Signs of a Broken Garage Door Spring in California — What to Watch For Before It Gets Worse
The clearest signs of a broken garage door spring are a door that won’t lift more than a few inches, a loud bang from the garage (often mistaken for something falling), a visible gap in the torsion spring coil above the door, or cables hanging loose on either side of the door. If you’re seeing any of these in your California home, call (844) 742-0390 — Ronald Sanchez can typically assess the situation the same day.
Why California Homes See Spring Failures More Than You’d Expect
California’s climate gets credit for a lot of things, but it’s also quietly hard on garage door hardware. Inland areas bake through months of triple-digit heat in summer, and then swing into cold, damp nights in late fall and winter. That thermal cycling — metal expanding and contracting repeatedly — accelerates metal fatigue in torsion and extension springs faster than homeowners usually realize.
In the San Fernando Valley, Ronald Sanchez has replaced springs on Wayne Dalton and Raynor doors where the original hardware was only seven or eight years old. Those doors weren’t abused — the Valley’s temperature swings just wear through the spring’s cycle rating faster than a more temperate climate would. A standard residential torsion spring is rated for roughly 10,000 cycles. If you open and close your door four times a day, that’s less than seven years before you’re living on borrowed time.
California’s housing stock adds another wrinkle. Tract homes built in the 1980s and 1990s — common across the Valley from Reseda to Chatsworth — were often built with single springs rather than paired torsion spring systems. A single spring carrying all the load fails sooner, and when it goes, there’s no backup spring to keep the door moving.
The Comparison: Normal Door Behavior vs. What a Broken Spring Actually Looks Like
Homeowners often wonder whether what they’re experiencing is a spring problem or something else — a worn roller, a misaligned track, or an opener struggling with age. Here’s the honest breakdown:
- Door won’t open past 6 inches: Classic broken spring. The opener’s motor can’t compensate for the full dead weight of the door without the spring’s counterbalance. This is the most common call we get.
- Loud bang, then nothing: A torsion spring snapping under tension sounds like a shotgun going off inside the garage. If you heard a bang and your door stopped working, the spring is almost certainly the cause — not the opener.
- Visible gap in the coil: Look at the horizontal metal spring above your door. A 2–4 inch gap in that coil where none existed before is a broken torsion spring, full stop.
- Cables hanging or piled on the floor: Extension springs (the ones that run along the horizontal tracks on each side) are connected to cables. When the spring breaks, cables go slack and can pile up near the bottom bracket. This is especially common on older Craftsman-brand doors.
- Door is crooked or one side drops: If you have a two-spring system and only one breaks, the door will tilt as the opener tries to lift unevenly. You’ll notice one side sitting lower than the other.
- Opener runs but door barely moves: The motor is working — you can hear it — but the door barely budges. That’s the opener struggling against a door that’s lost its counterbalance. Running the opener in this condition can burn out the motor over time.
- Manual lift feels impossibly heavy: Disengage the opener and try to lift the door by hand. A properly balanced door with working springs should go up with modest effort. If it feels like lifting a refrigerator, the spring isn’t doing its job.
A Step-by-Step: How to Check for a Broken Spring Without Getting Hurt
Important safety note: Torsion springs sit under enormous tension — enough to cause serious injury or death if handled incorrectly. The following steps are visual checks only. Do not attempt to remove, adjust, wind, or replace springs yourself. That work requires specialized winding bars, training, and experience. Ronald Sanchez handles spring replacements on every job himself precisely because this isn’t the kind of task to guess through.
- Disconnect the opener first. Pull the red emergency release cord hanging from the opener rail. This separates the door from the opener so you can check the door independently without the motor fighting you.
- Look at the torsion spring above the door. Standing inside the garage, look at the horizontal metal tube mounted above the door opening. You’re looking for a visible gap or separation in the coil. If you see one, the spring is broken.
- Check the cables on both sides. Look at the bottom corners of the door — each side should have a taut cable running up to the drum at the top. Slack, coiled, or detached cables usually mean a broken extension spring or a cable that snapped under spring failure stress.
