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Buying guide · 7 min read

How to Choose a New Garage Door — A Homeowner's Buying Guide

Size, material, insulation, hardware, wind-load. Here are the five decisions that shape your door — and how we walk homeowners through them.

Modern home with newly installed insulated steel garage door

Choosing a garage door is mostly about five decisions. Get those right and the rest — finishes, hardware, opener — falls into place. Here's how our installers walk homeowners through each one.

What decisions matter when choosing a garage door?

**Five decisions shape every garage door spec:** size, material, insulation, hardware/windows, and wind-load rating. Get those right and the rest — finish color, opener type, brand — falls into place. The decisions interact: an insulated R-18 carriage door on a coastal home will also pull you toward galvanized hardware and a hurricane wind-load upgrade.

  1. Size — single (8x7, 9x7) or double (16x7, 18x7)
  2. Material — steel, aluminum, wood, composite
  3. Insulation — none, R-9, R-13, R-16, R-18
  4. Hardware and windows — plain, decorative, full-view
  5. Wind-load rating — standard, hurricane (140–180 mph)

What's included

  • Door, hardware, springs, and weather seal
  • Removal and disposal of your existing door
  • Opener pairing (or new opener install if needed)
  • Workmanship warranty on every install

What's quoted separately

  • Structural carpentry — if your jamb is rotten or the header is undersized.
  • New electrical — most homes have a working ceiling outlet for the opener. If yours doesn't, an electrician handles that scope.
  • Custom widths and headroom — non-standard openings need a non-standard door, fully built to your spec.
  • Permit fees — passed through at cost where required.

Single vs. double doors

If you're choosing between two singles and one double for a two-car garage, the double is usually the cleaner architectural choice and the simpler install. We can spec either — the consult is where we walk you through trade-offs for your specific opening.

When is upgrading to a premium garage door worth it?

**A premium garage door is worth it when one of three conditions applies:** the garage is attached and you heat or cool it, the door is the dominant element of your home's facade, or you live in a hurricane or high-wind zone. In those cases, the next-tier door pays back in energy savings, curb appeal, or insurance discount within a few years.

06FAQ

What people ask us.

The consult is usually 30–45 minutes. From there, stocked doors typically install within the same week. Custom and made-to-order doors run 2–6 weeks depending on the build.

Repair if the door is under 10 years old and the issue is springs, cables, rollers, or a single panel. Replace if the door is 15+ years old, has multiple cracked panels, or has reached end-of-life across the whole system. We'll tell you honestly which side of that line you're on.

An insulated door on an attached, conditioned garage measurably cuts heat transfer and quiets the space. The energy payback is real over several years; the comfort and resale payback usually matter more day-to-day.

06Request a consultation

Tell us about
your door.

Ninety seconds. No pressure, no spam, no calls from a call center. A real installer follows up with the inventory check and a written consultation.

Request a consultation(770) 595-2656

Mon–Sat, 7am–8pm local · 24/7 emergency repair line