★★★★★Google Top Rated · Most Repairs Same Day

Garage Door Repair in Fort Worth, Alvarado & Across DFW

Most Repairs Done Same Day|You Talk to Arnold, the Owner|Free On-Site Estimates

A garage door that will not open, closes crooked, or suddenly sounds like a freight train usually points to a spring, cable, roller, or opener problem, not a whole new door. Arnold's Garage Door & Gates repairs garage doors across Fort Worth, Alvarado, Burleson, Cleburne, and the wider DFW metroplex, and you deal with Arnold himself from the first call to the final test of the door.

Arnold diagnoses the real problem on-site, gives you a free written estimate that holds for two weeks, and fixes what is actually broken instead of upselling a replacement. Most repairs are handled the same day, with after-hours help for true emergencies like a door stuck open or a car trapped inside.

Call or text Arnold at (682) 337-7220 and tell him what the door is doing. He will tell you honestly what it needs and what he can do today.

Garage door repair in Fort Worth by Arnold's Garage Door & Gates
Fixed right, the first timeDiagnosed and repaired on-site, honest pricing
Why Homeowners Call Arnold

Repair Done Right, the First Time

Same-Day When It Counts

Most repair calls are handled the same day when the schedule allows, plus after-hours emergencies.

Truck Stocked to Finish

Springs, cables, rollers, sensors and common parts ride on the truck, so most jobs are one visit.

Free On-Site Diagnosis

Arnold looks at the actual door and quotes it for free. You only pay if you hire him.

Honest Repair-First

If a small fix solves it, he says so, even when a bigger job would pay more.

Owner on Every Job

The person who diagnoses your door is the person who repairs it.

Google Top Rated

Built on repeat customers and word-of-mouth across the DFW towns.

The Three We See Most

The Three Garage Door Failures Arnold Sees Most

Most repair calls in this area come down to three problems. Knowing which one you are looking at tells you how urgent it is and what the fix really involves.

01

A snapped spring: the loud bang, then a door that will not lift

If you heard a loud bang and now the door will not open or feels impossibly heavy, you almost certainly have a broken torsion spring. The spring, not the opener, does the heavy lifting, so when it fails, the door is dead weight. Arnold weighs the door, sizes the correct spring, and on a two-spring door, replaces both because the second spring is next in line.

02

A cable off the drum: the door hangs crooked or sideways

When a lift cable slips off its drum or frays through, one side of the door drops and the whole door hangs crooked, sometimes wedged at an angle. Cables off the drum are the most common repair Arnold runs right now. It is not a safe door to keep operating, so it is worth a same-day call.

03

The door will not close: usually the safety sensors, not the opener

If the door starts down and reverses, or will not close while the opener light blinks, the cause is almost always the photo-eye safety sensors near the floor. A bumped bracket, a spider web, dust, or sun glare is enough. Arnold realigns the beams and tests the reverse, and the door closes again, no new opener required.

Everything We Fix

Common Garage Door Problems Arnold Fixes

Garage doors fail in many small ways before they fail completely. If your symptom is on this list, Arnold has fixed it many times.

The door will not open or close

Broken torsion or extension spring; door stuck halfway; door reverses before closing; no response to the remote or wall button; opens but will not close; closes then pops back up.

Off-track and cable failures

Door off the track on one or both sides; lift cable off the drum; frayed or snapped cable; door hanging crooked; door jammed at an angle after coming off the rollers.

Opener and sensor symptoms

Photo-eye safety sensors out of alignment; opener runs, but the door does not move; remote or keypad not working; wall switch dead; motor straining or humming; intermittent operation.

Noisy and rough operation

Grinding, squeaking, or banging during travel; door shudders or jerks; worn steel rollers rattling; loose or worn hinges; the door slams shut instead of lowering smoothly.

Physical and weather damage

Bent or dented panels after a vehicle impact; tracks pushed out of square; cracked rollers and worn bearings; failed weather seal letting in light, dust, and rainwater; doors thrown out of square by slab movement.

Not sure what is wrong?

Tell Arnold what the door is , and he will diagnose it for free.

Call (682) 337-7220
The Process

What Happens When You Call Arnold for a Repair

1

Phone triage with the owner

You reach Arnold directly, not an answering service. He asks what the door is doing and whether it is stuck open or closed, so he arrives with the right parts.

2

Scheduling, same-day when possible

Most repairs can be handled the same day when the schedule allows, plus after-hours calls for true emergencies. You get an honest time window, not a vague all-day promise.

3

On-site diagnosis

Arnold tests the springs, cables, rollers, opener, and safety sensors and finds the real cause rather than the obvious symptom. The on-site diagnosis is free.

4

Plain-English explanation and written quote

He tells you what failed and why and gives you a written quote with no surprise charges. The price holds for two weeks, and you decide with no pressure.

5

The repair, stocked on the truck

Because the common parts ride on the truck, Arnold completes most repairs on the spot. The person who quoted the job is the person who does it.

6

Safety test and triple-check

Before he leaves, Arnold runs a full cycle, checks the balance and safety reverse, and triple-checks his work. You get a safe, quiet door and a clear note of what was done.

