There is probably no door in your Callender home that gets used more and maintained less than your sliding glass door. It is your connection to the patio, the backyard, the pool, the lanai — the threshold between your indoor life and your outdoor living space. Your family crosses through it dozens of times a day. The dog scratches at it. The kids slam it. The morning coffee routine depends on it. And somewhere along the way, it stopped working the way it should.
Maybe it started gradually — a little more resistance when you pushed it, a slight grinding sound you learned to ignore. Maybe one morning you noticed the draft, or the fog between the panes, or the lock that jiggles but does not actually catch. Maybe you are now using two hands and your shoulder to muscle it open, or you have simply stopped using it altogether because the effort is not worth it.
Here is what you need to know: your sliding glass door is not supposed to work this way, and fixing it is far simpler and less expensive than most Callender homeowners assume. In most cases, the problem is a specific, identifiable component — worn rollers, a damaged track, a failed seal, a broken lock — that can be repaired or replaced without tearing out the entire door. The transformation from a door that fights you to a door that glides effortlessly is often just a single service visit away.
We are the sliding glass door repair specialists that Callender homeowners call first. We work exclusively on sliding doors — we know every brand, every configuration, every failure mode, and every solution. When you call (888) 611-9875, you are connecting with a team that will diagnose the real problem, explain your options honestly, and restore your sliding door to the smooth, secure, effortless operation you remember. One visit. One fix. A door that glides like new.
Sliding glass doors rarely fail all at once. They deteriorate gradually, and the symptoms they produce along the way are your early warning system. Recognizing what your door is telling you — and acting on it before the problem compounds — saves you money, frustration, and the inconvenience of a door that eventually stops working altogether.
If your sliding glass door has become progressively harder to open and close, the most likely culprit is the roller system. Rollers are the small wheeled assemblies mounted inside the bottom of the door panel that ride along the track, allowing the heavy glass panel to move smoothly with minimal effort. Over time, rollers wear out — bearings fail, wheels flatten, housings crack, and debris accumulates around the assemblies. As the rollers degrade, the door panel settles lower in the frame, increasing friction against the track and the frame. What used to be a one-finger push becomes a two-handed shove, and eventually the door binds so severely that it barely moves at all. The good news is that roller replacement is one of our most common and most transformative repairs — the difference between old rollers and new ones is dramatic and immediate.
If you can feel air movement near your sliding glass door — particularly along the bottom, the top, or the meeting point where the two panels overlap — your weatherstripping and seals have deteriorated. In Callender's climate, where air conditioning runs for most of the year, drafty seals mean your conditioned air is escaping to the outside and hot, humid outside air is infiltrating your home. This constant air exchange forces your HVAC system to work harder, raising your energy bills month after month. The draft may seem minor, but the cumulative energy loss over a year can be substantial. Replacing the weatherstripping and seals restores the door's thermal barrier and can produce noticeable savings on your next utility bill.
A sliding glass door lock that does not engage fully, that can be jiggled open, or that requires lifting and pushing the door to align before the latch will catch is a security failure that demands attention. Sliding glass doors are a common entry point for burglars, and a lock that does not function properly provides no resistance to forced entry. Lock failures are typically caused by worn lock mechanisms, misaligned strike plates, or door panels that have settled out of alignment due to worn rollers. In many cases, fixing the rollers and realigning the door automatically resolves the lock issue. When the lock mechanism itself is worn, we replace it with a new unit that provides reliable, secure latching.
If your sliding glass door has double-pane insulated glass and you have noticed a persistent haze, fog, or moisture between the two panes, the insulated glass unit's perimeter seal has failed. This seal is what holds the inert gas (typically argon) between the panes and keeps moisture out. Once the seal breaks, humid Callender air infiltrates the space between the panes, and the moisture condenses and evaporates in response to temperature changes, leaving behind mineral deposits that create the cloudy, hazy appearance. No amount of cleaning will fix this because the contamination is between the panes, not on the surface. The solution is replacement of the insulated glass unit — not the entire door, just the glass — which restores both clarity and insulating performance.
The sliding screen door that accompanies your glass door takes a beating in Callender homes — kids run through it, pets claw at it, wind catches it, and the mesh tears, sags, or develops holes. The screen door's rollers and track also wear out, causing it to bind, jump off the track, or refuse to latch. A non-functional screen door means you cannot enjoy fresh air without inviting mosquitoes, flies, and other insects into your home — a significant quality-of-life issue in Callender's climate. We repair and replace screen door mesh, rollers, tracks, frames, and latches, restoring full function to your screen door alongside your glass door.
