Garage Door Spring Replacement Cost in California: Straight Answers Before You Call
Garage door spring replacement in California typically runs $180–$340, depending on the spring type, door weight, and whether one spring or both need replacing. That range covers parts and labor for a standard residential torsion or extension spring swap — same-day service is available. If your door dropped overnight or won’t budge this morning, call (844) 742-0390 and Ronald Sanchez will give you an honest quote before any work begins. Nova Garage Door Service California has earned 4.7 stars across 90 reviews by keeping pricing clear and showing up when it matters.
Why California Homes Eat Through Springs Faster Than You’d Expect
Southern California’s climate looks easy on paper — mild winters, low humidity. But the San Fernando Valley runs a different pattern. Temperatures in the inland communities routinely swing 35 to 40 degrees between a July morning and a July afternoon. Metal expands and contracts with every cycle, and torsion springs — already under thousands of pounds of torque — fatigue faster when that thermal load compounds the mechanical one. Ronald grew up in this valley and spent eight years watching this exact failure pattern repeat. A spring rated for 10,000 cycles in a stable climate might give out closer to 7,000 cycles on a garage that faces west on a hot Reseda block.
The housing stock adds another variable. A significant share of California homes — particularly tracts built in the 1970s and 1980s across neighborhoods like Northridge, Canoga Park, and Chatsworth — still have original Wayne Dalton or early Craftsman doors running on undersized, single-spring setups. Those configurations were marginal when new. Forty years of Southern California heat cycles don’t help. When Ronald diagnoses a broken spring on one of these doors, the repair conversation often starts with “let’s upgrade to a dual-spring setup so this doesn’t happen again in three years.”
Torsion vs. Extension Springs: Which One Do You Have, and Does It Change the Price?
Most California homes built after the mid-1980s use torsion springs — a single (or paired) horizontal coil mounted above the door opening on a steel shaft. They’re the standard on heavier Clopay and Amarr doors and are generally considered the safer, longer-lasting design. Extension springs run along the horizontal tracks on each side of the door and are more common on older, lighter doors. Both will break eventually. Both need professional replacement.
- Single torsion spring replacement: $180–$260 for most standard residential doors
- Double torsion spring replacement (recommended for heavier doors): $260–$340
- Extension spring replacement (per pair): $180–$280
- Spring + cable combo repair: $250–$400 when the cable snaps at the same time
One thing worth knowing: if one torsion spring breaks and its partner is original, replacing both at the same visit makes practical sense. The second spring has lived exactly as long as the first and will likely follow within months. Ronald will tell you what he sees — if the second spring looks good and the door is only a few years old, he’ll say so. The goal is a repair that holds, not a repair that generates another service call.
Full Pricing Breakdown for California Garage Door Services
Springs are the most common call, but they’re not always the only thing that needs attention. Here’s what service typically costs across the full range of garage door work in the California market:
| Service | Typical Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Spring Repair / Replacement | $180 – $340 |
| Cable Repair | $130 – $250 |
| Opener Repair | $120 – $320 |
| Opener Installation | $250 – $550 |
| Panel Replacement | $250 – $500 |
| Track Realignment | $120 – $240 |
| Roller Replacement | $110 – $220 |
| New Door Installation | $700 – $2,200 |
| General Garage Door Repair | $150 – $600 |
These ranges reflect actual California market pricing — not a national average imported from somewhere with different labor costs or housing conditions. If your job falls outside these ranges in either direction, Ronald will explain exactly why before the invoice is written. Need a broader picture of what a Garage Door Repair in California service call covers? That page walks through the full scope.
A Safety Note That Actually Matters
Torsion springs are wound under extreme tension — enough to cause serious injury or worse if a spring is mishandled during removal or installation. This isn’t a disclaimer written to fill space. Ronald has seen the aftermath of DIY spring jobs gone wrong, and no YouTube tutorial changes the physics of a spring releasing 150–200 foot-pounds of torque unexpectedly. The tools required (winding bars, a properly tensioned shaft, the right spring size for door weight) aren’t something most garages carry, and using improvised substitutes is where injuries happen.
If your spring is broken, disconnect the automatic opener and leave the door down until a trained technician arrives. Don’t attempt to manually lift the door more than a few inches to retrieve a car — the door is effectively dead weight without a functioning spring, and the cables can fail under that load. Call (844) 742-0390 and we’ll get there the same day.
How a Nova Spring Replacement Actually Goes
- Call and describe what you’re seeing. Ronald will ask a few quick questions — door style, approximate age, whether it’s a single or double car — and give you a price range on the phone before scheduling anything.
- Arrival and full door assessment. Springs don’t break in a vacuum. Before replacing the spring, Ronald checks cables, drums, rollers, and the opener attachment point for stress damage. If the cable frayed when the spring snapped, he’ll show you before quoting the additional work.
- Spring sizing and selection. The replacement spring has to match door weight, not just door size. Ronald measures and selects the correct wire diameter, coil count, and inside diameter — an undersized spring on a heavy Clopay door will fail prematurely regardless of brand.
- Installation and tension calibration. Springs are wound to the correct tension for the door’s weight, then tested through several manual cycles before the opener is reconnected.
- Full operational test. The door runs through automatic open/close cycles, the force settings on the opener are verified, and the safety reversal is tested. The job isn’t done until the door behaves the way it should.
Ronald’s background in mechanical and electrical systems — built through hands-on technical training at Los Angeles Pierce College in Woodland Hills — is what makes step three and four go right the first time. Spring calibration is part mechanical feel, part math, and entirely something that takes repetition to get right. Eight years, one trade.
For anything beyond a spring — openers, panels, full replacements — the Garage Door Repair service covers the complete picture of what Nova handles.
Frequently Asked Questions
Garage door spring replacement in California costs $180–$340 for most residential jobs, covering parts and labor. A single torsion spring on a standard door runs toward the lower end; heavier doors requiring a dual-spring setup or same-day emergency service may land closer to $340. Call (844) 742-0390 for a free quote — Ronald will give you the number before we schedule anything.
Replacing both springs at the same visit is worth it when both springs are original and the door has seen several years of use — if one failed, the other is working on borrowed time. That said, Ronald will look at the surviving spring’s condition before recommending the additional cost. If it’s a newer door and the second spring shows no wear, a single replacement is the right call. No one here profits from recommending work the door doesn’t need.
Same-day spring repair is available for most California service areas — emergency calls included. Ronald carries a range of torsion and extension spring sizes on every run, which means he’s not making a parts trip before your job gets done. Call (844) 742-0390 early in the day for the best same-day scheduling window.
Torsion springs mount horizontally above the door and handle weight through torque; extension springs run along the upper tracks on each side and work through stretch tension. Torsion systems are more common on California homes built after the mid-1980s and are generally more durable. Extension spring replacement is often slightly less expensive, but both fall within the $180–$340 range for a standard residential door. The spring type your door uses is determined by how it was built — not a choice you make at repair time.
Ready to Get Your Door Moving Again?
When you call Nova Garage Door Service California, you get Ronald — not a dispatcher routing a crew you’ve never met. “I’d rather spend five minutes explaining the job than have you wondering what you paid for.” Call (844) 742-0390 for a free, no-pressure estimate. Same-day and emergency service are available across California, and the quote you get on the phone is the number we work from.
Written by Ronald Sanchez, Owner & Lead Technician at Nova Garage Door Service California, serving California, CA.