Garage Doors Illinois

Suburban Chicagoland garage door with a bent, dented top section the morning after a storm, branches scattered across the driveway
Storm response guide

Storm Damaged Your Garage Door in Wheeling? Here’s What to Do

The morning after the June storms tore through the northwest suburbs, my phone did not stop. People in Wheeling, Buffalo Grove, and Arlington Heights woke up to a garage door that would not budge, a panel folded like a soda can, or an opener straining against a door that was clearly off. If that is your morning, take a breath. Most of this is fixable, and the worst mistakes happen in the first ten minutes.

That line of storms brought tornado warnings and hard straight-line winds across northern Illinois. A garage door is the largest moving part of your house. It does not take a direct tornado to wreck one. A gust that drives the door inward while the springs are still under load is enough to bend a track, pop a roller stem, or shove a whole panel out of line.

Do not force it. The single worst thing I see after a storm is a homeowner hitting the wall button over and over on a jammed door. If the door is bent and the opener keeps pulling, you can snap a lift cable, crack a hinge, or bend the track past saving. Stop pressing the button and read the next section first.

First: is it safe to touch?

Before you diagnose anything, look for two things that turn a repair into a hazard. First, water and power. If wind-driven rain got into the garage and reached outlets or the opener motor, kill the breaker to the garage before you do anything else. Second, the springs. On most doors here the counterbalance is a torsion spring mounted on a bar above the opening. If a panel is crushed or the cable has jumped its drum, that spring can still be holding hundreds of pounds of tension. Stay out from under a door that is stuck partway up.

If the door is fully down and will not open, that is the safer failure. If it is stuck halfway, treat it like a loaded trap and keep people and cars out of the bay until it is secured.

What storm damage actually looks like

Fourteen years and a few thousand doors in, storm damage almost always sorts into one of a handful of patterns. Knowing which one you have tells you whether this is a same-day fix or a full section order.

Close-up of a garage door roller pushed out of a bent horizontal track
A roller knocked out of a bent horizontal track. When the track deforms, the roller stem no longer rides true and the door binds on the next cycle.

Bent track and a jumped roller

Wind pressure and debris knock the horizontal or vertical track out of plumb, and a roller pops free. The door binds, catches, or leans to one side. Minor track bends can be straightened and the track alignment reset; a kinked section gets replaced. This is one of the more common storm calls, and it overlaps with everyday garage door roller repair once the track is true again.

A snapped cable or unwound drum

If one side of the door dropped and the other stayed put, look at the cables. A lift cable that frayed or came off the drum leaves the door crooked and dangerous to operate. Do not try to rewind a drum by hand with the spring loaded. That is a garage door cable repair for someone with the winding bars and the training.

A bent or crushed panel

Debris or a pressure spike folds a single section. A panel shift where one section slides out of alignment can sometimes be reset, but a creased panel usually means a section swap. On many models you can replace the damaged section instead of the whole door, which is where knowing your brand and color pays off.

The opener took the hit

Sometimes the door is fine and the opener is not. A power surge during the storm can fry a logic board, or the travel limit and force setting get thrown off when the door binds. Reset those wrong and you make a jam worse. When the motor runs but the door does nothing, that is garage door opener repair territory, not a door problem.

Your first ten minutes, in order

  • Cut the power if there is water. Unplug the opener or flip the breaker before you inspect anything wet. Electricity and a soaked motor head do not mix.
  • Look, do not press. Walk the door from the outside and inside. Note bent track, a loose cable, a folded panel, or a spring that looks stretched or separated. Take photos on your phone while you are there.
  • Pull the manual release only if the door is down. The red cord is the manual release. If the door is fully closed, pulling it lets you check whether the door itself moves freely by hand. If the door is stuck up, leave the release alone.
  • Do a quick balance check, gently. With the opener disconnected and the door down, lift a foot or two by hand. A healthy door holds where you leave it. If it slams down or shoots up, the spring is compromised. That is the point of a balance test, and it tells you not to run the opener again.
  • Secure the bay and call. If anything looks bent, loaded, or off track, keep it closed, keep cars out, and get it inspected before you cycle it.
Garage door technician kneeling beside a partly open residential door, checking track and spring hardware with a level after a storm
Checking track plumb and spring load before touching the opener. Diagnosis first, always.

Here is my one strong opinion after all these years: diagnose before you fix. A storm door can have three problems stacked on top of each other, a tweaked track, a slipped cable, and a scared opener, and if you only chase the loud one you end up back out there in a week. A proper look at the bearing plate, the hinges, the bottom bracket, and the weather seal catches the small stuff before it becomes the next failure.

What repairs cost around here

Homeowners always ask for a number, so here are honest Chicagoland ranges. Storm work varies with door size, brand, and how many parts got hit, but this is the ballpark I quote before I have seen photos.

Storm repairTypical range
Roller replacement (full set)$110 to $180
Track straightening or section swap$150 to $350
Lift cable replacement (pair)$150 to $260
Torsion spring replacement (pair)$220 to $360
Single panel/section replacement$280 to $650
Opener logic board or full unit$180 to $550

If the springs went with the storm, the fix is standard garage door spring repair, and I always replace both springs at once even when one looks fine, because a spring at the end of its spring cycle life is a callback waiting to happen. For a full breakdown by part, our garage door repair pricing page lays it out with no games.

Insurance, documentation, and the freeze-thaw catch

Storm damage is often covered under a homeowner policy, so document everything before any work starts. Photograph the bent track, the folded panel, the debris, and the date. A written estimate that names each part helps the claim move. I am happy to write one that an adjuster can actually read.

One Chicagoland wrinkle worth knowing: a door that took a hit in June and gets patched cheap will show it by January. Our freeze-thaw swings punish a door that is even slightly out of balance, and a track that is a hair off will bind harder once the metal contracts in a Cook County cold snap. Fix it right the first time and it rides out the winter.

When it is a real emergency

Call for same-day help if the door is stuck open and you cannot secure the garage, if a cable or spring has clearly let go, or if the door is leaning and could come down. An open bay after a storm is an invitation, and a loaded spring is a genuine injury risk. That is exactly what emergency garage door repair is for, and there is no shame in making the call instead of wrestling a 150-pound door alone at 6 a.m.

Frequently asked questions

My garage door is stuck halfway after the storm. Can I just push it down?

No. A door stuck partway usually means a jumped roller, an off track, or a compromised spring or lift cable still under load. Forcing it can slam it down or snap a cable. Keep people and cars clear, leave it where it is, and have the hardware inspected before you cycle it again.

The opener runs but the door will not move. What broke?

That pattern almost always means the door is disconnected or jammed rather than the motor failing. The manual release may have been pulled, a roller may be off track, or a spring let go so the opener cannot lift the weight. Check the release and look for a bent track before assuming the opener needs replacing.

Can one bent panel be replaced, or do I need a whole new door?

Often just the section. If the panel is creased but the track, rollers, and springs are sound, many doors let you swap a single section and match the color. A full replacement only makes sense when several panels are damaged or the door was already near the end of its life.

Will my homeowner’s insurance cover storm damage to the garage door?

In many cases yes, wind and debris damage is a common covered peril, but it depends on your policy and deductible. Document the damage with dated photos before any repair, and get a written estimate that itemizes each part so the adjuster can verify the claim quickly.

Not sure how bad it is? Send a photo.

Text or call and we will tell you straight whether it is a same-day fix or a section order, and roughly what it runs, before anyone drives out. Serving Wheeling, Buffalo Grove, Arlington Heights, Northbrook, and the rest of Chicagoland.

Request an inspection

Or call 847-789-1175 for same-day storm response.