Small repairs, such as strap faults, lock issues or minor adjustments, can start from around £60–£75. Larger repairs, such as motor replacement, control unit faults or major door damage, can start from around £350. The final cost depends on the door type, fault, parts required and time involved.
Yes. All repair work carried out by TWF is guaranteed.
In many cases, yes. Contact TWF with the door type, fault, location and photos if possible. We can then advise whether it is something we can inspect or repair.
Replacement may be better if the door is badly damaged, insecure, repeatedly failing, poorly fitted, or if the repair cost is too close to the cost of a new door.
This can happen when the door detects resistance or a possible obstruction. It may be caused by the safety edge, alignment, guides, tracks or something stopping the door from closing cleanly.
Sometimes it is just wear or lack of adjustment, but scraping, grinding or banging noises should not be ignored. Noise can be an early sign that the door is rubbing, misaligned or putting strain on moving parts.
No. An occasional fault is still a fault. If the door sticks, stops, reverses, lifts unevenly or needs several attempts before it works, something is already wrong. Continuing to use it can put extra strain on the motor, guides, tracks or lifting parts and may turn a small repair into a bigger one.
Stop pressing the remote repeatedly. Check that nothing obvious is blocking the door, but do not force it. A door that refuses to close could have a safety edge fault, alignment issue, motor problem, remote fault or physical obstruction in the guides or tracks. Contact TWF and explain what the door is doing so we can advise on the next step.
Sometimes, yes. If the damage is limited to a replaceable or adjustable part, a repair may restore security and normal operation. If the door is bent, badly distorted, repeatedly failing or no longer closing properly, replacement may be the safer and more reliable option.
No. A motor can appear faulty when the real issue is resistance elsewhere in the door. For example, a roller curtain may be catching in the guides, or a sectional door may be struggling on its tracks. That is why the whole door should be inspected before replacing the motor.
Maintenance can reduce the risk of avoidable faults, especially with doors that are used every day. It helps identify wear, alignment issues and small problems before they become breakdowns. It cannot prevent every fault, but it can help keep a roller or sectional garage door working more smoothly for longer.
Start by finding out what is actually wrong with the door. Once the fault is known, you can compare the likely repair cost against the value of replacing it. For roller garage doors, you can also use the Garage Door Builder to price a new made-to-measure door, which makes the repair-or-replace decision much easier.