Real Job
The 'broken opener' that was a five-minute sensor fix

A customer was ready to buy a whole new opener because the door would not close and the opener light kept blinking. Arnold found a safety sensor knocked slightly out of alignment by a stored bike. He realigned the beams, tested the reverse, and the door worked perfectly, for a fraction of the cost of the new opener the customer expected to buy.

Honest Pricing

Garage Door Repair Price Ranges

Every repair gets a free on-site estimate and a written quote before any work begins, and the quote holds for two weeks. There is no charge just to come and look.

Springs

Standard torsion spring replacement is quoted up front. On a two-spring door, both springs are replaced because the second shows the same wear.

Cables

Cable repair or replacement is quoted up front, often paired with spring work since the two wear together.

Off-track repair

Getting a door back on its track and squaring the rails is quoted up front, depending on whether the track can be straightened on-site or needs replacing.

Remotes, keypads & sensors

Remote and keypad programming typically runs $75 to $150. Safety-sensor realignment is often a quick, low-cost fix caught during the diagnosis.

Real DFW Repairs

Real Garage Door Repairs Across DFW

Cable off the drum, fixed the same visit

A Burleson homeowner came home to a door hanging at an angle after a cable jumped the drum. Arnold reset the cable, checked the springs and drums that wore alongside it, rebalanced the door, and had it running smoothly the same afternoon, on the first visit.

Talked out of a full replacement

A customer had been told by another company that nearly the entire door and opener needed replacing. Arnold found it was a straightforward spring replacement to get the door working properly, and saved them the cost of a job they did not need.

A late-night door that saved a trip

The night before leaving town, a customer's vehicle was trapped behind a dead garage door. Arnold ran the after-hours call, got the door up and working that night, and they made their trip the next morning. That is what after-hours repair is for.

How Arnold Compares

Arnold's vs. the Big Garage-Door Chains

A
Arnold's Garage Door & Gates
Who does the work: Arnold, the owner, on every job
Who answers the phone: Arnold, directly
Diagnosis: Free, on-site, no fee to look
Your quote: Written and honored for two weeks
Repair vs replace: Repair first, replace only if needed
Parts on hand: Common parts stocked on the truck
Same-visit fixes: Most repairs completed in one visit
After-hours help: Owner runs true emergency calls
Accountability: One name on the work, start to finish
Reviews: Google top-rated, repeat-customer-driven
National Chains & Franchises
Whichever tech is dispatched that day
A call center or answering service
Often, a service or trip charge
Can change once the truck arrives
Frequent push to a full replacement
Often, a second trip to order parts
Multiple visits common
Premium rates, often subcontracted
Spread across a rotating crew
Mixed, volume-driven
Local Conditions

North Texas Conditions That Wear Out Garage Doors

A garage door in Johnson County and the Fort Worth area faces problems that a door in a milder climate never sees. Knowing them is half of fixing a door right the first time.

Blackland clay moves your house

Much of this area sits on expansive clay that swells and shrinks with the rain. As a slab shifts, the opening pulls out of square, and the door binds, rubs, or sticks. The repair is squaring the tracks and rebalancing the door, not a new door.

The first hard freeze snaps tired springs

Cold steel is brittle steel. The morning after the first real freeze, broken-spring calls come in waves as springs near the end of their life give out. It is the most predictable rush in the trade here.

Summer heat is hard on seals and rollers

DFW summers bake a garage, drying and cracking the bottom weather seal and stressing worn rollers and bearings. Heat-shrunk seals let in dust and rainwater; tired rollers get noisy and rough.

Hail and high winds knock doors off track

Storm season brings hail and straight-line winds that dent panels and shove doors off their tracks. Arnold straightens tracks, replaces damaged parts, and provides itemized estimates for insurance claims.

Dust and spider webs blind the safety sensors

Garages here collect fine dust, and the photo-eye sensors are a favorite spot for spider webs. Either can break the beam and leave a door that will not close. It looks like an opener failure, but it is usually a two-minute fix.

Established neighborhoods run original hardware

Many homes around Fort Worth and older Johnson County towns still have their original springs, rollers, and openers. That aging hardware fails predictably, and Arnold carries the parts to bring a decades-old door back to smooth, safe operation.

The Technical Side

How Arnold Diagnoses and Repairs

Why a broken spring, not the opener, is usually why a door will not open

The opener only guides a door; the springs have already counterbalanced it. A balanced door weighs only a few pounds at the lift point because the torsion springs offset its true weight, which can run well over a hundred pounds. When a spring snaps, that counterbalance disappears, and the opener cannot lift the dead weight. The fix is the spring, not a new opener.

Weighing the door to size the correct spring

Springs are not one-size-fits-all. Arnold weighs the door and calculates the wire size, inside diameter, and length required. A mismatched spring leaves the door heavy at the top or floaty at the bottom, wears out early, and stresses the opener. Doing the math up front is the difference between a repair that lasts for years and one that fails in months.

