How Much Does It Cost to Replace a Sliding Glass Door Track?
Real numbers, honest breakdowns, and the factors that push the price up or down — so you know exactly what to expect before calling for a quote in South Florida.
- The Quick Numbers
- Full Cost Breakdown by Track Type
- What Affects the Price
- Track Replacement vs. Full Door Replacement
- Combined Track and Roller Jobs
- Does Homeowners Insurance Cover It?
- Is It Worth Replacing the Track on an Older Door?
- Costs in Lee County and Southwest Florida
- Frequently Asked Questions
The first question most homeowners ask before scheduling a sliding door repair is the same one: what is this going to cost? For track replacement specifically, the answer is more straightforward than people expect — and almost always far less than they were afraid of when they realized the track was damaged. Sliding door track replacement is one of the most cost-effective repairs available in residential door maintenance, typically costing 5 to 15 percent of what a full door replacement would run.
This guide gives you real pricing across every track replacement scenario in South Florida — from a basic bottom track swap to a combined track and roller job — along with an honest breakdown of what drives the price up or down. Whether your sliding door is in Fort Myers Beach, Cape Coral, Bonita Springs, or anywhere across Lee County, the numbers below give you a solid baseline before you pick up the phone. A1 Sliding Doors quotes flat all-in rates on every job — no hourly surprises, no parts-separate billing.
Before and after track replacement — restored smooth operation at a fraction of full door replacement cost.
The Quick Numbers
If you need a fast reference before reading the full breakdown, here are the typical all-in costs for track replacement in South Florida by a professional sliding door specialist.
Parts and labor, single-panel residential sliding glass door, standard aluminum frame
This covers the large majority of residential track replacement jobs — a standard 6-foot or 8-foot aluminum-frame patio door with a damaged bottom track. The full range reflects variation in door width, track profile complexity, and whether any threshold preparation work is needed. Most straightforward bottom track jobs in South Florida land between $175 and $250 all-in.
Full Cost Breakdown by Track Type
| Track Type | Typical Cost Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Bottom track — standard residential | $150 – $350 | Parts + labor, most common job type |
| Bottom track — large or wide door | $250 – $450 | 8-foot+ openings, heavier panel handling |
| Screen door track | $75 – $150 | Lighter-duty work, shorter labor time |
| Header (top) track | $100 – $250 | Access difficulty varies by door design |
| Track + roller replacement (combined) | $200 – $450 | Most efficient when both components need work |
| Track + threshold repair | Add $75 – $200 | If subfloor or threshold is damaged |
| Full door replacement | $800 – $3,500+ | Only when frame or glass also requires replacement |
Always get a flat all-in quote before any work starts — not an hourly estimate. A flat quote covers parts and labor together, protects you from scope creep, and lets you compare prices accurately between service providers. Any reputable sliding door specialist will provide one before touching the door.
What Affects the Price
Understanding what drives track replacement cost up or down helps you assess whether a quote is reasonable and what questions to ask before scheduling.
Track Length and Door Width
Replacement track extrusion is priced by the linear foot. A standard 6-foot sliding door uses less material than an 8-foot or 10-foot opening. The labor time also scales with door width — wider doors mean more track to extract and install, and more distance to cover during threshold preparation and sealing.
Panel Weight and Glass Type
Track replacement requires removing the door panel to access and extract the old track. Standard glass panels weigh 80 to 130 pounds — manageable with two people in normal time. Impact glass panels in Lee County and Southwest Florida homes often weigh 150 to 200 pounds, require more careful handling, and add labor time. This is the single most significant variable that separates a $175 job from a $350 job on the same track type.
Threshold Condition
If the threshold surface where the track sits is clean concrete or solid tile, track extraction and installation is straightforward. If the threshold shows water damage, rotted wood subfloor, cracked concrete, or significant corrosion around the old track fastener holes, that work needs to be addressed before the new track can be properly secured. Threshold preparation adds $75 to $200 depending on the extent of the damage.
Parts Availability
Standard aluminum track extrusions in common widths are typically in stock and available same day. Custom or proprietary track profiles for specific door brands — particularly older PGT or CGI systems in Lee County — may require sourcing from a specialty supplier, which can add a parts procurement delay. A technician who services Southwest Florida regularly will usually carry the most common profiles in their vehicle.
Combined Work
When track and roller replacement are done together, the combined job costs less than two separate visits. The door panel is already removed for track access, so roller replacement at the same time adds minimal incremental labor. If your track needs replacing and your rollers are showing wear, scheduling both at once is almost always the more economical approach.
Old track removal — the condition of the threshold underneath determines whether prep work is needed.
New track installed and secured — the door glides cleanly on a fresh rail surface.
Track Replacement vs. Full Door Replacement
This comparison comes up in almost every track replacement conversation, and the numbers make the answer clear in most situations.
| Option | Typical Cost | Permit Required? | Time to Complete |
|---|---|---|---|
| Track replacement | $150 – $450 | No | 1 to 3 hours same day |
| Track + roller replacement | $200 – $450 | No | 2 to 3 hours same day |
| Standard door replacement | $800 – $1,800 | Usually yes | Full day + permit timeline |
| Impact door replacement | $1,500 – $3,500+ | Yes — always | Full day + permit + inspection |
The cost differential is significant, but the permit and timeline comparison matters just as much. Track replacement is a same-day service call with no permits, no inspectors, no construction mess, and no disruption to the home beyond the few hours the technician is on site. Full door replacement in most Lee County municipalities requires a permit, a licensed contractor, and an inspection before the job is officially closed. For a door whose glass and frame are in good condition, replacing the track is the correct decision in the vast majority of cases.
