Garage Door Installation Cost in Westchester County (2026 Prices)
2026 Cost Guide

Garage Door Installation Cost in Westchester County

Honest installed price ranges for Westchester homes — from standard steel to carriage-style and custom doors built to suit stone colonials, tudors, and historic villages.

Garage door pricing in Westchester County covers a wide spectrum, and for good reason: the housing stock here is some of the most varied in the region. A 1920s tudor in Bronxville, a stone colonial in Scarsdale, a mid-century split in Harrison, and a newer build in Armonk all call for different doors — and different budgets.

This guide breaks down what new garage doors actually cost installed across Westchester in 2026, what pushes a project up or down within each range, and how to choose a door that fits both your house and your street.

Want a number for your specific home? Text us a few photos of your current door and the front of the garage. We'll tell you what fits, what it runs installed, and you get the exact price upfront before any work begins.

2026 Garage Door Installation Costs in Westchester County

ProjectTypical Range
Standard single steel door (8x7 or 9x7)$800–$1,600
Insulated double-layer steel$1,200–$2,000
Insulated triple-layer steel (premium quiet)$1,800–$2,800
Carriage-style door$2,500–$6,500
Custom, wood, or full-view glass$4,000–$10,000+
Double-car door (16x7)Add roughly 50–80%
LiftMaster belt-drive WiFi opener (add-on)$450–$900 installed

Typical installed ranges for our service area; every home differs — we quote the exact price upfront before any work begins.

What Drives Garage Door Pricing in Westchester

The basics move price everywhere: door size (a single 8x7 vs. a 16x7 double-car), construction (single-layer steel vs. insulated double or triple layer), and finish options like windows and decorative hardware. But Westchester adds a few wrinkles of its own.

First, the architecture. The stone and brick colonials and tudors in places like Scarsdale and Bronxville don't look right with a flat builder-grade door — they call for carriage-style or custom-fit doors that match the home's character, which is why the $2,500–$6,500 carriage range is the most-quoted bracket in those neighborhoods. Many of these homes also have non-standard openings that need custom sizing.

Second, older detached garages. A lot of the county's village homes — Larchmont, Rye, Bronxville — have freestanding garages from the 1920s–40s with low headroom, settled framing, or out-of-square openings. Those installs take more fitting work, and sometimes a low-headroom track kit, which shows up in the quote.

Third, aesthetics rules. Several Westchester villages have historic-district guidelines, and many newer communities have HOA standards on door style and color. We've worked within both — bring us the guidelines and we'll spec a door that passes review the first time. As with every quote, haul-away of the old door and new tracks are typically included.

  • Single vs. double-car size, and custom dimensions on older openings
  • Single-layer steel vs. insulated double/triple layer construction
  • Carriage-style and custom designs for stone, brick, and tudor homes
  • Low-headroom or out-of-square framing in older detached garages
  • HOA and historic-district style requirements
  • Haul-away of the old door and new tracks — typically included in our quotes

Attached Garage? Go Insulated and Quiet

If your garage is attached — common in Westchester's colonials and newer construction — an insulated door is where your money works hardest. The garage door is the biggest opening in your home's thermal envelope, and a single-layer steel door does almost nothing to stop a cold snap from pulling heat out of the rooms around and above the garage.

A double-layer door adds a polystyrene core; a triple-layer polyurethane door is the premium option, with the highest R-value and the stiffest, quietest panels. If there's a bedroom or office over the garage, the triple-layer door plus a LiftMaster belt-drive opener is the combination that makes the door essentially disappear from your household's soundtrack.

One more Westchester-specific note: if you're in a wooded, outage-prone area — Armonk, Chappaqua, and the northern part of the county know this well — spec the opener with battery backup. When a storm drops the power, the door still opens, which matters when the garage is your main way in and out of the house.

What's Included in Our Installation Quote

Comparing quotes only works if they cover the same scope. Some advertised prices are door-only, with tracks, springs, disposal, and labor billed separately. Our installation quotes are complete and confirmed upfront before any work begins:

  • The door — premium brands like Clopay, Wayne Dalton, and Amarr
  • New tracks, rollers, and hinges sized to your opening
  • New springs balanced to your new door's exact weight
  • Removal and haul-away of the old door and hardware
  • Weather sealing — bottom seal and perimeter stop molding
  • Opener check and adjustment, or a new LiftMaster opener if bundled
  • 1-year parts and labor warranty on the installation

How to Budget: Good, Better, Best

For a typical Westchester single-car opening, here's the honest way to frame your budget. Double-car doors scale up from these numbers.

Good — around $800–$1,600: a quality single-layer steel door. A solid fit for detached garages where insulation doesn't earn its keep, and a major curb-appeal upgrade over a tired door.

Better — around $1,200–$2,800: insulated double- or triple-layer steel. The right call for attached garages — warmer, quieter, sturdier, and available in finishes that suit most of the county's housing stock.

Best — $2,500 and up: carriage-style ($2,500–$6,500) and custom or true-wood doors ($4,000–$10,000+). In neighborhoods where the homes have real architectural character, this tier is often what the house deserves — and what neighborhood guidelines sometimes expect.

Financing and 0% promotional options are available, so stepping up a tier doesn't have to strain the monthly budget. Ask when you call and we'll lay out the numbers.

The Bottom Line

In Westchester County, a new garage door runs from about $800 for a standard steel single to $10,000+ for true custom work — with most homeowners landing at $1,200–$2,800 for a quality insulated door, or $2,500–$6,500 for a carriage-style door that suits the county's classic architecture. Text us photos of your garage and we'll tell you exactly what fits and exactly what it costs, upfront, before any work begins.

Common Questions

Get an Exact Price for Your New Door

Text us photos for a fast quote, or call to talk through styles for your home. Upfront pricing, premium doors, clean installation, and a 1-year parts and labor warranty.