A garage door opener is a quiet workhorse — most last 10 to 15 years. With a little care, you can push toward the high end of that range and avoid surprise failures.
1. Keep the door balanced
This is the big one. The opener doesn’t lift the door’s full weight — the springs do. If the door is out of balance, the opener works overtime and wears out early. A quick balance check during a tune-up keeps the load where it belongs.
2. Lubricate moving parts
Twice a year, apply a garage-door-specific lubricant to the rollers, hinges, and springs. Skip the door track (it just collects grime). Good lubrication reduces friction and the load on the motor.
3. Test the safety features
Once a month, place an object in the door’s path and close it — it should reverse. Then wave something through the photo-eye sensors near the floor as it closes. Working safety features protect your family and reduce stress on the system.
4. Tighten the hardware
Vibration loosens bolts and brackets over time. Periodically tighten the hardware (with the door closed) so nothing rattles loose.
5. Keep the sensors clean and aligned
Dust and bumps knock the photo-eye sensors out of alignment, which is the top cause of “my door won’t close.” A quick wipe and check prevents headaches.
6. Schedule a professional tune-up
A twice-yearly professional inspection catches the things a homeowner can’t — early spring fatigue, cable wear, motor strain. Ask about our Worry-Free maintenance plan to put it on autopilot.
Need a tune-up or a second opinion on an aging opener? Call (224) 770-0587 — we’ll give you a straight answer.

