Garage Door Opener Cost

How much does a garage door opener cost?

A new garage door opener typically costs about $350–$900 installed nationally: chain drives at the lower end, belt drives mid-range, and wall-mount jackshaft openers roughly $700–$1,400. Smart features, battery backup, and horsepower move the number. Every garage is different — these are typical ranges, and a free estimate gets you the real price.

Typical national range

$350 $900

Typical national range — not our quote

Typical timeframe: Most opener installations: 2–4 hours, including programming and safety tests. Your free estimate gives you the real number, in writing.

Typical ranges

Garage door opener prices by drive type

Typical installed national ranges — unit plus professional installation. Rail length, wiring, and old-opener removal can shift the total.

Chain Drive

Proven and budget-friendly; the loudest option, fine for detached garages

$350 – $650
Belt Drive Most popular

Quiet rubber belt — the pick when bedrooms sit near or above the garage

$450 – $850
Screw Drive

Few moving parts, middle of the pack on noise and price

$400 – $700
Wall-Mount (Jackshaft) Premium

Mounts beside the door, frees the ceiling, ultra quiet — premium choice

$700 – $1,400

Ranges are typical national figures for professionally installed work — not Door Serv Pro prices. Door Serv Pro gives you a free written estimate for your exact door and explains what's behind every line before any work begins.

What moves the number

What affects your garage door opener price

Drive type

Chain is cheapest and loudest; belt costs more and runs quietly; wall-mount jackshaft units cost the most but free your ceiling and are nearly silent. Where your bedrooms sit relative to the garage usually decides it.

Horsepower & motor

A 1/2 HP opener handles most single doors; heavy insulated two-car doors want 3/4 HP or more. Modern DC motors add soft start/stop — easier on the door and quieter in the house.

Smart features

Wi-Fi and app control (like myQ), built-in cameras, and voice-assistant integration add to the unit price. Handy if you've ever turned around to check whether you closed the door — most of us have.

Battery backup

A battery-backup opener still works during power outages — worth considering in storm-prone parts of the Four-State Area where the garage is the main way in and out.

Rail length & door height

Standard rails fit 7-foot doors. An 8-foot or taller door needs a rail extension, and low-headroom or high-lift tracks add hardware and labor.

Installation & old-opener removal

Professional installation includes removing the old unit, mounting, wiring the wall button and safety sensors, programming remotes, and force/limit safety testing — the part DIY installs most often get wrong.

Straight talk

The opener is half the story — the install is the other half

An opener only works as well as the door it's lifting. If the door is out of balance, the opener drags dead weight and dies young — no brand survives that. A proper installation checks door balance first, then sets the force and travel limits and tests the auto-reverse safety system. That's also why we'll tell you honestly when your old opener just needs a $20 part instead of a replacement.

What actually sets your price

  • Drive type and noise level
  • Horsepower for your door's weight
  • Smart features and battery backup
  • Rail length and headroom
  • Door balance and condition (it affects opener lifespan)

Financing available

Spread the cost into comfortable payments

Door Serv Pro offers flexible monthly payment plans through GoodLeap with quick approval — so a garage door opener fits your budget, not the other way around. We'll walk through the options with your free written estimate.

View financing options

Pricing FAQ

Garage Door Opener cost questions, answered

Honest answers to what Four-State Area homeowners ask us most about pricing.

How much does it cost to install a garage door opener if I already bought one?

Labor-only installation of a customer-supplied opener typically runs in the lower hundreds nationally, depending on rail length, wiring, and old-opener removal. One honest caution: big-box units are often lighter-duty versions of the pro lines, and the warranty can differ. We'll quote it straight either way.

Belt drive or chain drive — which should I buy?

If the garage shares a wall or ceiling with living space, get the belt drive — the noise difference is real, every single day. If it's a detached garage, a chain drive does the same job for less. Screw drives split the difference; wall-mount jackshafts are the quiet, premium pick.

Should I repair my old opener or replace it?

A worn gear or a bad sensor on a 6-year-old opener is a sensible repair. An opener from before 1993 lacks modern photo-eye safety reversal and should be replaced regardless of how it runs. In between, age, parts availability, and noise decide it — we'll give you the honest math, not a pitch.

Do smart openers really matter?

For many homeowners, yes — app control means you can check whether the door is closed from anywhere, get alerts when it opens, and let in a delivery or family member without sharing a code. It's an add-on cost, not a must-have; we'll show you both options at your estimate.

What horsepower opener do I need?

A 1/2 HP (or equivalent DC) opener handles most single-car and lighter two-car doors. Heavy insulated two-car doors and wood doors want 3/4 HP or more. Bigger isn't automatically better — a properly balanced door matters more than raw power, which is why we check balance before recommending a unit.

Can I finance a new opener with a new door?

Yes. Openers are commonly bundled into a door replacement estimate, and Door Serv Pro offers flexible monthly payment plans through GoodLeap with quick approval. Bundling also saves a second installation visit — see our financing page or ask when you call.

Reviews

What your neighbors say

4.9 average across 1,700+ reviews

We’d rather you hear it straight from homeowners across the Four-State Area (WV, MD, VA, PA) than take our word for it — read real, unedited reviews on the platforms we can’t edit.

Plan with confidence

Honest, no-pitch guides from local Four-State Area (WV, MD, VA, PA) pros — weigh your options and know the trade-offs before you spend a dollar.

Ready. Set. Pro!

Get a free opener estimate — honest advice included

Free estimates, upfront written pricing, and 24/7 availability across the Four-State Area (WV, MD, VA, PA). You approve the price before any work begins — Ready. Set. Pro!

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