Window Replacement Cost in Indiana (2026)

Window Replacement in Indiana runs $270–$1,350 per window, with most projects landing near $540. Indiana prices run 10% below the national median of $600, making it one of the more affordable states for this service.

Indiana 2026 pricing

TierPrice per windowWhat you get
Budget $270 Entry-tier materials, contractor lower hourly rate
Typical $540 Mid-tier materials, established local contractor
Premium $1,350 Premium materials, top-rated installer, custom work

Source: National median $600 × BLS Regional Price Parity (2022) applied to Indiana. Last updated 2026-05-25.

Why Indiana pricing looks like this

Midwestern states like Indiana run close to or below national average pricing, with freeze-thaw cycles being the main climate cost driver.

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

Pricing by major metro in Indiana

Within Indiana, metro-level pricing varies by labor market and cost of living. Multipliers below are applied to the state typical of $540.

MetroTypical priceRangeNotes
Indianapolis $551 $275–$1,377 Close to state average
Fort Wayne $518 $259–$1,296 4% below state avg
Evansville $508 $254–$1,269 6% below state avg
South Bend $502 $251–$1,256 7% below state avg
Carmel $594 $297–$1,485 +10% vs state avg (higher labor + CoL)

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 window replacement cost in Indiana

Window Replacement Cost Calculator

Enter your project size and specifics — we'll estimate the total range a local contractor is likely to quote.

Small house: 8–10. Medium 3-bedroom: 12–16. Large: 18–25. Custom: 25+.
Estimated total project cost

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

Frequently asked questions about Window Replacement in Indiana

Single-hung vs double-hung — what's the price difference?
Double-hung windows (both upper and lower sash slide) cost $50–$150 more per window than single-hung (only lower sash moves). Double-hung are easier to clean from inside and better for upper-floor windows. Single-hung wins on price and slightly better energy efficiency — fewer moving parts means tighter seals.
How much does it cost to replace all windows in a typical house?
A standard 3-bedroom house has 12–16 windows. Replacing all with mid-tier vinyl double-pane: $5,000–$12,000 installed. With premium fiberglass + Low-E triple pane: $12,000–$22,000. Whole-house jobs usually get 5–10% volume discounts. Plan for 2–3 day install with a 3-person crew.
Insert vs full-frame replacement — when do I need each?
Insert (pocket) replacement fits new windows inside existing frames — cheapest at $400–$900/window, takes 30–45 min per window. Use this if frames are solid (no rot, no warping). Full-frame replacement tears out the old frame to the studs — $700–$1,800/window. Required if you see water damage, soft wood, mold around the frame, or the existing frame is bent/out-of-square.
Andersen, Pella, Marvin, Milgard — which brand?
All four make quality windows; the price ladder runs Andersen 100/200 < Milgard < Pella < Andersen 400 < Marvin. Milgard offers best value in the West (made in CA/WA). Andersen 400 Series and Pella Lifestyle are the volume mid-premium picks nationally. Marvin Signature is the premium tier ($800–$1,800/window) for wood-clad and historic-match. Avoid window companies that won't name the brand they install — they're typically reselling generic vinyl at premium markup.
Are Energy Star windows worth the upgrade?
In northern-tier states (climate zones 5–7), the upgrade from double-pane to triple-pane Low-E pays back in 8–14 years through heating savings. In southern states (zones 1–3), Low-E with argon fill on double-pane is the right tier — triple pane is overkill and rarely pays back. The federal Residential Energy Efficient Property Credit (30% of cost up to $600/year for windows) cuts net cost meaningfully.

Get 3 free quotes from local window replacement pros

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.

Get free quotes →

Compare nearby states

About this data. National baseline of $600 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.