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Stair Repair in St. Louis – Railings, Balusters, Handrails & Treads

A wobbly stair railing is a safety hazard, not an inconvenience. We fix it correctly, with no minimum job size.


Stair Repair in St. Louis


FIX St. Louis repairs and installs stair railings, handrails, balusters, and stair treads in St. Louis homes. A wobbly or loose railing is a fall hazard and should be addressed promptly not monitored. We diagnose the specific anchor failure, repair it correctly into structural framing, and restore the railing to full service. We also install attic pull-down ladders. No minimum job size. Firm quote before any work begins. Phones answered 24/7.

314-434-4100

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314-254-8006

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Wobbly Stair Railings Are a Fall Hazard – Not a Minor Inconvenience

Approximately 15% of home accidents involve stairs. A railing that moves under hand pressure has failed at its anchor point and the failure progresses with every use. A railing that seemed marginally loose in January can fail entirely by spring. If your stair railing moves when you shake it, address it before someone in your household puts their full weight on it.

FIX St. Louis repairs loose and wobbly stair railings as a priority service. Call 314-434-4100 to schedule.

Stair Services FIX St. Louis Handles

ServiceWhat We Do
Repair broken stair rail balustersRemove and replace broken or missing balusters; match existing style where possible.
Tighten wobbly stair railingsDiagnose anchor point failure; re-secure with correct hardware into framing.
Install stair banistersInstall complete banister system — posts, rail, and balusters — on open stair side.
Secure loose handrailsRe-anchor wall-mounted handrails with correct bracket and fastener into wall studs.
Install new handrailsInstall wall-mounted handrail on closed stair side at correct height and angle.
Repair detaching stair treadsRe-secure stair treads that have lifted, cracked, or separated from the riser.
Replace deteriorated stair treadsRemove and replace worn, cracked, or rotted stair treads; match existing profile.
Install attic laddersInstall pull-down attic stair unit in ceiling opening; insulate and trim as needed.
314-434-4100

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Phones Answered 24/7

314-254-8006

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Stair Problems FIX St. Louis Fixes

Wobbly or Loose Stair Railings

A railing that moves when you shake it has failed at one or more anchor points. Identifying exactly where the failure is occurring is the starting point for the correct repair.

The most common failure locations: the newel post (the large structural post at the top or bottom of the stair) has loosened at its base connection to the floor or stair framing; the balusters have loosened where they connect to the handrail or to the base rail; or the handrail bracket has pulled away from the wall. Each requires a different repair approach, and attempting to fix the wrong one leaves the railing still unsafe.

The correct repair in every case anchors the hardware into structural framing wall studs, floor joists, or stair stringers not just into drywall or surface-mounted material. A railing anchor driven only into drywall will not hold load and will fail again. We verify the anchor point reaches framing before closing the repair.

Dr. Steve’s Take:

Loose stair railings are explicitly on Dr. Steve’s list of pre-sale repair priorities — and for good reason. A wobbly railing is one of the first things a home inspector flags and one of the things buyers specifically test during showings. But the more important reason to fix it is the one that doesn’t involve selling: someone in your household is going to put their full weight on that railing one day, and it needs to hold.

From Dr. Steve’s Tips: Simple Repairs to Enhance Your Home’s Resale Value (No Renovations!)

Broken or Missing Balusters

Balusters are the vertical members that run between the handrail and the base rail or stair tread. A broken or missing baluster creates a gap in the railing system and compromises both the structural integrity of the railing and the safety barrier it provides particularly for children.

Baluster replacement involves matching the existing style (turned wood, square wood, wrought iron, or metal) and reattaching at both the top and bottom connection points with appropriate hardware. A baluster that is simply glued at the top and drilled at the bottom will not hold under load. We use the correct mechanical connection for the baluster type.

Dr. Steve’s Pro Tip:

Before calling for baluster replacement, take a photo of the existing balusters close-up of the profile and full-height. Style matching is the most time-consuming part of baluster replacement, and a clear photo lets us source the correct match before the visit. In St. Louis, where older homes often have turned or tapered wood profiles that are no longer standard, having a match in hand on day one keeps the repair to a single visit.

Loose or Missing Handrails on Walls

Wall-mounted handrails on the closed side of stairs the single rail attached to brackets on the wall pull out of the wall when the brackets are anchored only into drywall rather than studs. Re-anchoring means locating the wall studs, repositioning the brackets to align with them, and using screws long enough to reach structural framing. Where stud spacing does not align with ideal bracket spacing, we use toggle anchors rated for the load.

Detaching or Deteriorated Stair Treads

Stair treads that have lifted from the riser, cracked across the width, or deteriorated from moisture exposure (on exterior stairs particularly) are both an aesthetic and a safety issue. A tread that moves underfoot or has a sharp cracked edge is a hazard for anyone using the stairs.

Treads that have detached but are otherwise intact can be re-secured with construction adhesive and finish screws driven from above the trick is driving the screws at an angle that misses the riser below and holds without splitting the tread. Treads that are cracked or deteriorated beyond repair are replaced with new material matched to the existing profile and finish.

Dr. Steve’s Take:

Dr. Steve covered stair safety in a column on knowing when not to DIY. Stair repairs particularly railing anchoring and tread securing fall into the category where getting it wrong is not just a cosmetic problem. A railing that looks solid but isn’t anchored into framing will fail under load. This is not a repair to guess at.

From Dr. Steve’s Tips: When Is It Time to Step Down as DIYer-in-Chief?

Attic Ladder Installation

A pull-down attic ladder installed correctly provides safe, consistent access to attic storage. The key factors: the ceiling opening must be framed correctly to support the unit’s weight, the ladder must be positioned to open without hitting walls or obstacles, and the hatch must seal well enough to prevent conditioned air from escaping into the attic. We install the framing, the ladder unit, and the trim and insulate the hatch door as part of the installation.

314-434-4100

Call Now

Phones Answered 24/7

314-254-8006

Text Now

Online Form

Free Quote

FAQs

Stair Repair in St. Louis

Wobbly Railing? Loose Handrail? Fix It Before It Fails.

Stair repairs are safety repairs. FIX St. Louis anchors railings and handrails into structural framing not just into drywall. Firm quote before we touch anything. No minimum job size. Phones answered around the clock.

Contact FIX St. Louis — Floors & Stairs Services

Call 314-434-4100 — Phones answered 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
Text 314-254-8006 — Text us anytime with questions or to schedule
FIX St. Louis • 50 River Bend Dr, St. Louis, MO 63017
CustomerService@FixSL.com
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