. The frame itself is also subject to moisture-driven changes, compounding the problem. Professional repair addresses the current fit through planing, shimming, and adjustment, and can include moisture sealing to slow future absorption.
Rooms that generate significant moisture — bathrooms during showers, kitchens during cooking, laundry rooms during dryer operation — expose their doors and frames to humidity levels that exceed even Paulden's already elevated ambient. Bathroom doors are particularly vulnerable because they are subjected to direct steam exposure during showers, creating conditions where the door absorbs moisture rapidly and swells noticeably within a single use. Over time, this repeated moisture exposure can cause permanent warping, finish deterioration, and frame damage.
As homes settle — a natural process influenced by soil conditions, water table fluctuations, and time — the structural framing shifts, and door frames shift with it. A frame that was perfectly square when the home was built can become noticeably out of square after years of settling, creating binding at one corner of the door and a gap at the opposite corner. Foundation settling is common in Paulden due to the area's soil characteristics, and it is one of the most frequent underlying causes of interior door problems that are not related to humidity.
The constant cycling between Paulden's air-conditioned interiors and humid outdoor conditions creates repeated thermal and moisture stress on door materials. Every time a door transitions between conditioned and unconditioned environments — or simply experiences the slight fluctuations that occur as the AC cycles on and off — the materials expand and contract slightly. Over thousands of cycles, this stress loosens screws, shifts hinge positions, fatigues adhesive bonds in engineered materials, and contributes to the gradual misalignment that causes operational problems.
Every interior door problem diagnosed and repaired. One call.
Call (888) 611-9875The most common interior door complaint — a door that requires more force than it should to operate, or one that simply refuses to close fully.
When a door sticks primarily during humid months and operates better during drier periods, humidity swelling is the cause. We address this by carefully planing the door edge to restore proper clearance, adjusting the hinge positions if the frame has swelled, and in some cases, applying sealant to exposed wood edges to slow moisture absorption. The goal is a door that operates smoothly year-round, regardless of what Paulden's humidity is doing on any given day.
When a door sags — dropping at the latch side and rising at the hinge side — the issue is almost always in the hinges. Hinge screws loosen over time, allowing the hinge leaves to shift and the door to settle downward. The sagging door drags on the floor at the bottom corner and binds against the head jamb at the top. We tighten, reposition, or replace hinges and address stripped screw holes to lift the door back into proper alignment.
When a door that used to work fine gradually becomes difficult to close without any obvious change in the door itself, the frame has likely shifted due to foundation settling. The frame is no longer square, and the door — which is still the same shape it always was — no longer fits the opening the way it did. We adjust the door to the frame's current geometry through a combination of hinge repositioning, strike plate adjustment, and selective planing.
If the door closes but the latch does not catch — the door bounces back open or requires lifting and pushing to engage the latch — the strike plate and the latch are no longer aligned. This misalignment can be caused by door sagging, frame shifting, or wear in the latch mechanism. We relocate the strike plate, adjust the latch, or modify the mortise to restore positive, effortless latching.
A door that swings open on its own or fails to stay closed when latched has a specific mechanical cause that can be identified and corrected.
The latch bolt — the spring-loaded piece that extends from the door edge and catches in the strike plate — can wear down, lose spring tension, or become gummed up with paint and debris to the point where it no longer extends far enough to engage the strike plate reliably. We clean, adjust, or replace latch mechanisms to restore positive engagement.
When the latch reaches but misses the strike plate opening — passing above, below, or to the side — the strike plate needs to be moved to align with the latch's current position. This is a common repair when sagging or settling has changed the relationship between the door and the frame. We relocate the strike plate, deepen or modify the mortise, and fill the old screw holes for a clean, solid installation.
A warped door may contact the frame at some points and gap at others, preventing the latch from engaging because the door cannot sit flat against the stop. Minor warping can be addressed through hinge adjustment and weatherstrip modification. Moderate warping may require planing the high spots. Severe warping — where the door has twisted or bowed significantly — may require replacement if the door cannot be brought back into a functional relationship with the frame.
Hinges are the hardest-working hardware on any door. They bear the full weight of the door through every opening and closing cycle, and over years of use, the hinge pins wear, the knuckles develop play, and the screws loosen. A door with worn hinges sags progressively, dragging on the floor and binding against the frame. Tightening the screws is sometimes sufficient. In many cases, replacing the hinges — or upgrading to heavier-duty hinges — provides a more lasting solution.
