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Sliding Interior Door Repair in St. Louis — Bypass, Pocket & Barn-Style

Sliding doors off track, stuck in the wall, dragging on the floor, or missing hardware — all types repaired with no minimum job size.


Sliding Interior Door Repair in St. Louis


Most sliding interior door problems in St. Louis — bypass closet doors that fall off their tracks, pocket doors that are stuck or jammed, barn-style doors that drag or wobble — come down to worn rollers, dirty or damaged tracks, or misaligned hardware. In almost every case the door itself does not need replacing. FIX St. Louis handles all three sliding door types, gives you a firm quote, and fixes it in one visit. No minimum job size.

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Three Types of Sliding Interior Doors — One Team That Fixes All of Them

Sliding interior doors come in three distinct types, and they’re different enough mechanically that a handyman who knows one does not automatically know the others. FIX St. Louis handles all three — bypass sliding closet doors, pocket doors, and barn-style sliding doors — with the same firm-quote, no-minimum-job-size approach.

Dr. Steve highlighted stuck and non-functioning interior doors in Fix St. Louis Honors Time Magazine’s Person of the Year, and again in What Stranded Astronauts Are Teaching Us About Home Repairs — the consistent theme: a door that doesn’t work is a daily frustration that usually has a fast, inexpensive fix. See why St. Louis homeowners trust us before any work begins.

TypeDescriptionKey HardwareRepair Access
Bypass slidingTwo panels that slide in parallel tracks; one panel overlaps the other. Found in closets and laundry rooms. Stays on the wall.Rollers, track, floor guideModerate
Pocket doorSingle panel that slides into a concealed cavity inside the wall. Found in bathrooms, home offices, older St. Louis homes.Rollers, track hidden in wall, floor guideHigher — wall access often required
Barn-style slidingSingle or double panel that hangs from an exposed rail above the opening. Surface-mounted hardware. Found in renovated or modern spaces.Overhead rail, roller hangers, floor guideLower — hardware is surface-accessible
The table above covers the key differences between door types. The most important is repair access: bypass and barn-style hardware is surface-accessible, while pocket door hardware is concealed inside the wall. That distinction affects what a repair involves and how long it takes.

Sliding Interior Door Services FIX St. Louis Handles

Here is the complete list of what we do. This covers all three sliding interior door types. For the full picture of our door services, visit our Doors page.

ProblemWhat We Do
Hard to openDiagnose roller, track, or floor guide issue; clean, adjust, or replace as needed.
Hard to closeAdjust roller height; check track alignment and floor guide position.
Rubs against floorRaise rollers via adjustment screws; address flooring height change if recent install.
Falls off its trackRe-seat door on track; replace worn rollers or damaged track sections.
Track is loose or missingRe-anchor track; straighten or replace damaged sections.
Door detached or missingRe-hang existing door or source and install a replacement panel.
Swings in and out at bottomInstall or replace floor guide; correct roller height so door hangs plumb.
Needs floor guidesInstall correct floor guide type for the door system and flooring surface.
Pocket door hard to open or stuckClean track; lubricate rollers; adjust roller height; assess for screw intrusion.
Pocket door off trackRemove trim to access hardware; re-seat rollers; repair or replace as needed.
Pocket door needs installationFrame cavity, install track and hardware, hang and align door panel.
Knobs or finger pulls neededInstall surface-mounted pulls appropriate for the door type.
Door needs replacementSource correct panel size and style; hang and align in existing track system.
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The Most Common Sliding Interior Door Problems in St. Louis

Bypass Sliding Closet Doors: Off Track, Dragging, or Swinging Out

Bypass sliding closet doors — the two-panel type that slide past each other in parallel tracks — are the most common sliding interior door in St. Louis homes. They appear in bedrooms, laundry rooms, and utility spaces, and they develop a predictable set of problems over time.

The most frequent issue is a door that falls off the top track. The rollers at the top of each panel ride in a channel track mounted to the header. When those rollers wear out or crack, or when the track loosens from the header, the panel drops. The door also swings in and out at the bottom when the floor guide is missing or damaged — the floor guide is the small bracket at the bottom center that keeps the panels plumb.

Dragging on the floor usually means the rollers have worn down enough to lower the door’s hanging height. Most bypass door roller systems have adjustment screws that raise the door back to the correct clearance. If the flooring height has changed from a recent install, that adjustment may not provide enough lift — in that case we assess the options before recommending anything.

Dr. Steve’s Pro Tip:

If your bypass closet door is dragging on carpet or a new floor, try the roller adjustment screws before calling anyone. They’re usually accessible on the roller housing at the top of the door panel — turn them clockwise to raise the door. If you can’t locate them or the adjustment doesn’t provide enough lift, that’s when to call us. It’s a quick look and a fast fix either way.

Pocket Doors: Stuck, Hard to Slide, Off Track, or Jammed

Pocket doors are the most common sliding door type in older St. Louis homes — particularly the brick bungalows, four-squares, and craftsman-style homes built between 1900 and 1960. They’re also appearing in newer construction where space is at a premium and a standard swing door would conflict with furniture or fixtures.