Every sliding glass door problem that goes unaddressed gets worse over time, not better. Worn rollers cause the door panel to drag on the track, damaging the track surface and accelerating track wear. Drafty seals waste energy month after month, with cumulative costs that far exceed the cost of replacement weatherstripping. A lock that does not engage invites a security breach that could cost far more than any repair. Foggy glass continues to degrade, and the failed seal allows moisture to damage the glass spacer and frame components. And the longer you compensate for a difficult door by forcing it, the more likely you are to damage additional components — or injure yourself — in the process. The cost of timely repair is almost always less than the cost of deferred maintenance.
Sliding glass doors in Callender face a combination of environmental stresses that are more aggressive than what doors in most other regions experience. Understanding these local factors helps explain why your door may have deteriorated faster than you expected and why regular maintenance is so important here.
Callender's high humidity and coastal air create a corrosive environment that attacks every metal component on your sliding glass door — the rollers, the track, the lock mechanism, the handle hardware, the frame fasteners, and the adjustment screws. Corrosion causes rollers to seize, tracks to roughen, locks to bind, and screws to freeze in place. Salt air accelerates this corrosion dramatically for properties near the coast, but even inland Callender properties experience humidity-driven corrosion that degrades door components faster than in drier climates. Regular lubrication and maintenance slow this process, but eventually the corroded components need professional replacement.
The track that your sliding glass door rides on is a channel recessed into the threshold — and in Callender, that channel becomes a collection point for sand, grit, dirt, pet hair, insect remains, and organic debris. Every time the door slides open and closed, the rollers grind this abrasive material between themselves and the track surface, wearing down both components simultaneously. Fine sand particles are particularly destructive because they embed in the roller bearings and track surface, creating ongoing abrasion even after the visible debris is swept away. Regular track cleaning helps, but the damage accumulates over years and eventually requires professional roller and track service.
Callender's intense sun exposure bombards your sliding glass door with ultraviolet radiation that degrades rubber and vinyl components over time. Weatherstripping hardens, cracks, and loses its flexibility. Door seals shrink and pull away from their contact surfaces. Vinyl frame components can become brittle. The glazing compound or gaskets that hold the glass in the frame deteriorate. South- and west-facing doors take the most punishment, but all exterior sliding glass doors in Callender are affected by UV degradation to some degree. Replacing weatherstripping and seals on a schedule that accounts for Callender's UV intensity keeps your door sealed and efficient.
Hurricanes and tropical storms pose an obvious threat to sliding glass doors — large glass panels are inherently vulnerable to wind-borne debris, and the wind pressure differential during a severe storm can stress frames, break locks, and blow doors off their tracks. But storm damage is not limited to catastrophic events. Tropical storms and strong thunderstorms can drive rain past worn seals, introduce moisture into the frame and track system, and cause debris impact damage that may not be immediately obvious but compromises the door's integrity over time. Post-storm inspection of your sliding glass door is always a good practice in Callender.
In Callender's warm climate, the sliding glass door is used year-round — often as the primary access point between indoor and outdoor living spaces. The frequency of use in Callender homes far exceeds what the same door would experience in a cooler climate where outdoor activity is seasonal. This heavy daily cycling accelerates wear on rollers, tracks, locks, and weatherstripping, shortening the functional life of every moving component and making regular maintenance and timely repair more important than in regions where sliding doors sit idle for months at a time.
Expert sliding door repair. Quality parts. Same-visit results. One call does it.
Call (888) 611-9875We handle the complete range of sliding glass door repairs — from simple adjustments to full panel and glass replacement — for every brand and configuration found in Callender homes and businesses.
Rollers are the foundation of your sliding glass door's operation, and they are the component most likely to be responsible when the door becomes difficult to move.
Rollers carry the entire weight of the door panel — typically 100 to 200 pounds or more for a standard residential sliding glass door — and must allow that weight to move freely along the track. When rollers wear out, the door panel settles, friction increases, and the door becomes progressively harder to operate. Because rollers are hidden inside the bottom of the door panel, homeowners cannot see them wearing out. The symptoms — stiffness, grinding, uneven movement — develop so gradually that many homeowners assume the door itself is the problem and consider full replacement, when in reality new rollers would solve the issue completely at a fraction of the cost.