When hinge screws have been tightened and retightened over the years, the screw holes in the frame can become stripped — the wood surrounding the hole is compressed and broken to the point where the screw can no longer grip. The hinge appears tight but slowly works loose under the door's weight, and the sagging returns within days or weeks. We repair stripped screw holes using proven techniques — dowel inserts, longer screws that reach the structural framing, or epoxy-reinforced anchor points — that provide a solid, lasting foundation for the hinge screws.
Some doors — particularly solid wood doors, glass-paneled French doors, and heavy fire-rated doors — are heavier than the hinges they were hung on can comfortably support long-term. Standard residential hinges may be adequate initially but gradually fail under the sustained load. We upgrade hinges to heavy-duty versions with thicker gauge metal and larger knuckles when the door's weight demands it.
Physical damage to interior doors is common in homes with active families, kids, and pets. The good news is that most cosmetic and structural damage can be repaired without replacing the entire door.
Hollow-core doors — the lightweight, economical doors used in most Paulden homes for bedrooms, closets, and utility spaces — are vulnerable to puncture damage. A doorknob impact, an accidental kick, moving furniture, or a moment of frustration can punch a hole through the thin veneer skin. We repair hollow-core door holes using a process that fills and reinforces the damaged area, rebuilds the surface, and finishes it to blend with the surrounding door. The result is a solid, smooth repair that is far less noticeable than the hole it replaced — and far less expensive than a new door.
Solid wood doors can develop cracks and splits from drying, impact, or stress — particularly along the grain or at panel joints. We repair cracks and splits using wood glue, clamps, and reinforcement techniques that restore structural integrity and prevent the crack from reopening. Surface finishing blends the repair with the surrounding wood.
Doors with wood veneer surfaces can develop delamination — the veneer peeling away from the substrate — due to moisture exposure, adhesive failure, or impact damage. We reattach delaminated veneer, replace damaged sections, and restore the door's appearance.
MDF (medium-density fiberboard) doors are common in Paulden homes and are particularly susceptible to moisture damage — swelling, softening, and crumbling when exposed to water. We repair damaged MDF surfaces and edges, and we can recommend moisture-resistant treatments for MDF doors in humidity-prone locations.
When physical damage is too extensive for practical repair — large holes in critical structural areas, severe splitting, or moisture damage that has compromised the door's core — replacement is the better option. We supply and install replacement interior doors that match your home's existing style, dimensions, and hardware.
The frame is what your door depends on for proper operation, and frame problems are behind many door malfunctions.
Interior door frames can crack from impact, split from settling stress, and in moisture-exposed locations like bathrooms, develop rot that weakens the frame structurally. We repair cracked and split frames using reinforcement techniques that restore strength, and we replace rotted frame sections with new material that matches the original.
When settling has shifted a frame out of square, we can realign it by adjusting the shims behind the jambs — repositioning them to bring the frame back to a geometry that allows the door to operate properly. This is a skilled adjustment that requires understanding the frame's relationship to the surrounding structure and the door's required clearances.
The casing and trim around your door frame contribute to both the appearance and the structural stability of the installation. Damaged, loose, or missing casing is replaced or reattached to complete the repair and restore the finished appearance of the doorway.
We repair, adjust, and replace hinges of every type — standard butt hinges, spring hinges, concealed hinges, and specialty hinges. We carry a range of sizes and finishes to match your existing hardware or upgrade to a more suitable hinge for your door's weight and usage.
Interior doors use various hardware configurations depending on their function — passage sets (no lock) for hallways and living areas, privacy sets (push-button or turn lock) for bedrooms and bathrooms, and dummy sets (non-functioning handles) for closets and decorative applications. We repair, adjust, and replace all types of interior door hardware, matching the finish and function of your existing installation.
One of the most common requests we receive is trimming doors that no longer clear new flooring. When you install new tile, hardwood, laminate, or thick carpet, the floor height increases, and doors that previously cleared the old floor now drag on the new surface. We remove the door, trim the bottom edge to the appropriate height for the new flooring, refinish the cut edge to prevent moisture absorption, and rehang the door with proper clearance.
The most common interior door in Paulden homes — lightweight, affordable, and found in bedrooms, closets, and utility spaces. We repair holes, sticking, sagging, latch failures, and all other common hollow-core door problems.
Heavier and more durable than hollow-core, solid-core doors are used for their sound reduction, fire resistance, and quality feel. Their added weight puts more stress on hinges, which is the most common repair need.
Found in higher-end homes and older Paulden properties, solid wood doors are beautiful but particularly susceptible to humidity-driven swelling, warping, and cracking. We repair all solid wood door issues with techniques appropriate to the material.
Modern engineered doors made from medium-density fiberboard or composite materials. They resist warping better than solid wood but are vulnerable to moisture damage. We repair surface damage, edge swelling, and hardware failures in MDF and composite doors.