Pocket door problems fall into two categories: problems you can solve without touching the wall, and problems that require accessing the hardware concealed inside it.
In the first category: a pocket door that is hard to slide is almost always a dirty track, worn rollers, or both. Vacuuming the top track channel and applying silicone spray resolves a surprising number of pocket door complaints. If the door has dropped and no longer closes flush with the wall, roller height adjustment — accessible through the door opening without removing anything — often corrects it.

In the second category: a pocket door that has come off its track, whose rollers are worn through, or whose track is bent or broken requires removing the door stop trim around the opening to access the hardware. This is more involved than a standard sliding door repair, but it is not a wall demolition. In most cases we remove a small trim piece, replace the hardware, and reinstall the trim in a single visit.

Dr. Steve’s Take:

One of the most common ‘mysteries’ we see with pocket doors: the door was fine until someone hung shelves or a TV on the wall next to it. A single drywall screw that penetrates into the pocket cavity can stop the door cold. Before calling us, think about any recent wall work near the pocket. If someone drilled into that wall in the last few months, that’s almost certainly what happened.

Dr. Steve’s Tips: So, Is It a SMALL World After All?

Barn-Style Sliding Doors: Noisy, Wobbly, Off the Rail, or Improperly Installed

Barn-style sliding doors — panels that hang from an exposed overhead rail on surface-mounted hardware — have become popular in St. Louis home renovations and new construction over the past decade. They’re a practical solution where a swing door would consume too much floor space, and they add visual character to a room.

The most common barn door problems are: a grinding or clanking noise when the door moves (dirty or dry roller hangers), a door that wobbles or swings away from the wall (missing or incorrect floor guide), and a door that hangs unevenly or has come off the rail (loose mounting hardware or worn roller hangers).

Barn-style hardware is surface-accessible, which makes repairs straightforward compared to pocket doors. We clean and lubricate the rail and rollers, install or replace floor guides, re-anchor loose mounting hardware, and replace worn roller hangers. Because the hardware is visible, alignment issues are easier to diagnose on-site.

One note specific to barn-style installations: the mounting rail must be anchored into wall studs or a structural backing board — not just drywall. A rail anchored only into drywall will pull out under the weight of a heavy door, and the failure is usually sudden. If your barn door rail is starting to sag or the anchors are showing movement, this needs attention before the door comes down.

Dr. Steve’s Take:

Door latches on sliding interior doors are often the last thing homeowners think about and the first thing that creates a security or privacy problem. A barn-style bathroom door that doesn’t latch, or a pocket door with a failed privacy lock, is an issue worth fixing. These are simple hardware replacements that make a real difference.

Dr. Steve’s Tips: What Stranded Astronauts Are Teaching Us About Home Repairs

Sliding Interior Doors in St. Louis Homes: What to Know

Pocket doors are particularly common in St. Louis’s older housing stock. Many homes built between 1900 and 1940 were designed with pocket doors between parlors, dining rooms, and living spaces — the sliding door was the original open-plan solution before open-plan became a design trend. These older pocket door systems often use hardware that is decades old, and when they fail, finding correct replacement parts requires some experience with period hardware.

FIX St. Louis has repaired pocket doors in homes throughout Kirkwood, Webster Groves, Brentwood, Maplewood, and surrounding communities that still have their original sliding door systems. If your home is pre-WWII and you have pocket doors that have not been touched since they were installed, we are familiar with what we will find when we get into that wall — which makes the diagnosis and repair faster.

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Simple Maintenance to Keep Sliding Interior Doors Working

Sliding doors need very little maintenance — but that little bit matters disproportionately. Here’s what Dr. Steve recommends. For more home maintenance guidance, visit Dr. Steve’s Tips.

Dr. Steve’s Pro Tip:

For pocket doors specifically: before any renovation, tell your contractor where your pocket doors are. Shelves, TV mounts, and artwork installation have a way of finding the worst possible locations. A screw through the wall into the pocket cavity is one of the most common and entirely preventable pocket door failures we fix.

FrequencyWhat to Do
MonthlyOpen and close every sliding interior door fully. Any that drag, feel gritty, or resist movement should be flagged — catching it early means a track cleaning or lubrication, not a roller replacement.
SeasonallyVacuum the floor track channels on bypass and barn-style doors. Hair, dust, and debris pack into tracks quickly and create drag that wears rollers faster than normal use does.
Twice yearlyApply dry silicone spray to rollers and track channels. On barn-style doors, apply to the overhead rail and roller hangers. Never use oil-based lubricants or WD-40 — they attract grit and accelerate wear.
After any wall workIf anyone drills into walls adjacent to a pocket door — for shelves, TVs, pictures, or artwork — check that no screws or nails have penetrated into the pocket cavity. A single errant screw can jam a pocket door completely.

FAQs

Sliding Interior Door Repair in St. Louis

314-434-4100

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Phones Answered 24/7

314-254-8006

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Online Form

Free Quote

Sliding Door Off Track? Pocket Door Stuck? We’ll Fix It.

Whether it’s a bypass closet door that won’t stay on the track, a pocket door that hasn’t moved in years, or a barn door that grinds every time you open it — these repairs are usually faster than you think. Dr. Steve noted in So, Is It a SMALL World After All? that door problems are among the small repairs that most consistently improve daily quality of life. Firm quote upfront. No minimum job size. Phones answered around the clock.

Contact FIX St. Louis — Sliding Interior Door Repair

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FIX St. Louis • 50 River Bend Dr, St. Louis, MO 63017
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