We install rollers appropriate for your door's weight, size, and usage demands. Standard nylon rollers are suitable for lighter doors with moderate use. Steel rollers offer greater load capacity and durability for heavier doors. Tandem roller assemblies — featuring two wheels per assembly instead of one — distribute the door's weight over a larger contact area, providing smoother operation and longer life. We recommend the right roller type for your specific door and usage pattern.
The transformation when we replace worn rollers is one of the most satisfying results in our business. A door that required a full-body effort to move slides open with a single finger. A door that was grinding, hopping, and shuddering moves smoothly and silently. The change is immediate and unmistakable, and it is typically the single most impactful repair we can perform on a sliding glass door.
The track is the surface your door rides on, and its condition directly affects how smoothly the door operates.
Tracks can become bent from impact, objects falling on them, or the weight of a misaligned door pressing down unevenly. Corrosion roughens the track surface, increasing friction. Accumulated sand, grit, and debris packs into the channel, obstructing roller movement. We straighten bent tracks, clean impacted debris, and treat corroded surfaces to restore smooth operation. When track damage is too severe for repair, we replace the track entirely.
Over time, settling, shifting, and the weight of the door can cause the track to move out of level or out of alignment with the frame. A misaligned track causes the door to bind at certain points, operate unevenly, or fail to close and latch properly. We realign and level tracks to restore proper door travel and ensure consistent operation across the full range of motion.
When tracks are severely corroded, deeply gouged, structurally bent beyond straightening, or worn to the point where the surface can no longer support smooth roller travel, full replacement is the right call. We remove the damaged track and install a new one, ensuring proper fit, level, and alignment with the door panel and frame.
The glass panel is the most prominent component of your sliding glass door, and damage to it affects security, insulation, appearance, and safety.
Broken or cracked sliding glass door panels require prompt replacement for both safety and security reasons. Sliding glass doors are required to use tempered safety glass, which shatters into small, relatively harmless pieces rather than large dangerous shards. We replace broken and cracked panels with properly tempered glass that meets safety codes and matches the dimensions and specifications of your door.
Foggy or hazy glass in a double-pane sliding door indicates a failed insulated glass unit seal. We replace the failed IGU with a new unit that restores clarity, reinstates the insulating gas layer, and renews the thermal performance of the door. IGU replacement is significantly less expensive than full door replacement and addresses the problem completely.
If you are replacing glass in your sliding door — whether due to damage, fog, or proactive upgrade — this is an excellent opportunity to upgrade to impact-resistant glass for hurricane protection or to energy-efficient glass with Low-E coatings and argon gas fill for better thermal performance. Impact glass can eliminate the need for hurricane shutters over your sliding door opening, and energy-efficient glass can produce meaningful savings on your Callender cooling costs.
Your sliding glass door's lock is your last line of defense at one of the largest openings in your home. It must work reliably every time.
Sliding glass doors use various locking mechanisms depending on the brand and era of installation. Mortise locks are recessed into the edge of the door panel and engage a hook or latch into the frame. Surface-mounted latch locks engage a catch on the frame or track. Security bars or Charlie bars provide supplemental resistance by preventing the door from being pried open. We repair, replace, and install all types of sliding door locks and supplemental security hardware.
Broken, loose, or corroded handles make the door difficult to operate and contribute to misalignment of the locking mechanism. We replace handles with new units that match your door's configuration and ensure proper alignment with the lock hardware.
Older sliding glass doors often have locking hardware that provides minimal security — simple hook latches that can be defeated with basic tools. We can upgrade your lock to a modern multi-point locking system, a keyed lock, or a foot-operated bolt that provides significantly better resistance to forced entry. For Callender homeowners concerned about sliding door security, a lock upgrade is one of the most cost-effective security improvements available.
The seals and weatherstripping on your sliding glass door are what keep conditioned air in and hot, humid Callender air out.
The bottom seal runs along the base of the door panel and contacts the track to block air and water infiltration. The fin seal — the fuzzy strip that lines the vertical edge where the two door panels overlap — blocks air movement through the interlock area. Both seals wear out, compress, harden, and tear over time, creating gaps that allow air and moisture to pass through. We replace both seal types with materials matched to your door's specifications.
