Entry Door Repair in St. Louis
Front doors, side doors, back doors, and entry doors to the garage — fixed right. Licensed, insured, and phones answered 24/7.
Entry Door Repair in St. Louis
Most entry door problems in St. Louis — sticking in summer, drafts in winter, latches that miss, weatherstripping that’s worn out, or thresholds that have shifted — can be fixed without replacing the door. FIX St. Louis diagnoses the real cause and repairs it, typically in a single visit. We handle front doors, side doors, rear entry doors, and doors to the garage — with no minimum job size and a firm quote before any work begins.
Your Entry Door Does More Work Than Any Door in the House
It opens and closes multiple times every day. It takes the full force of St. Louis weather — humid summers that swell wood, cold winters that shrink it, and spring storms that push rain and wind against every seal and gap. It’s the first thing guests see and the first thing that affects your energy bill.
When an entry door starts to fail — sticking, drafting, not latching — most homeowners assume it needs replacing. In most cases, it doesn’t. The door itself is usually fine. It’s the hardware, the weatherstripping, the threshold, the hinges, or the frame that needs attention.
FIX St. Louis has been solving entry door problems for St. Louis homeowners for years. We carry the parts, we know the problems, and we give you a firm quote before we touch anything. See why St. Louis homeowners choose us — no surprises, no minimum job size.
Why Entry Doors Act Up: The St. Louis Seasonal Pattern
If your door is harder to open in July than it was in January, that’s not a coincidence. St. Louis weather puts entry doors through a specific cycle of stress:
| Season | What Happens to Your Entry Door |
|---|---|
| Summer | Wood swells from humidity — doors stick, won’t close fully, or require a shoulder to latch. Gaps close up and weatherstripping gets pinched. |
| Fall | Frames begin to shift as temperatures drop. Locksets and latches may start missing their strike plates. |
| Winter | Cold causes wood to contract, creating gaps where drafts enter. Thresholds gap at the bottom. Weatherstripping becomes brittle and cracks. |
| Spring | Freeze/thaw cycles move frames. Brickmold and exterior trim can separate. Rotting begins if winter moisture got in. |
Dr. Steve’s Pro Tip:
The most common entry door call we get in July is ‘my front door won’t shut without really pushing it.’ Nine times out of ten, it’s humidity swelling the door into the frame. The fix is a quick plane of the binding edge — not a new door. Wait until fall and that same door might start letting cold air in through a gap. Same door, opposite problem, same solution: the frame, not the door.
Entry Door Problems We Fix in St. Louis
Here’s a complete look at what FIX St. Louis handles on entry doors. This isn’t a partial list — it’s everything. For the full picture of our door services, visit our Doors page.
| Problem | What We Do |
|---|---|
| Door hard to open or close | Diagnose cause — frame settling, humidity swelling, hinge sag, or threshold interference — and fix the root issue, not just the symptom. |
| Door rubs against frame or floor | Plane, sand, or adjust hinges to restore proper clearance. |
| Won’t fully click shut / latch misses | Adjust or replace strike plate; correct hinge alignment. |
| Gaps where light or air comes through | Replace weatherstripping, door sweep, or threshold; adjust brickmold. |
| Weatherstripping worn or missing | Remove old stripping and install new compression or kerf-style seal. |
| Door sweep damaged or dragging | Replace sweep; adjust height for proper seal without drag. |
| Threshold cracked or uneven | Repair or replace threshold; re-seal as needed. |
| Inside casing trim loose or damaged | Re-secure, repair, or replace interior casing. |
| Outside brickmold damaged or rotted | Replace brickmold sections; caulk and prime for weather protection. |
| Decorative side lites (sidelights) damaged | Repair or replace side lite glass or framing. |
| Rotted entry trim, columns, or pediment | Remove rot, sister in new framing where needed, and restore trim. |
| Doorknob or lockset not working | Adjust, repair, or replace lockset hardware. |
| Doorbell not working | Diagnose and repair or replace wired or wireless doorbell. |
| Video doorbell camera needs replacement | Install or replace video doorbell unit. |
| Door needs full replacement | Source and install new entry door slab or full unit. |
The Most Common Entry Door Problems — And What’s Actually Going On
Dr. Steve’s Take:
A drafty entry door in St. Louis winter isn’t just uncomfortable — it’s measurable energy waste on every utility bill. Dr. Steve dedicated an entire column to this, walking through the four places a drafty entry door leaks and what the fix is for each. Weatherstripping and door sweeps are the most common culprits, and they’re among the least expensive repairs we make on entry doors.
From Dr. Steve’s Tips: Maybe That’s Why Your Home is as Drafty as a Flight on Alaska Airlines
Dr. Steve’s Take:
St. Louis storms — and we get real ones — accelerate exterior wood deterioration faster than most homeowners realize. Dr. Steve covered exactly this in a column on weather resilience: the entry door’s brickmold and decorative trim are the first places to check after a wet spring or a bad storm season. Rot caught early is a straightforward repair. Rot ignored becomes a structural issue.
From Dr. Steve’s Tips: Can Your House Stare a Hurricane in the Eye?
Keep Your Entry Door Working: A Simple Maintenance Schedule
Entry doors don’t need much attention — but they do need some. Here’s what Dr. Steve recommends to keep yours operating well through St. Louis seasons. For more home maintenance guidance, visit Dr. Steve’s Tips.
| Frequency | What to Check |
|---|---|
| Monthly | Test that the door opens, closes, and latches smoothly. Check that the deadbolt throws fully without forcing. |
| Each Season | Run your hand along the door edges when it’s windy or very cold. Feel for drafts at the sweep, threshold, and weatherstripping sides. |
| Spring | Inspect brickmold and exterior trim for winter damage. Check caulk lines for cracking. Look for any soft spots suggesting rot. |
| Fall | Apply a light coat of lubricant to hinges and lockset. Check door sweep for wear. Replace weatherstripping if it’s cracked or flattened. |
| Annually | Have a professional eye on your entry door — especially if it’s older, if you’ve noticed changes in operation, or if your home has settled noticeably. |
Dr. Steve’s Pro Tip:
Never use WD-40 on door hinges. It’s a solvent, not a lubricant — it strips grease, attracts dirt, and makes the squeak return faster. Use a dry silicone spray or a white lithium grease instead. One application lasts a full year and won’t stain the frame.
FAQs
Entry Door Repair in St. Louis
Ready to Fix Your Entry Door? We’re Ready to Help.
Whether your front door is fighting you every time you come home, letting cold air in all winter, or just looking rough around the edges — we’ll take a look, tell you exactly what’s going on, and fix it in one visit. Firm quote upfront. No minimum job size. Phones answered 24/7.