A Plus Garage Doors LLC
Glendale, AZ 85303-5004
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Garage Doors, Garage Door Repair, Garage Builders ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Always verify a contractor's license before hiring for garage door repair contractor license check in Phoenix. Every contractor listed here has been vetted — browse 70 licensed pros and check credentials before you commit.
Typical cost in Phoenix
$150–$800 / repair
70 contractors in Phoenix
Glendale, AZ 85303-5004
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Garage Doors, Garage Door Repair, Garage Builders ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
13205 N 13th Ln , Phoenix, AZ 85029-1761
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Garage Doors, Handyman, Garage Door Repair
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Phoenix, AZ 85033-1038
Garage Door Repair, Garage Builders, Garage Doors ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
12223 N 39th Pl , Phoenix, AZ 85032-7322
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Garage Doors, Garage Door Repair, Door Repair
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Phoenix, AZ 85053-4846
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Garage Doors, Garage Door Repair
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Phoenix, AZ 85023-4149
BBB Accredited A- rated. Garage Door Repair, Garage Doors
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
2401 W Phelps Rd Ste B2 , Phoenix, AZ 85023-3211
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Garage Door Repair, Garage Builders, Garage Doors ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Phoenix, AZ 85041
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Garage Door Repair, Garage Doors, Garage Openers
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Glendale, AZ 85303-5004
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Garage Doors, Garage Door Repair, Garage Builders ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
3254 E Broadway Rd , Phoenix, AZ 85040-2805
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Garage Doors, Garage Door Repair, Garage Openers
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
3815 N 84th Ln , Phoenix, AZ 85037-2401
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Garage Doors, Tree Services, Garage Door Repair ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Phoenix, AZ 85042-4545
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Garage Doors, Garage Door Repair, Garage Openers
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Phoenix-area garage doors face a different set of stressors than doors in cold climates: intense UV radiation, extreme heat (garage interior temperatures of 140–165°F in summer), desert dust infiltration, and scorpion entry through degraded seals. Repair pricing in the Phoenix MSA reflects a year-round high-demand market with a significant snowbird second-home population that often defers maintenance. BLS SOC 49-9011 technicians in the Phoenix MSA earn $22–$42/hr. Here's what Mesa, Chandler, Gilbert, Scottsdale, and Phoenix homeowners pay:
| Service | Typical Scope | Phoenix Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Torsion spring replacement (1 spring) | Standard 7-ft door | $150–$280 |
| Torsion spring replacement (both springs) | Replace both simultaneously | $220–$400 |
| Cable replacement | 1–2 cables frayed or snapped | $100–$220 |
| Bottom weatherseal replacement | Full-width rubber or brush seal | $80–$175 |
| Side / top weatherstripping | Door frame seal replacement | $100–$200/project |
| Roller replacement (full set) | Nylon or steel rollers, full door | $100–$200 |
| Track cleaning (desert dust) | Brush + solvent track cleaning | $75–$150 |
| UV-degraded paint / finish touch-up | Surface prep + touch-up only | $150–$400 |
| Opener motor replacement | Belt or chain drive + installation | $300–$600 |
| Keypad / remote programming | New keypad or lost remote | $50–$100 |
| Full panel replacement (1 section) | Storm or impact damage | $250–$650 |
| New single-car door (installed) | 9x7 or 9x8 insulated | $800–$1,800 |
| New double-car door (installed) | 16x7 or 16x8 insulated | $1,400–$3,200 |
This is uniquely Arizona: the Arizona bark scorpion (Centruroides sculpturatus) — the most venomous scorpion in North America — can enter gaps as small as 1/16 of an inch, and degraded garage door weatherseals are a primary entry point. Phoenix pest control professionals consistently cite garage door bottom seal gaps as Entry Point #1 for scorpion home invasions in areas like Ahwatukee, Anthem, Cave Creek, and North Scottsdale. Phoenix UV degrades standard rubber bottom seals within 2–3 years (vs. 7–10 years in Northern climates). Budget $80–$175 every 2–3 years for bottom seal replacement. Brush seals or premium T-seals rated for UV resistance last longer in Phoenix sun.
Phoenix garage door companies experience highest call volume in July–September when attic heat conducts through the ceiling into garage space, causing opener motors in non-climate-controlled garages to run at the margin of their thermal tolerance. Door openers with "thermal protection" (overload shutoff) become temporarily inoperable during peak summer. If your Phoenix garage door repeatedly stops and requires waiting 20 minutes before it operates again in summer, this is the opener's thermal protection tripping — not a spring or cable failure. Upgrading to a unit with better heat tolerance (or providing garage ventilation) is the fix.
The Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC) requires contractors who install garage doors and openers (versus purely adjusting or repairing an existing setup) to hold an appropriate ROC license — typically B-1 (Residential General) or B-89 (Carpentry and Related Trades). Verify any Phoenix garage door installation contractor at roc.az.gov/verifycontractor. Pure maintenance and repair work falls in a gray zone, but any company charging for installation labor on a new door or new opener should carry an active ROC license. Filing without a license subjects both the contractor and the homeowner to penalty in Arizona.
The Phoenix MSA's rapidly growing technology employment base (Intel Chandler, TSMC Mesa, various tech campuses in Scottsdale) creates strong demand for smart home connected openers. The LiftMaster 8550W2 with built-in Wi-Fi and myQ integration ($350–$550 installed) is among the most requested models in Scottsdale and North Phoenix — allowing remote monitoring and control, especially valuable for snowbird homeowners who want to verify garage door status from out of state.
The Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC) regulates contractor licensing in Arizona. For garage door work:
Installation requires an ROC license. Any contractor who installs a new garage door (replacing the door itself), installs a new opener on a new circuit, or performs structural attachment work must hold an active ROC license. The relevant classifications include B-1 (Residential General Contractor) and B-89 (Carpentry and Related Trades). Verify license status at roc.az.gov/verifycontractor — confirm the license is active, not expired or suspended, and that the bond is current.
ROC bond protection. Arizona's ROC system provides consumer protection: if a licensed contractor causes damage and refuses to remedy it, you can file a complaint with ROC and potentially recover from the contractor's bond. Homeowners who hire unlicensed contractors (evidenced by a hand-delivered flyer or a suspiciously low online ad) forfeit this protection. The Arizona ROC Complaint Process is free and typically produces a written response within 30–90 days.
Workers' compensation in Arizona. Under Arizona Revised Statutes §23-901, employers with employees must carry workers' compensation insurance. If a garage door technician is injured on your property without coverage, your homeowner's insurance is the fallback — a significant liability exposure you can avoid by requesting a current Certificate of Insurance before any work begins.
A Phoenix-specific reason to maintain a professional relationship with a garage door service company: weatherseal inspection. The Arizona bark scorpion enters homes through gaps that homeowners often cannot see from street level. A garage door bottom seal develops micro-cracks and compression loss from UV exposure within 2–3 years in the Phoenix climate. A professional annual inspection ($75–$125) catches:
Phoenix is among the top metropolitan areas targeted by garage door bait-and-switch operations. These companies appear at the top of Google search results under service-area business listings using addresses that are simply mail forwarding services in Chandler or Mesa. Their model: advertise $39 spring replacement, dispatch a technician who quotes $800+ "after assessment." The Arizona Attorney General Consumer Protection Division and BBB of Central and Northern Arizona have documented this complaint pattern repeatedly.
Red flags in Phoenix:
How to verify legitimately:
| Factor | DIY Repair | Professional Repair |
|---|---|---|
| Torsion spring replacement | Never — severe injury risk, stored energy | Professional only — $150–$280 per spring |
| Weatherseal replacement | Feasible — Home Depot 7221 E. McDowell or Lowe's Tempe | $80–$175 professionally installed |
| Track cleaning (desert dust) | Yes — compressed air + dry cloth | $75–$150; included in tune-up |
| Safety sensor alignment | Yes — wing nut adjustment, indicator light check | Included in service call |
| Remote/keypad programming | Usually yes — manufacturer instruction | $50–$100 if needed |
| Cable replacement | Risky — cables still under tension | Professional — $100–$220 |
| Panel replacement | Requires panel sourcing + track knowledge | $250–$650 professionally |
| Opener installation | Possible for replacement; may need permit for new circuit | $300–$600; required if ROC installation work |
| Arizona ROC requirement | N/A (homeowner exempt for own residence) | Required for installation work for hire |
Weatherseal replacement (bottom seal). This is the most important DIY task for Phoenix homeowners given the scorpion entry risk through degraded seals. Standard T-style or beaded bottom seals are available at Home Depot (Ahwatukee, Chandler, Scottsdale locations) in standard 18-ft rolls for $20–$45. Slide out the old seal (heat from Phoenix summers often makes removal easier — the rubber softens in warmth) and slide in the new one. This 30–45 minute task, done every 2–3 years, is the most cost-effective scorpion prevention measure available.
Track cleaning. Sonoran Desert dust, haboob silt (fine-grained montmorillonite clay), and occasional mud accumulate in the C-channel tracks of Phoenix garage doors, especially after monsoon season. Wipe out tracks with a dry rag — do not use lubricant in the tracks (lubrication causes dust to stick and compounds the problem). Rollers themselves (the nylon or steel wheels that ride in the track) should be lubricated every 6 months with white lithium grease or silicone spray directly on the roller stem/bearing, not applied to the track surface.
Safety sensor test and alignment. Garage door safety sensors require annual testing per UL 325 standards. Roll a 2x4 lumber flat on the garage floor in the door's path — the door must reverse before contacting the 2x4. If it doesn't reverse: the safety sensors may be misaligned. Adjust each sensor (loosen the wing nut, re-aim so the indicator light is solid green, re-tighten) and retest.
Torsion spring replacement. The Phoenix heat accelerates torsion spring metal fatigue differently than cold climates — in Phoenix, springs more often fail during summer heat cycles rather than cold snaps. The stored energy in a torsion spring coil is enormous and can cause severe or fatal injury if released uncontrolled. This is professional-only work in all circumstances.
Any work on the garage-to-home interior door if you're planning to sell. Arizona home inspectors specifically flag the interior door separating the attached garage from living space — it must be solid-core (20-minute fire-rated minimum). If your home was built in the 1970s–1990s and has a hollow-core interior door from garage to living space, replace it as part of any garage improvement project. A solid-core pre-hung door from Home Depot runs $250–$400; installation by a licensed contractor runs $200–$400. This deficiency on an inspection report can cost far more in negotiated price reductions.
July–September is Phoenix garage door emergency season. Heat-related opener failures are common — the motor thermal protection trips in 140°F+ garage temperatures.
Get free quotes from 70 verified garage door repair contractor license check companies in Phoenix. No obligation.
Get 3 Free Quotes →Not sure what to expect? Read our expert guides on garage door repair contractor license check pricing, what's included, and how to hire the right contractor.