The interlock area — where the active and fixed door panels overlap — is a critical seal point. Worn interlock weatherstripping allows significant air infiltration because the gap extends the full height of the door. Restoring this seal can produce an immediate and noticeable reduction in drafts and a measurable improvement in energy efficiency.
In a climate where air conditioning runs for the vast majority of the year, every gap in your building envelope costs you money. A sliding glass door with failed seals can leak enough conditioned air to produce a measurable increase in your energy bills — particularly because the opening is so large. Replacing weatherstripping and seals is one of the lowest-cost, highest-return improvements you can make to your Callender home's energy performance.
Your screen door is the companion piece to your sliding glass door, and when it fails, you lose the ability to enjoy ventilation without insect invasion.
Screen mesh deteriorates from UV exposure, pet damage, physical impact, and general wear. Torn or sagging mesh allows insects to enter freely, defeating the screen's purpose entirely. We rescreen existing frames with new mesh — standard fiberglass, pet-resistant, or fine-mesh options depending on your needs.
Like the main glass door, screen doors ride on rollers in a track. Worn screen rollers cause the screen door to drag, bind, jump off the track, or refuse to close properly. We replace screen rollers and repair screen tracks to restore smooth, reliable operation.
When the screen door frame is bent, corroded, or damaged beyond practical repair, full replacement is the most cost-effective solution. We supply and install replacement screen doors that match your glass door's frame dimensions and configuration.
The aluminum or vinyl frame that houses your sliding glass door can become damaged from impact, corrosion, settling, or improper installation. Frame damage can cause alignment issues, seal failures, and operational problems throughout the system. We repair bent or corroded frame sections, adjust thresholds that have shifted, and ensure the frame provides the structural support your door panel needs for proper operation.
When the door system has deteriorated beyond the point of economical repair — extensive frame corrosion, obsolete hardware, structurally compromised panels, or multiple simultaneous failures — complete replacement is the right decision. We supply and install complete sliding glass door systems, including frame, panels, glass, hardware, track, and weatherstripping, in a range of materials and configurations to suit your Callender home's requirements and your budget.
Rollers, tracks, glass, locks, screens — we fix it all. One call, one visit.
Call (888) 611-9875Sliding glass doors appear in virtually every room and setting in Callender homes. We service them all.
The classic application — connecting your living room, family room, or kitchen to the patio or backyard. These doors see the heaviest daily use in most homes and are typically the first to develop roller, track, and seal problems.
Upper-floor balcony doors and lanai access doors are exposed to wind, rain, and UV without the protection that ground-floor overhangs may provide. They also experience greater air pressure differentials, which can accelerate seal failure and increase draft problems.
Doors that open to pool areas face additional exposure to moisture, pool chemicals, and foot traffic carrying water, sand, and debris directly into the track. These doors benefit from corrosion-resistant roller upgrades and more frequent track maintenance.
Some Callender homes use sliding glass doors for bedrooms that open to private patios or balconies. These doors require the same mechanical attention as main living area doors, with the added importance of secure locking for bedroom safety.
Larger openings may use multi-panel sliding systems or pocket doors that slide into a wall cavity. These systems have additional complexity — more panels, more rollers, more track surface, and more precise alignment requirements. We service multi-panel and pocket sliding glass door systems with the attention their complexity demands.
Multi-unit properties in Callender frequently feature sliding glass doors as the primary access to balconies and patios. We service these doors within the access constraints of multi-unit buildings, coordinating with building management when necessary and completing work with minimal disruption to neighboring units.
Sliding glass doors in commercial settings serve different functions and face different demands than residential installations, but they require the same expert maintenance and repair.
Restaurants with patio seating, hotels with pool access, and resorts with beachfront openings depend on sliding glass doors that operate smoothly and reliably for guest experience and operational efficiency. A stuck or difficult door creates a bottleneck, an unprofessional impression, and a potential liability. We keep Callender hospitality sliding doors operating flawlessly.
Some retail environments use sliding glass door systems for customer entry, display access, or interior zone separation. These high-traffic commercial applications demand durable roller and track systems and reliable locking hardware. We service commercial sliding glass entry systems for Callender retailers.
Sliding glass panels are increasingly used in modern office environments as conference room walls, office dividers, and interior partitions. These systems require smooth, quiet operation and precise alignment. We repair and maintain commercial interior sliding glass systems.
Healthcare offices, dental practices, and professional facilities use sliding glass doors for reception windows, treatment room access, and patient flow management. We understand the operational importance of these doors in professional settings and provide timely, efficient repair.
