Every garage door spring will eventually break. The question is whether it happens on your schedule or at the worst possible moment.
A broken spring is the number one reason for emergency garage door calls. The good news: springs almost always give warning signs before they fail completely. Knowing what to watch for can save you from being stuck outside your garage at 6 AM.
Understanding Spring Lifespan
Garage door springs are rated in cycles, not years. One cycle = one open and one close. The lifespan of your springs depends on two things: their cycle rating and how often you use the door.
Standard Spring Ratings
| Spring Type | Typical Rating | Cost Level |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 10,000 cycles | Basic |
| High-cycle | 25,000 cycles | Mid-range |
| Commercial-grade | 50,000+ cycles | Premium |
Most builder-installed springs are standard 10,000-cycle springs. They’re adequate but don’t last as long as upgraded options.
Translating Cycles to Years
Here’s the math for a typical household:
| Daily Use | 10,000-Cycle Spring | 25,000-Cycle Spring |
|---|---|---|
| 2 times/day | 13-14 years | 34+ years |
| 4 times/day | 6-7 years | 17 years |
| 6 times/day | 4-5 years | 11 years |
| 8 times/day | 3-4 years | 8-9 years |
Think about your actual usage. A household with two working adults and a teenager with a car might open the door 6-8 times daily. A retired couple who mostly stays home might only cycle it twice.
The takeaway: Standard springs in an active household often last just 4-6 years. That’s not a manufacturing defect. That’s just how springs work.
The Two Types of Garage Door Springs
Torsion Springs
Located on a metal shaft above the door opening. These are the most common type in modern residential doors.
Pros:
- Smoother, more controlled door operation
- Longer lifespan than extension springs
- Contained when they break (don’t fly across the garage)
- Better for heavier doors
Cons:
- Higher replacement cost
- Require professional installation (dangerous under tension)
Extension Springs
Located on both sides of the door, running parallel to the horizontal tracks.
Pros:
- Less expensive to purchase
- Easier to access for inspection
Cons:
- Can be dangerous when they break (whipping potential)
- Don’t last as long as torsion springs
- Less smooth operation, more stress on opener
If you have extension springs without safety cables running through them, consider adding cables. They contain the spring if it breaks, preventing it from becoming a projectile.
Warning Signs Your Springs Are Wearing Out
Springs rarely fail without warning. Here’s what to watch for:
1. The Door Feels Heavier
With the opener disconnected (pull the red release cord), try lifting the door by hand. A healthy door with functioning springs should lift easily to waist height with one hand.
If you need two hands or your back complains, the springs are losing tension.
2. The Door Doesn’t Stay Open
Lift the door halfway and let go. It should stay in place, maybe drifting an inch or two.
If it falls back down or shoots up, the springs are out of balance. This puts extra strain on the opener and accelerates wear on all components.
3. Visible Gaps in the Coils
Look at your torsion spring. The coils should be tight and evenly spaced. If you see a gap of half an inch or more between coils, the spring is stretched and weakening.
A fully broken spring will have an obvious 1-3 inch gap, usually near the center.
4. The Opener Strains
Your opener is designed to work with balanced springs doing most of the lifting. When springs weaken, the motor compensates, working harder than intended.
Signs of strain:
- Slower opening speed
- Grinding or laboring sounds
- Motor feeling hot after operation
- Door hesitating or jerking during travel
5. Squeaking or Creaking Noises
Some noise is normal, but a spring making sounds it didn’t used to make is telling you something. Metal fatigue changes how components resonate.
6. Rust or Corrosion
Rust weakens springs and accelerates cycle degradation. In South Florida’s humidity, springs without protective coating deteriorate faster.
If you see visible rust, your springs are losing lifespan even if they still function today.
What Happens When a Spring Breaks
When a torsion spring snaps, you’ll know it. The sound is unmistakable: a loud bang like a gunshot. People often think something fell in the garage or someone broke in.
After the break:
- The door will be extremely heavy to lift (150-400 lbs)
- The opener may not be able to raise it at all
- The door may have dropped suddenly when the spring failed
Important: If your door closed while the spring broke, don’t try to force it open. The opener isn’t designed to lift that weight and will burn out trying.
Spring Replacement: What to Expect
Should You DIY?
We strongly advise against DIY spring replacement. Torsion springs hold 200+ pounds of stored energy when wound. Improper handling causes serious injuries every year, including broken bones, lacerations, and worse.
Extension springs are somewhat safer to handle but still require proper technique and tools.
Why Replace in Pairs?
If one torsion spring broke, its partner is the same age with the same number of cycles. It’s statistically close to failure too.
Replacing both at once costs marginally more for parts and saves:
- A second service call fee (typically $29-49)
- A second round of labor charges
- Another day of scheduling and waiting
We’ve seen customers insist on single-spring replacement to save money, then call back within 90 days when the second spring fails. Every time, they regret not doing both.
Typical Costs
| Service | Price Range |
|---|---|
| Single torsion spring | $200 – $300 |
| Pair of torsion springs | $300 – $450 |
| High-cycle upgrade (pair) | $400 – $550 |
Upgrading to High-Cycle Springs
When replacing worn-out standard springs, consider upgrading to high-cycle springs. The price difference is typically $75-150 more than standard springs.
For a door you’ll use for many more years, high-cycle springs often pay for themselves by lasting 2-3x longer.
Extending Your Spring Lifespan
Lubricate Regularly
Apply silicone-based lubricant to springs twice yearly. This reduces friction, prevents rust, and allows the coils to move smoothly. Avoid WD-40 for this purpose. It’s a solvent, not a lasting lubricant.
Maintain Balance
Annual balance checks identify wear before failure. If the door drifts when stopped halfway, get the springs adjusted.
Control Humidity
In garages with poor ventilation, humidity accelerates rust. A small dehumidifier or improved ventilation can extend spring life.
Reduce Unnecessary Cycles
Every open/close costs spring life. If you’re leaving and returning multiple times in quick succession, consider keeping the door up until your last trip.
Schedule Preventive Replacement
If your springs are approaching their cycle limit and showing any warning signs, consider proactive replacement. Scheduling a repair on your terms beats an emergency call on a Monday morning when you’re trying to get to work.
We’re happy to inspect your springs and give you an honest assessment of their remaining life. No charge for that conversation, and no pressure to replace something that doesn’t need it yet.