Doors that slide into a cavity inside the wall. Pocket doors develop track problems, roller failures, guide wear, and alignment issues that cause them to stick, derail, or become trapped inside the wall. We access and repair pocket door mechanisms without unnecessary wall demolition.
Barn-style sliding doors on exposed rail hardware have become popular in Paulden homes. They can develop rail alignment issues, roller problems, guide failures, and clearance problems. We repair and adjust barn door hardware for smooth, reliable operation.
Bifold doors fold in half on a track and pivot system. They are notorious for jumping off their tracks, binding, sagging, and refusing to fold properly. The pivot pins, track channels, guides, and spring mechanisms are all serviceable components that we repair regularly.
Interior French doors and double-door installations require precise alignment between two panels, coordination of latch hardware, and consistent operation of both doors. When one panel sags, shifts, or warps, the entire system is affected. We repair French door alignments, hardware, and coordination with the precision these installations require.
Louvered doors — with horizontal slats — and traditional paneled doors can develop specific problems including broken louvers, loose panels, split stiles and rails, and damaged finish. We repair these distinctive door styles with attention to their unique construction.
Pantry doors, laundry room doors, and utility closet doors are high-use, low-attention doors that accumulate problems over time. We address sticking, hardware failure, damage, and the specific challenges of doors in tight kitchen layouts.
Pocket, bifold, French, barn, hollow-core — we fix them all.
Call (888) 611-9875Bedroom doors provide privacy, noise reduction, and a sense of personal space. A bedroom door that does not latch, does not close quietly, or lets sound pass freely undermines the room's fundamental purpose. We repair bedroom doors to close fully, latch securely, and operate quietly.
Bathroom doors face the harshest conditions of any interior door — direct steam exposure, high humidity, temperature fluctuations, and frequent use. They also require reliable privacy locks. We address humidity swelling, lock failures, moisture damage, and all other bathroom-specific door problems, and we can recommend moisture-resistant treatments that extend the life of bathroom doors in Paulden's climate.
Closet doors — whether bifold, sliding bypass, or hinged — are among the most frequently problematic doors in any home. Their mechanical systems are lightweight and prone to wear, and they receive rough daily use. We repair all closet door types, addressing track problems, roller failures, pivot issues, and alignment concerns.
Kitchen and pantry doors operate in spaces where clearance is tight, use is frequent, and humidity from cooking adds environmental stress. We address sticking, swelling, hardware wear, and the specific challenges of doors in tight kitchen layouts.
With remote work common among Paulden homeowners, the home office door has become a critical functional element — it needs to close fully, latch securely, and provide meaningful sound isolation. We repair home office doors with attention to the closure and sealing quality that productive work-from-home life requires.
Laundry room doors are exposed to elevated moisture and heat from washer and dryer operation. They are also sometimes modified to include ventilation louvers or pet access openings. We repair moisture damage, swelling, hardware failure, and modified door issues in laundry room applications.
We begin every repair by examining the door, the frame, the hinges, the hardware, and the relationship between all of them. We check the frame for square. We look for hinge wear, stripped screw holes, and settlement patterns. We test latch engagement and operation. We identify the root cause of the problem so that our repair addresses it permanently rather than treating a symptom that will recur.
After diagnosis, we explain what we found, what we recommend, and what it will cost. If there are options — a simple adjustment versus a more comprehensive repair, standard hardware versus an upgrade — we present them clearly. You approve the scope and price before any work begins.
Interior door repair is a craft that requires precision. Planing a door edge to restore clearance requires removing just enough material — too much creates a gap. Shimming a frame requires adjusting in small increments to achieve level and plumb. Relocating a strike plate requires precise mortise work. We execute these adjustments with the care and precision they require, because the difference between a good repair and a mediocre one is measured in fractions of an inch.
After structural and alignment repairs are complete, we install or reinstall all hardware — hinges, locksets, strike plates, and any specialty hardware — and test the door's operation thoroughly. We cycle the door multiple times, verify latch engagement, check clearances at all edges, and confirm smooth, effortless operation.
We clean up all debris from the repair — wood shavings, dust, packaging, old hardware — and leave your home in the same condition we found it. We invite you to operate the door yourself and confirm that you are satisfied with the results before we consider the job complete.
Precise repairs that make every door in your home work perfectly.
Call (888) 611-9875The cost of interior door repair depends on the type and complexity of the problem, the door type and material, the hardware involved, and whether frame work is needed in addition to the door itself. Simple adjustments — tightening hinges, relocating a strike plate, adjusting a latch — are at the lower end. More involved work — planing and refitting a swollen door, repairing stripped hinge holes, fixing frame alignment — falls in the middle range. Damage repair, pocket door work, and multiple-door projects are at the higher end.
