Garage Door Spring Replacement Cost in Pennsylvania (2026)

Garage Door Spring Replacement in Pennsylvania runs $155–$369 per spring, with most projects landing near $238. Pennsylvania prices run close to the national median of $250 — within ±10%.

Pennsylvania 2026 pricing

TierPrice per springWhat you get
Budget $155 Entry-tier materials, contractor lower hourly rate
Typical $238 Mid-tier materials, established local contractor
Premium $369 Premium materials, top-rated installer, custom work

Source: National median $250 × BLS Regional Price Parity (2022) applied to Pennsylvania. Last updated 2026-05-25.

Why Pennsylvania pricing looks like this

Northeastern states like Pennsylvania carry higher labor and permit costs, with cold-weather climate adding 8–15% to seasonal pricing.

Specific factors that move Pennsylvania pricing relative to the national baseline:

Pricing by major metro in Pennsylvania

Within Pennsylvania, metro-level pricing varies by labor market and cost of living. Multipliers below are applied to the state typical of $238.

MetroTypical priceRangeNotes
Philadelphia $250 $163–$387 Close to state average
Pittsburgh $236 $153–$365 Close to state average
Allentown $231 $150–$358 Close to state average
Harrisburg $226 $147–$351 5% below state avg
Lancaster $228 $149–$354 4% below state avg

Metro multipliers from BLS metro-level Regional Price Parity. Always verify with 2–3 local quotes — actual contractor pricing varies ±15% within a metro depending on specific neighborhood, season, and contractor availability.

Estimate your specific garage door spring replacement cost in Pennsylvania

Garage Door Spring Replacement Cost Calculator

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Estimated range
$150–$400
Typical: $250 · National baseline

Calculator defaults to National average. Switch the "Your State" dropdown to Pennsylvania to apply local pricing.

Frequently asked questions about Garage Door Spring Replacement in Pennsylvania

Can I drive the car out with a broken spring?
Technically yes for one trip if you manually lift the door — but the door weighs 150–250 lbs without spring assist and most home insurance won't cover a dropped-door injury. Most pros recommend leaving it shut until repaired.
Should I replace both springs even if only one broke?
For torsion springs on a double door, yes — both are the same age and the second usually fails within months. Replacing in pairs also keeps the door balanced. For extension springs, only replace the broken one unless the other shows visible rust or stretch.
How long does a garage door spring replacement take?
30–60 minutes for a professional, including testing door balance and opener limit settings. DIY (extension only): 60–90 minutes. Torsion DIY is not recommended without proper winding bars.
Are garage door springs covered under home warranty?
Most home warranties cover the opener motor, not the springs. Springs are usually classified as wear-and-tear items and excluded. Check your specific plan — a few premium tiers do cover them after a one-time service call fee ($75–$125).
How do I know which spring size I need?
Measure the broken spring: uncoiled length, wire diameter, and inside diameter. Most pros use the DASMA calculator (industry standard) to spec the replacement. If you're going DIY, photograph the existing spring's spec sheet — it's usually stamped on the spring itself.

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The state estimates above are a starting point. Pricing varies ±15% within a state by metro and contractor. We'll connect you with up to 3 vetted local pros — free, no obligation, 60 seconds.

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About this data. National baseline of $250 derives from aggregated 2026 quote data across major lead-gen platforms. State-level figures apply Bureau of Labor Statistics Regional Price Parity (2022, all-items) to the national baseline. We refresh quarterly and welcome corrections — email [email protected] if a local quote you received falls materially outside our state range. See full methodology.