Torsion versus extension springs, and why torsion is safer

Torsion springs mount on a shaft above the door and stay contained when they break. Extension springs run along the tracks and, without safety cables, can fly across the garage when they snap. When Arnold finds an aging extension setup, he can explain the safer torsion conversion.

How springs, cables, and drums fail together

The springs apply tension to the cables, which wrap around the drums to lift the door. Because these three parts share the same load and age, they tend to fail together. Arnold inspects the cables and drums whenever he services springs, so he is not back in a month for the next part in the chain.

Diagnosing the safety reverse and photo-eye system

Every modern opener has a photo-eye system and an auto-reverse. When a door will not close, Arnold checks beam alignment, sensor LEDs, brackets, and wiring before ever suspecting the opener. He also tests the mechanical auto-reverse, a safety check many service calls skip.

Track damage after an impact: straighten or replace

When a vehicle catches a door, the panels and tracks both take the hit. Arnold assesses whether the track can be straightened on site, whether the bend compromised it, and whether the panel can be repaired or needs replacing, often saving the cost of a full door.

Bent panels: repair, single-panel swap, or full door

If you do not care about cosmetics, a dent can often be worked out, though it is more of a Band-Aid than a permanent fix. A single damaged panel can sometimes be swapped if the matching panel is still available. When the impact compromises the structure, replacement is the honest call. You get the real trade-offs.

Why a door opens unevenly or slams shut

A door that rises crooked, jerks, or slams down is almost always a balance problem, a spring losing tension, a cable slipping, or one side dragging. Arnold checks spring tension and balance on both sides because an out-of-balance door strains the opener and cables and only gets worse.

The repair-versus-replace decision on an aging opener

When an opener is roughly ten years old or older, parts get scarce, and a repair can be throwing good money after bad. Newer units are usually a targeted fix, a circuit board, a travel module, or a gear. Arnold weighs age, failure type, and parts availability and tells you honestly which is the better value.

Frequently Asked

Questions Homeowners Ask Arnold

How much does a garage door repair cost?+

It depends on the part, but you get a free on-site estimate and a written quote before any work starts. The quote holds for two weeks.

Can you fix my door the same day?+

Most repair calls can be handled the same day when the schedule allows, because Arnold stocks the common parts on the truck. He also handles after-hours emergency calls for situations that cannot wait, like a door out of track or a car trapped in the garage.

My door will not close, and the opener light is blinking. What is wrong?+

That is almost always the photo-eye safety sensors near the floor, not a failed opener. A bumped bracket, dust, a spider web, or sun glare knocks the beam out of alignment. Arnold realigns and tests it, usually a quick, low-cost fix.

My door will not open at all. Do I need a new opener?+

Usually not. The most common cause is a broken spring, since the spring does the lifting and the opener only guides the door. Arnold diagnoses the real cause first, so you are not buying an opener you do not need.

Is it safe to replace a garage door spring myself?+

No. Springs are under enormous tension and can cause serious injury if they release unexpectedly. Sizing them also requires weighing the door and doing the math. This is genuinely one of the most dangerous DIY repairs.

If only one spring broke, why replace both?+

On a two-spring door, the second spring has the same age and wear as the one that broke and is next in line to fail. Replacing the pair keeps the door balanced and saves you a second service call within months.

My door is crooked or hanging sideways. What happened?+

That is typically a cable off the drum or a door off its track, often after something fell in the door's path or a cable wore through alongside the springs. It is not safe to keep operating, so it is worth a same-day call.

Why is my garage door so loud?+

Grinding, squeaking, and banging usually come from worn steel rollers, dry or loose hinges, or parts that need adjustment. Arnold can quiet most doors quickly, and quieter nylon rollers are a popular upgrade on older steel-roller doors.

Do you repair all brands of doors and openers?+

Yes. Arnold services virtually any brand of door and opener, including LiftMaster, Genie, Chamberlain, DoorLink, CHI, and more. He will also tell you honestly when a brand or unit is worth repairing and when replacement is the better value.

A car backed into my door. Do you repair the panel or replace it?+

It depends on the damage. If the panel is dented but the door is structurally sound, Arnold can often work the dent or repair the section, though he will be honest that it is more of a temporary fix. If a matching panel is available, a single-panel swap is sometimes possible. If the impact bent the tracks or compromised the door, replacement is the honest call.

How do I know if I need a repair or a whole new door?+

Most of the time, you do not need a new door. Arnold's honest answer is to fix what is broken and only recommend a full replacement when the door is genuinely past repair, and he will show you why. A free on-site estimate gives you a straight answer.

★★★★★

What Arnold's Customers Say

Book Your Repair

Garage Door Acting Up? Call Arnold Today.

Whether your door will not open this morning, will not close tonight, or has jumped its track and trapped your car, Arnold is one call away. You talk to the owner, you get a free on-site estimate, and most repairs are finished on the same visit.

Hours

Open for same-day service and after-hours emergency calls. Call, and Arnold will tell you what he can do today.

Service Area

Fort Worth, Alvarado, Burleson, Cleburne, Joshua, Keene, Venus, Grandview, Crowley, Mansfield, Arlington, Kennedale, Benbrook and across DFW.