- Try a manual lift test — carefully. With the opener disconnected, try lifting the door to waist height using both hands on the door’s handle or bottom rail. If it requires serious effort or immediately drops back down when released, the springs are not providing counterbalance. Stop here — don’t force it further.
- Note whether the door tilts. If one side rises faster or sits lower than the other when you attempt the lift, you likely have a single broken spring in a dual-spring system.
Once you’ve done this visual check, the next call should be to a trained technician. Need to know what parts may be involved? Browse our Garage Door Parts in California page for context on what typically gets replaced alongside a broken spring.
How Much Does Spring Repair Cost in California?
Spring repair in California typically runs $180–$340 depending on the spring type (torsion vs. extension), the size and weight of the door, and whether both springs need replacement at once. Ronald Sanchez’s standard recommendation is to replace springs in pairs — if one has failed at 10,000 cycles, the other is right behind it. Replacing both in a single visit costs less in the long run than two separate service calls a few months apart.
| Service | Typical California Range |
|---|---|
| Spring Repair (torsion or extension) | $180–$340 |
| Cable Repair (if affected by spring failure) | $130–$250 |
| Opener Repair (if motor was stressed) | $120–$320 |
| Full Garage Door Repair | $150–$600 |
If the opener took damage from running against a broken spring, that repair is handled in the same visit. We stock springs and cables compatible with all eight brands we service — including Amarr and Raynor doors, which use slightly different spring hardware than the more common residential formats. You won’t wait days for a part to arrive.
For replacement hardware context, you can also check our Garage Door Parts page, which covers what’s commonly stocked and what typically ships on request.
FAQs About Broken Garage Door Springs in California
If the opener runs but the door barely moves, the spring is almost always the cause — not the opener. Pull the red emergency release cord and try lifting the door by hand; if it’s extremely heavy or won’t stay up on its own, the spring has lost its counterbalance function. An opener problem typically sounds different: grinding, clicking, or no motor noise at all. Call (844) 742-0390 if you’re not sure — Ronald can walk you through a quick diagnosis over the phone before the visit.
No — using your door with a broken spring risks damaging the opener motor, snapping cables, and potentially causing the door to fall suddenly. A door that’s lost its spring counterbalance can weigh 150–400 pounds with nothing helping hold it up. Keep the door closed and the opener disconnected until the spring is replaced. This isn’t a situation where “just a few more uses” is safe or worth it.
Most spring repairs in California take 45 minutes to 90 minutes from arrival, depending on whether one or both springs need replacing and whether cables are also involved. Ronald handles the job himself, so there’s no waiting for a second technician or a parts runner — he arrives with what he needs for the most common spring configurations already on the truck.
Spring repair in California costs between $180 and $340 for most residential doors. Larger or heavier doors — commercial-grade or oversized two-car doors — can run toward the top of that range. If cables also need replacing due to the spring failure, add $130–$250 for that work. Call (844) 742-0390 for a free estimate — the quote is specific to your door, not a ballpark pulled from a price sheet.
Nova Garage Door Service California — Straight Talk, No Runaround
Ronald Sanchez built Nova Garage Door Service after years of watching neighbors overpay for spring repairs that took less than an hour. Eight years in the trade later, 90 homeowners across California have left an average 4.7-star review — not because of a slick sales pitch, but because the job gets done right and explained clearly. “I’d rather spend five minutes explaining the job than have you wondering what you paid for.” That’s the standard on every call.
When you call Nova, you get Ronald — the owner who also happens to be the technician. Whether your door is a Wayne Dalton, a Craftsman, or something less common, there’s a good chance he’s worked on that exact model before. Same-day and emergency service are available because a broken spring doesn’t schedule itself conveniently.
Spotted a broken spring or just not sure what’s wrong with your door? Call Nova Garage Door Service California at (844) 742-0390 for a free, no-pressure estimate. We’ll tell you exactly what’s needed — and exactly what it’ll cost — before any work begins.
Written by Ronald Sanchez, Owner & Lead Technician at Nova Garage Door Service California, serving California, CA.