We begin by examining the entire door system — rollers, track, glass, frame, lock, handle, weatherstripping, screen door, and threshold. Sliding glass door problems are frequently interconnected — worn rollers cause misalignment, which causes lock failure, which causes the homeowner to force the door, which damages the track. Addressing only the obvious symptom without checking the full system leaves underlying problems in place to cause future failures.
A door that is hard to open might have bad rollers, a damaged track, a misaligned frame, or all three. A door that will not lock might need a new lock, or it might need roller adjustment to bring the panel back into alignment with the strike. We diagnose root causes so that the repair actually solves the problem rather than temporarily masking it.
After diagnosis, we explain what we found, what needs to be repaired, and what it will cost. If there are options — repair versus replacement, standard rollers versus heavy-duty, basic weatherstripping versus premium — we present them clearly and help you make the decision that fits your budget and your goals. You approve the price before we start.
We use quality replacement parts from reputable manufacturers, properly sized and specified for your door. Our technicians perform repairs with the precision and care that sliding glass doors require — these are systems where millimeters matter, and a roller that is slightly too high or a track that is slightly off-level will cause problems immediately. We get it right the first time.
After repair, we adjust the door height, level, and alignment for optimal operation. We cycle the door multiple times, test the lock engagement, check the seal contact, and verify smooth, effortless movement across the full range of travel. We invite you to operate the door yourself and confirm that you are satisfied with the results before we consider the job complete.
Honest diagnosis. Fair pricing. A door that actually glides.
Call (888) 611-9875In the majority of cases, repair is all that is needed. If the frame is structurally sound, the glass is intact, and the door's problems are related to rollers, tracks, locks, seals, or hardware, repair will restore the door to full function at a fraction of replacement cost. Most sliding glass door issues are component-level problems, not door-level problems, and replacing the worn components brings the entire system back to like-new performance.
Replacement makes more sense when the frame is severely corroded, warped, or structurally compromised, when multiple major components have failed simultaneously, when the door does not meet current building code requirements for impact resistance, or when the overall condition has deteriorated to the point where repair costs approach replacement costs. In these situations, a new door provides better long-term value and brings the opening up to modern standards for safety, efficiency, and performance.
Whether triggered by damage or by choice, replacing a sliding glass door is an opportunity to upgrade. Impact-rated glass eliminates the need for hurricane shutters and provides superior daily security. Low-E coatings and argon gas fill reduce solar heat gain and improve energy efficiency. Modern frames with improved thermal breaks reduce heat transfer through the frame material. Multi-point locking systems provide dramatically better security than single-point latches. If you are replacing the door anyway, investing in these upgrades delivers benefits you will enjoy for the life of the new door.
Sliding glass doors damaged by hurricanes, tropical storms, or other insured events are typically covered under your homeowner's insurance policy. We provide detailed documentation of the damage and repair or replacement costs to support your insurance claim. We can communicate directly with your adjuster and coordinate the scope of work with your coverage. Our experience with insurance claims in Callender helps streamline the process and maximize your recovery.
The cost of your repair depends on the specific components that need attention, the size and weight of your door, the brand and availability of replacement parts, and the complexity of the work. Roller replacement, track repair, lock replacement, and weatherstripping are common repairs with predictable pricing. Glass replacement, frame repair, and full door replacement are more variable depending on the size, type, and specifications of the materials involved.
Roller replacement for a standard residential sliding glass door in Callender typically ranges from $150 to $350. Track repair and cleaning falls in a similar range. Lock and handle replacement runs $100 to $250. Weatherstripping and seal replacement is typically $100 to $300. Glass panel replacement varies widely based on size and type — from $200 to $400 for single pane to $400 to $1,000 or more for insulated or impact-rated glass. Comprehensive repairs addressing multiple components may range from $300 to $800. We provide exact pricing based on your specific door and situation before any work begins.
| Repair Type | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Roller Replacement | $150 — $350 |
| Track Repair & Cleaning | $150 — $350 |
| Lock & Handle Replacement | $100 — $250 |
| Weatherstripping & Seals | $100 — $300 |
| Glass Panel (Single Pane) | $200 — $400 |
| Glass Panel (Insulated/Impact) | $400 — $1,000+ |
| Complete Door Replacement | $1,000 — $3,500+ |
Complete sliding glass door replacement — including the door system, frame, glass, hardware, and installation — typically ranges from $1,000 to $3,500 or more for residential installations, depending on size, glass type, frame material, and features. Impact-rated systems are at the higher end. Standard single-pane systems are at the lower end. We can provide specific replacement pricing after assessing your opening and discussing your preferences.