In Lee County and throughout Southwest Florida, full door replacement requires a permit. An unpermitted replacement discovered during a real estate transaction can delay or derail a sale and require costly remediation. Track replacement — which does not require a permit — avoids this risk entirely while restoring the door's full functionality.
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Flat-rate pricing, no surprises, warranty on every job. Serving Lee County, Bonita Springs, Fort Myers, Cape Coral, Naples, and all of South Florida.
Combined Track and Roller Jobs
One of the most important cost decisions in sliding door repair is whether to address the track and rollers together or separately. Here's why combining them almost always makes financial sense when both components are showing wear.
The most labor-intensive part of both track replacement and roller replacement is removing and reinstalling the door panel. That step is required for both repairs. If the panel is already off for track replacement, adding roller replacement at the same time costs only the additional parts plus a small amount of incremental labor — typically $50 to $100 more than doing the track alone. Scheduling roller replacement as a second visit after track replacement would cost $150 to $200 in labor alone for that visit.
More importantly, installing new rollers on a damaged track and then replacing the track later means the rollers are operating on a degraded surface during the interim — accelerating wear on components you just paid for. The correct sequence when both need work is to replace the track first and install new rollers simultaneously on the fresh track surface. Our sliding door track service covers the full assessment of which components need attention and provides a combined quote before any work begins.
Does Homeowners Insurance Cover It?
This question comes up often, particularly after storm season in Southwest Florida. The short answer is: not for wear and tear, but sometimes for event-related damage.
Standard homeowners insurance policies exclude gradual deterioration and normal wear — a track that has corroded over 10 years of coastal exposure, or worn grooves from years of roller contact, falls into this category. The insurance company won't pay for that.
However, if the track was damaged by a specific covered event — hurricane storm debris that bent or cracked the track, a break-in that damaged the door, or a falling object — the repair may be covered subject to your deductible. In Lee County, which has been in the path of significant hurricane activity, storm-related track damage claims are not uncommon. Document the damage with photos immediately after the event, before any cleanup or temporary repairs, and contact your insurer before scheduling the replacement. A written assessment from a licensed technician describing the damage and its likely cause can support the claim.
Is It Worth Replacing the Track on an Older Door?
For most older doors, yes — by a significant margin. If the door frame is structurally sound and the glass is intact, replacing the track restores the door's operating surface completely. The door functions like new, seals properly against weather, and locks correctly. The cost is a fraction of replacement, and there's no permit process, no construction disruption, and no waiting.
The one scenario where the calculation shifts is when the door is non-impact-rated and a hurricane hardening project is already on the homeowner's near-term agenda. In that case, combining the track repair budget with a broader impact door upgrade might make financial and practical sense — particularly for Lee County homes that have seen multiple hurricane impacts and are already planning resilience upgrades. In that specific situation, a technician can help you think through the numbers honestly rather than just recommending one approach over another.
Costs in Lee County and Southwest Florida
Track replacement pricing in Lee County is consistent with the South Florida averages above. The variables that most commonly push jobs toward the higher end of the price range in this market are impact glass panels — which are near-universal in post-2004 construction in Cape Coral, Fort Myers, and Bonita Springs — and older proprietary track systems in communities like Pelican Landing, Gateway, and Estero where specific door brands were heavily used during the 1990s and early 2000s.
Fort Myers Beach properties that sustained damage during recent hurricane seasons represent a specific segment where track replacement has been common alongside broader door system repairs. In these cases, accurate documentation of the damage source — wind-driven debris vs. gradual wear — is important for the insurance coverage question above. For a straight assessment of what your Lee County door actually needs and what it will cost, get a free estimate — we'll give you the all-in price before we start.
Know the Price Before You Decide
Serving Lee County, Fort Myers, Cape Coral, Bonita Springs, Naples, and all of South Florida. Free estimates, flat-rate pricing, same-day service available.
Frequently Asked Questions
Bottom track replacement in South Florida typically runs $150 to $350 for most residential sliding glass doors, including parts and labor. Combined track and roller replacement runs $200 to $450. Screen door track replacement costs $75 to $150. Full door replacement — only needed when the frame or glass is also damaged — costs $800 to $3,500 or more.
Significantly cheaper. Track replacement costs $150 to $350 for most residential doors. Full sliding glass door replacement costs $800 to $3,500 or more, plus permits and installation time. Unless the glass is broken or the frame is severely damaged, track replacement is the correct and far more cost-effective repair.
Key factors include the type of track being replaced, door width and track length, whether the threshold needs repair, whether rollers also need replacing, parts availability for the specific door brand, and panel weight. Impact glass doors add labor cost due to heavier panel handling requirements.
Not for normal wear and tear. If the track was damaged by a specific covered event — hurricane debris, a break-in, or an accident — the repair may be covered after your deductible. Document the damage with photos immediately and contact your insurer before scheduling the repair.
A professional technician typically completes a bottom track replacement in 1 to 2 hours, including door panel removal, track extraction, new track installation, and door reinstallation with adjustment. Combined track and roller replacement may take 2 to 3 hours. Full same-day completion is standard for most residential jobs.
Yes, in most cases. If the frame is straight and the glass is intact, replacing the track on a 15 to 20 year old door restores smooth operation for years at a fraction of full replacement cost. The exception is when a hurricane hardening upgrade is already planned — in that case, combining the budget with a full impact door replacement may make more financial sense.