Single interior door repairs in Paulden typically range from $75 to $250, depending on the scope. Simple hinge and latch adjustments are at the lower end. Door planing, strike plate relocation, and moderate hardware replacement fall in the $100 to $200 range. Hollow-core hole repair, frame repairs, pocket door service, and comprehensive multi-issue repairs may range from $150 to $350. Multiple-door projects benefit from per-door pricing efficiencies. We provide exact pricing after assessment, before work begins.
| Repair Type | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Hinge & Latch Adjustments | $75 — $150 |
| Door Planing & Refitting | $100 — $200 |
| Strike Plate Relocation | $100 — $200 |
| Hollow-Core Hole Repair | $150 — $300 |
| Frame Repair & Realignment | $150 — $350 |
| Pocket Door Service | $150 — $350 |
| Door Replacement (incl. install) | $200 — $500 |
Replacement is more cost-effective when the door is severely warped beyond adjustment, when moisture damage has compromised the core structure, when physical damage is too extensive for practical repair, or when the homeowner wants to change the door style. A standard interior door replacement, including the door, hardware, and installation, typically ranges from $200 to $500 depending on door type and quality.
Interior door repair is one of the most underappreciated home improvements available. For a modest investment, you can transform the daily experience of moving through your home — doors that glide open, close with a satisfying click, latch on the first try, and stay put when closed. The cumulative effect on your home's livability, noise control, privacy, and overall feel is disproportionately large compared to the cost. It is one of the best returns on investment in home maintenance.
Interior door repair requires a specific understanding of how doors, frames, hinges, and hardware interact — and how Paulden's climate affects all of them. We bring this focused expertise to every repair, delivering results that a general handyman's generalized approach cannot match.
We repair every type of interior door found in Paulden homes — hollow-core, solid-core, solid wood, MDF, pocket, bifold, barn, French, louvered, and paneled. We address every problem — sticking, sagging, binding, latching, damage, hardware failure, and frame issues. No matter what your door is doing or not doing, we can fix it.
Interior door repair happens inside your home, in your bedrooms, your bathrooms, your hallways. We work carefully and cleanly, protecting your flooring and furnishings, and we clean up completely when the job is done.
We charge fair prices for quality work, and we never recommend replacing a door that can be repaired effectively. Our goal is to solve your problem at the lowest cost that provides a lasting result.
We are a local Paulden business. Our reputation is built one repaired door at a time, in homes throughout this community. We protect that reputation by treating every customer and every door with the same care and professionalism.
Honest diagnosis. Precise repairs. Doors that work the way they should.
Call (888) 611-9875We provide interior door repair throughout every neighborhood in Paulden — from historic homes with original solid wood doors to new developments with modern hollow-core installations.
Our service area extends to the surrounding communities throughout the greater Paulden metro. Call (888) 611-9875 to confirm coverage and schedule your interior door repair.
Common causes include humidity swelling of wood, hinge sagging, foundation settling shifting the frame out of square, and paint buildup. The cause determines the fix — planing, hinge adjustment, shimming, or a combination.
Single door repairs typically range from $75-$250. Simple hinge/latch adjustments are at the lower end. Planing, frame repairs, pocket door service, and multi-issue repairs range from $150-$350.
Yes. We fill and reinforce the damaged area, rebuild the surface, and finish it to blend with the surrounding door — far less expensive than replacement.
The strike plate and latch are no longer aligned, usually from door sagging or frame settling. Relocating the strike plate and adjusting the latch restores positive engagement.
Yes. We access and repair pocket door track, rollers, and guides without unnecessary wall demolition, restoring smooth sliding operation.
Repair is almost always the right first answer. Replacement is warranted only when the door is structurally compromised beyond repair, damage is too extensive, or you want a style change.
Yes. We remove the door, trim the bottom for proper clearance over new flooring, refinish the cut edge, and rehang with smooth operation.
Yes — hollow-core, solid-core, solid wood, MDF, pocket, bifold, barn, French, louvered, and paneled doors. Every type, every problem, every room.
You walk through the doors inside your home dozens of times every day. Every sticking door, every door that bounces back open, every door that requires a shove and a lift is a small friction point that chips away at the comfort and ease of your daily life. You have adapted to these problems — but you should not have to.
Call (888) 611-9875 and let us restore every interior door in your home to smooth, effortless operation. The repairs are faster and more affordable than you expect, and the difference in how your home feels is something you will notice every single day.
Your doors should work for you, not against you. We make that happen.