Before deciding that repair is too expensive, consider what the broken door is costing you right now. A drafty door wastes energy every day your AC runs — potentially adding $20 to $50 or more per month to your utility bill in Callender's climate. A lock that does not work leaves one of the largest openings in your home unsecured. A door that is difficult to operate reduces your quality of life every time you use it. A foggy glass panel degrades your view and your home's appearance. Over the course of a year, the cumulative cost of living with a broken sliding glass door often exceeds the one-time cost of repairing it.
We specialize in sliding glass doors. This is not a sideline service we offer alongside a dozen other trades — it is a core focus of our business. Our technicians understand the specific engineering, materials, and failure modes of sliding glass door systems in a way that a general handyman or contractor simply does not. This specialization means faster diagnosis, more accurate repair, better parts selection, and results that last.
We carry replacement rollers, locks, handles, weatherstripping, and hardware for the most common sliding glass door brands found in Callender homes. This inventory enables same-visit repairs for the majority of our service calls. For less common brands or specialty configurations, we can source parts quickly and return to complete the repair with minimal delay.
Your sliding glass door is typically located in one of your home's main living areas — the family room, the living room, the master bedroom. We are acutely aware that we are working in your personal space, and we treat it with appropriate care and respect. We protect your flooring, clean up our work area thoroughly, and leave your home in the same condition we found it — with the sole exception of a sliding glass door that actually works.
We will never recommend replacing a door that can be repaired, and we will never perform a repair that we know will not last. Our assessments are honest, our recommendations are based on what is best for you and your door, and our pricing reflects the fair value of quality work with quality parts. We tell you the price before we start, and that is what you pay.
We are a local Callender business. Our reputation is built one sliding glass door at a time, one satisfied customer at a time, in this community. We protect that reputation by delivering consistently excellent service and treating every homeowner with honesty and respect.
Expert sliding glass door repair from the team Callender trusts.
Call (888) 611-9875We provide sliding glass door repair throughout every neighborhood in Callender — from waterfront properties with salt-air-damaged doors to inland homes with standard wear-and-tear issues. Our team serves the entire city with the same expertise and quality.
Our service area extends beyond Callender to the surrounding communities throughout the greater metropolitan area. Call (888) 611-9875 to confirm coverage and schedule your repair.
The most common cause is worn rollers. Rollers carry the full weight of the door panel and wear out over time, causing the panel to settle and drag. Roller replacement restores smooth, effortless operation.
Roller replacement typically costs $150-$350. Track repair is similar. Lock/handle replacement runs $100-$250. Weatherstripping is $100-$300. Glass replacement varies from $200-$1,000+ depending on type.
Yes. Foggy glass indicates a failed insulated glass unit seal. We replace the IGU — not the entire door — restoring clarity and insulating performance at a fraction of full door replacement cost.
If the frame is structurally sound and problems are component-level (rollers, tracks, locks, seals), repair restores full function at a fraction of replacement cost. Replacement is better when the frame is severely corroded or compromised.
Yes. We repair and replace screen door mesh, rollers, tracks, frames, and latches — restoring full function alongside your glass door.
Yes. We can upgrade to modern multi-point locking systems, keyed locks, or foot-operated bolts that provide significantly better resistance to forced entry.
Yes. We service restaurant patios, retail storefronts, office buildings, conference room dividers, and medical/professional facilities.
Most repairs are completed in a single visit. Roller replacement, track repair, lock replacement, and weatherstripping are typically same-day services.
That door is not going to fix itself. Every day you wrestle it open, force it closed, or avoid using it altogether is a day you are living with a problem that has a straightforward solution. New rollers. A clean track. Fresh weatherstripping. A lock that actually locks. These are simple fixes that produce a dramatic improvement in how your door operates, how your home feels, and how your day flows.
Call (888) 611-9875 and tell us what your sliding glass door is doing — or not doing. We will listen, schedule a convenient time to come out, diagnose the problem accurately, give you a fair price, and fix it right. Most repairs are completed in a single visit, and the result is a door that glides open and closed the way it did when it was brand new.
Your sliding door should slide. We make that happen. Call us today.