A Dragging Door Is Rarely Just Annoying
A storefront door that drags, a steel door that won't latch, or a closer that slams instead of controlling the swing — these usually start as an annoyance and become a security or fire code problem if left alone. Getting it looked at early is almost always cheaper than waiting for it to fail completely.
Why Property Managers Call Us First
Repeat vendors who show up without the right parts, or take two visits to diagnose what should have been obvious, cost property managers time they don't have. Our service vans carry the parts that fail most often, so the first visit is usually the only visit.
The Problems We Fix Every Day
Doors that drag, stick, or won't latch. Closers that slam or leak oil. Broken pivots and hinges. Panic bars that don't retract cleanly. Misaligned strikes. Cold air pouring into a vestibule through a worn threshold. Storefront glass rattling loose in its stops. If it's a commercial door and it swings or slides, we've likely fixed one just like it this month.
Fire Door Repairs Need Extra Attention
On rated fire doors, a repair isn't just about function — it has to preserve the door's ability to self-close and self-latch to stay code-compliant. Our technicians know the difference between a standard closer adjustment and one on a rated assembly, and we won't leave a fire door in a non-compliant state.
Repair vs. Replace — An Honest Call
A modest repair that buys two more years of service is sometimes the right move; sometimes the door and frame are far enough gone that repair money is better spent on replacement. Our technicians give you both numbers with a straight recommendation, so you're deciding with full information instead of under pressure from a broken door.
What Repairs Cost and How Fast We Can Come
Common repairs — closer replacement, hinge or pivot repair, latch realignment — run $250 to $750 including parts. We quote a firm price on site before any work begins, and the assessment itself is free with the repair. Calls received before mid-afternoon are typically serviced the same day.
Storefront Doors Are Usually Repairable
Sagging, dragging, bad pivots, and misaligned locks on aluminum storefront doors are almost always repairable rather than requiring full replacement. Replacement only gets recommended when the door or frame is genuinely beyond saving, and we'll explain exactly why if that's the case.
Book a Repair
If a door on your property isn't closing, locking, or latching the way it should, contact us. Same-day service is available across Toronto and the GTA, and 24/7 emergency response is there if the problem is security-critical.
Issues We Hear About Most Often
Property managers, retailers, and GCs across the GTA run into the same patterns. Here is what usually brings people to this service — and how we approach it.
Closers and panic bars fail without warning
A closer that slams or a panic bar that sticks usually gives some warning before it fails completely. Same-day repair catches it before it becomes a fire code or security issue.
Two-visit repairs waste your time
A tech who shows up without the right part means scheduling a second visit and living with a broken door in the meantime. Our vans carry the parts that fail most, so most repairs finish in one visit.
Fire doors that don't self-latch anymore
A fire door that's stopped self-latching properly can fail inspection even if nobody's noticed day to day. We check and correct this as part of a standard closer repair on rated doors.
Not sure if it's worth repairing
Spending money on a door that's already failing elsewhere feels like a waste, but replacing something repairable is too. We give you both numbers and a straight opinion before you decide.
Door Repair Across the GTA
We provide door repair throughout Toronto and the Greater Toronto Area, with regionally routed crews for fast response:

