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Storm Door Installation Cost Calculator

Price a 2026 storm door install by type (solid-glass, full-view, retractable, security), material, and regional labor — then collect 3 local handyman or door-installer quotes.

Door Size & Material

Features

Location

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Frequently Asked Questions

Q

How much does it cost to install a storm door in 2026?

Average installed cost is $350-$950, with premium security or full-view retractable models reaching $1,800. The door alone is $100-$650; labor adds $125-$450. Homewyse pegs typical January 2026 projects at $603-$920 installed nationwide. Big-box installed Larson and Pella come in around $450-$500 all-in.

  • Typical range: $350-$950 installed
  • Door alone: $100-$650
  • Labor: $125-$450
  • Homewyse 2026 benchmark: $603-$920
  • Big-box Larson / Pella installed: ~$450-$500
Storm Door TypeDoor OnlyInstalledBest For
Solid-glass standard$100-$600$250-$750Mild climates, budget
Full-view$250-$600$425-$950Max light, seasonal swap
Full-view retractable$300-$650$475-$1,000Most popular, low hassle
Security (grille)$500-$1,200$700-$1,500Urban, high-crime
Impact-rated hurricane$600-$1,500$900-$2,500FL, coastal NC/SC/TX
Q

How much is labor only to install a storm door?

Labor runs $125-$300 in most regions ($175-$300 Northeast/West Coast), or $40-$90/hour. Most installs take 2-4 hours on a standard opening. DIY saves $75-$400 but minor misalignment causes drafts, premature closer failure, and voids warranty coverage.

  • Typical labor: $125-$300
  • Northeast / West Coast: $175-$300
  • Hourly rate: $40-$90/hr
  • Install time: 2-4 hours
  • DIY savings: $75-$400 (skill-dependent)
Q

What is the best storm door for the money — Larson, Andersen, or Pella?

Larson and Pella from Home Depot/Lowe’s run $450-$500 installed and cover most needs for mild-to-moderate climates. Andersen is positioned above both with better hardware and a higher price. For cold climates and heavy use, pay up for a full-view retractable with laminated glass.

  • Larson / Pella installed: ~$450-$500
  • Andersen: premium hardware, 20-30% higher
  • Full-view retractable: best buy for most homes
  • Cold climates: laminated or low-E glass
  • Warranty sweet spot: 10+ years
Q

Is a storm door worth it for energy savings?

A storm door adds one extra air gap, reducing heat loss through a standard entry door by 10-15% in cold climates (DOE). Payback is 5-10 years on a $500 door. Skip it if your entry door is already modern insulated fiberglass or steel in a mild Southern climate.

  • Heat-loss reduction: 10-15% (DOE, cold climates)
  • Payback period: 5-10 years at $500
  • Best ROI: zones 5-7 (cold)
  • Skip: modern insulated door + mild climate
  • Bonus: extends entry-door lifespan
Q

Do I need a permit to install a storm door?

Most municipalities don’t require a permit for a direct replacement storm door. Hurricane-prone coastal zones (FL, coastal NC/SC, TX) may require impact-rated doors with permit and inspection, adding $50-$200 and 1-2 weeks to the schedule.

  • Direct replacement: no permit in most areas
  • Hurricane zones: impact-rated + permit required
  • Permit fee: $50-$200
  • Inspection delay: 1-2 weeks
  • Always check HOA / historic-district rules
Q

How many storm door quotes should I get?

Get at least 2-3 written quotes for anything above the big-box $450-$500 installed price. A bid significantly below that range often uses plastic hinges and closers that fail within 2-3 seasons. Verify license, general liability, and a written scope that names the door brand, type, and glass/screen option.

  • Minimum 2-3 written quotes
  • Big-box benchmark: ~$450-$500 installed
  • Plastic-hardware bids: 2-3 season lifespan
  • Verify: license, GL, warranty registration
  • Require written brand + model in scope

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Example Calculations

1Full-view retractable Larson, Midwest entry door

Inputs

Door width36 in
MaterialAluminum (Larson)
FeaturesFull-view retractable screen
RegionMidwest

Result

Typical installed quote$475 – $700
Door unit~$350
Labor~$175

Big-box full-view retractable is the most-installed storm door in the US. 2-4 hour install on a standard opening.

2Security storm door with laminated glass, Northeast row-house

Inputs

Door width34 in
MaterialSteel security
FeaturesGrille over glass + deadbolt
RegionNortheast

Result

Typical installed quote$950 – $1,500
Security door~$750
Labor (+NE premium)~$250

Security storm doors add steel/aluminum lattice over glass for crime deterrence while preserving ventilation — popular in urban Northeast markets.

3Hurricane-rated impact storm door, coastal Florida

Inputs

Door width36 in
MaterialImpact-rated aluminum
FeaturesMiami-Dade approved, permit
RegionFL coastal

Result

Typical installed quote$1,200 – $2,500
Door unit~$1,000
Labor + framing~$400
Permit + inspection~$150

Coastal Florida requires impact-rated doors and permit inspection. Expect 1-2 week inspection lead time before the install date.

Formulas Used

Storm door install cost driver breakdown

Quote = Door unit + Labor + Hardware + Permit

Typical storm door quote = Door unit (55-65%) + Labor (25-35%) + Hardware/sweep (5-10%) + Permit/haul-away (5% if required). Hurricane-zone impact-rated jobs add 30-60% for code-compliant hardware and inspection delay.

Where:

Door= Solid-glass $100-$600, full-view $250-$600, retractable $300-$650, security $500-$1,200
Labor= Crew hours × local rate; $125-$300 typical, +30-40% in hurricane zones
Hardware= Closer, handle, sweep, latch; $25-$75 if replaced out of door kit
Permit= $50-$200 in hurricane zones or historic districts; often zero elsewhere

Storm Door Installation Costs in 2026: What Buyers Actually Pay

1

What a Storm Door Installation Actually Costs in 2026

The headline figure most installers quote is $350-$950 fully installed, with the national average sitting near $434 for a standard mid-range full-view door (Angi). Homewyse, which tracks contractor-quoted rates rather than national averages, pegs the 2026 typical install at $603-$920. The door alone runs $100-$600 for a standard solid-glass unit, $250-$600 for a full-view, and $300-$650 for a full-view retractable; labor adds $125-$450 on top depending on region and any frame prep. Big-box installed pricing on Larson and Pella full-view models from Home Depot and Lowe’s lands at roughly $450-$500 all-in, which makes them the value benchmark for most projects.

On the premium end, security models with steel grilles over the glass run $700-$1,500 installed, and impact-rated hurricane doors required in coastal Florida and the Carolinas can stretch past $2,500 with permits and inspection. Glass upgrades — laminated, tempered, or low-E coatings — add another $25-$80 to the door cost regardless of door type. The table below maps door type to door-only and installed price ranges so you can sanity-check the bid you receive against the right benchmark, not just the national average.

Storm door pricing has crept up roughly 6-10% since 2023 from labor inflation and vinyl-extrusion cost increases, so anything you remember from a 2022 install is likely $50-$100 stale. Pricing is also surprisingly flat across most of the country — only the Northeast, West Coast, and hurricane coastal markets push labor materially above the $125-$225 baseline that prevails in the South and Midwest.

Storm door cost by type, 2026. Source: Angi, HomeGuide, Homewyse, Fixr.
Storm Door TypeDoor OnlyInstalledBest For
Solid-glass standard$100-$600$250-$750Mild climates, budget
Full-view$250-$600$425-$950Max light, seasonal swap
Full-view retractable screen$300-$650$475-$1,000Most popular, low hassle
Security (grille over glass)$500-$1,200$700-$1,500Urban, high-crime areas
Impact-rated (hurricane)$600-$1,500$900-$2,500FL, coastal NC/SC, TX

On a like-for-like swap into a healthy frame, $450-$500 from Home Depot or Lowe’s installed Larson is the value sweet spot. Pay more only if your climate or security needs justify the upgrade.

2

Six Factors That Move Your Storm Door Quote

Two storm doors that look identical on a contractor’s pricing sheet can quote $200-$1,200 apart once the install variables stack. Door type alone covers the largest spread — solid-glass at $250 installed and security or impact-rated at $1,500-$2,500 installed are the floor and ceiling. Glass upgrades layer in another $25-$80; regional labor swings $125-$300 between cheapest and most expensive metros; frame prep on a deteriorated or non-standard opening adds $100-$400; and hurricane code in coastal Florida or the Carolinas adds $200-$600 plus a $50-$200 permit and 1-2 week inspection delay.

Use the list below to read each line item critically. The most common quote hide is rolling labor into the door price to make a low-cost installer look competitive on the bottom-line number. Push for itemized line items: door, labor, hardware (closer, handle, sweep), haul-away, and permit if applicable. If a contractor refuses to itemize, that’s the signal to get one more bid before signing.

A 20%+ below-pack bid on a $500 storm door rarely means the installer found efficiencies — it usually means a discount door with a plastic closer and hinges that fail in 2-3 seasons.

  • Door type: solid $250-$750 installed, full-view $425-$950, retractable $475-$1,000, security $700-$1,500, hurricane $900-$2,500
  • Material: vinyl cheapest, then aluminum, composite, steel, wood (most expensive)
  • Glass upgrade: laminated, tempered, or low-E adds $25-$80 per door
  • Regional labor: Northeast and West Coast $175-$300, Midwest and South $125-$225, hurricane coast $200-$450
  • Frame condition: deteriorated wood or non-standard opening adds $100-$400 in prep labor
  • Hurricane code (FL, coastal NC, SC, TX): impact-rated door + $50-$200 permit + inspection
  • Expedited or emergency install: 10-25% surcharge over standard scheduling
3

Storm Door Types Compared: Solid, Full-View, Retractable, Security

Picking the right door type is the single decision that most affects both upfront cost and long-term satisfaction. Solid-glass storm doors at $100-$600 are the cheapest option, but they block airflow entirely and limit screen use to a small inset — fine for mild Pacific Northwest or West Coast climates where the entry door is rarely opened, frustrating in any market that wants summer ventilation. Full-view doors at $250-$600 are the most popular choice, swapping a glass insert for a screen insert seasonally, but the storage-and-swap routine wears thin for most homeowners after the first year.

Full-view retractable models at $300-$650 hide the screen inside the frame so the swap becomes a one-second pull instead of a hardware-store run twice a year; this is the value pick for most US buyers and what Larson and Pella sell at the $500-installed price point. Security models add a steel or aluminum grille over the glass for $500-$1,200 — worthwhile in urban high-crime areas or for Airbnb-style rentals, overkill for typical suburban use. Impact-rated hurricane doors at $600-$1,500 are required, not optional, in coastal Florida, NC, SC, and Texas building codes; without one, your homeowners insurance windstorm coverage typically excludes the door opening entirely.

Brand choice matters less than door type, but it still affects warranty and parts availability 5-10 years out. Larson and Pella from Home Depot and Lowe’s cover the value tier reliably, Andersen sits one tier above with better hardware at a 20-30% premium, and Provia and Larson EmergeBilt round out the premium custom market for replacement-window-style retailers. For the typical buyer, the window replacement cost calculator helps estimate matching projects when you bundle a storm door with a window upgrade order.

Regional labor cost for storm door installation, 2026.
RegionLabor CostTypical Install Time
Northeast / West Coast$175-$3002-4 hours
Midwest / South$125-$2252-4 hours
Hurricane coastal (FL, NC, SC, TX)$200-$4503-5 hours + inspection
4

DIY vs Professional Installation: When to Hire

Storm doors are one of the more DIY-friendly exterior projects. Most pre-hung units from Larson, Pella, and Andersen ship with a complete install kit and step-by-step instructions, and a competent first-timer can complete the job in 4-8 hours — saving the $125-$400 labor line. Tools are minimal (drill, level, screwdriver, caulk gun) and the only real consumable is $20-$50 in trim screws, weatherstripping, and a tube of paintable caulk. For a homeowner who is comfortable hanging a curtain rod and drilling pilot holes, this is a Saturday project, not a multi-day undertaking.

That said, four scenarios push the math toward hiring a pro. First, non-standard openings: anything outside the 32, 34, or 36-inch standard widths means custom doors or frame modification, both of which add $150-$400 in pro labor that’s hard to DIY safely. Second, deteriorated wood frames with rot or out-of-square jambs need scribing and shimming that takes a pro 30 minutes and a DIYer 3 hours. Third, hurricane-rated impact doors usually require permitted, inspected installs in coastal jurisdictions — the inspector will check fastener spacing and torque, which DIYers routinely fail. Fourth, warranty coverage on premium doors often requires authorized installer documentation to activate.

  • DIY saves $125-$400 in labor; tool and consumables cost $20-$50
  • Most pre-hung storm doors include install kit and instructions
  • Pro install takes 2-4 hours; first-time DIY takes 4-8 hours
  • Minor misalignment causes drafts, wind damage, and premature closer failure
  • Hire a pro if: non-standard opening, deteriorated frame, hurricane-rated door, or you want warranty registration handled
  1. 1

    Measure the existing opening

    Width at top, middle, and bottom; use the smallest. Most doors come in 32, 34, and 36 inch widths.

  2. 2

    Pick door type and handle side

    Match in-swing or out-swing of your entry door. Wrong handle side means a $50 restocking fee plus delay.

  3. 3

    Inspect the frame for rot

    Soft, cracked, or out-of-square jambs need repair before install. If you find rot, hire a pro.

  4. 4

    Order the door and hardware kit

    Verify wind-chain or damper is included; gusts rip doors backward and damage frames without one.

  5. 5

    Decide DIY or pro

    Standard frame, standard size, no hurricane code: DIY saves $125-$400. Otherwise, pay the pro line.

5

How a Storm Door Quote Breaks Down

A clean storm door quote decomposes into four buckets: the door unit at 55-65% of the total, labor at 25-35%, hardware (closer, handle, sweep, latch) at 5-10%, and any haul-away or permit fee at 0-5%. On a $500 mid-range full-view installed quote that works out to roughly $300 in door cost, $150 in labor, $35 in hardware, and $15 in disposal. Hardware is the most commonly overlooked line; if your door comes with a basic plastic closer and an installer offers a $50 hydraulic upgrade, that’s a worthwhile spend that doubles closer lifespan.

The donut and percentages below visualize the same four-bucket split. When you receive three written quotes, recast each one into these buckets and outliers become obvious immediately. A bid where the door unit is materially below 55% is either using a cheaper door than spec’d, or rolling labor into the door line to disguise a thin labor margin. Either pattern predicts trouble.

Permits matter only in two scenarios: hurricane-coast jurisdictions require permitted, inspected installs on impact-rated doors ($50-$200 permit + 1-2 week wait), and a handful of historic districts require approval before any visible exterior modification. In every other case the install is permit-exempt, which is one reason storm doors stay attractive as a low-friction summer-curb-appeal project.

$500typical quoteDoor unit — 60%Labor — 28%Hardware + sweep — 7%Permit + haul-away — 5%Typical US storm door installation breakdown, 2026. Source: Angi, HomeGuide.
6

Common Storm Door Mistakes That Cost You Money

Storm door buyer mistakes cluster around three themes: cheap hardware that fails fast, missing the wind-chain that protects the frame, and mis-ordering the handle side. Discount big-box doors at $100-$200 typically come with plastic closers and stamped-steel hinges that warp or snap inside 2-3 seasons, especially in Sun Belt heat or Northern freeze-thaw cycles. Pay the extra $50-$100 for a hydraulic closer and forged hinges and the door makes it through 8-10 seasons before service — the cheaper unit needs a $250-$400 hardware swap by year three.

The wind-chain or damper is the single most overlooked accessory. Without it, a 25-mph gust caught against an open storm door rips the door backward and rips the closer arm out of the entry-door frame — a $400 frame repair on top of a new closer and door. Every quality install includes a wind-chain; if a contractor doesn’t mention it, ask. Then there’s the handle side mistake — ordering an in-swing handle for an out-swing entry, or vice versa, which means a $50 restocking fee plus a 1-2 week reorder delay.

A few less-common but expensive traps round out the list. Mounting a clear-glass storm door on a south-facing entry without low-E coating cooks the wood entry door behind it, warping the panels and voiding the entry door warranty. HOA and historic-district restrictions bar visible storm doors in many subdivisions — verify before you buy, since aluminum frames have to come down at resale otherwise. Pair the door with a home renovation estimator check if you are bundling several exterior upgrades and want to confirm budget.

Always insist on a hydraulic closer, forged hinges, and the wind-chain accessory. The $100 hardware upgrade pays for itself the first time a 30-mph gust catches the door open.

  • Buying a discount door with plastic closer and hinges — fails in 2-3 seasons
  • Skipping the wind-chain or damper — gusts rip the door off in storms ($400 frame repair)
  • Ordering wrong handle side (in-swing vs out-swing) — $50 restocking fee plus delay
  • Installing on a south-facing door without low-E glass — heat damage to entry door
  • Failing to check HOA or historic district restrictions before purchase
  • Mounting into siding instead of solid framing — door pulls out in moderate wind
  • Skipping the manufacturer warranty registration — some Larson and Pella warranties require online registration within 30 days of install or coverage drops to 1 year from 10
7

Hurricane-Zone Buyers: Code, Permits, and Insurance Credit

Storm doors in Florida, the Carolinas, and coastal Texas are governed by the same impact-resistance codes as windows in those jurisdictions. A standard residential storm door is not legal as the only barrier on a primary entry in a Wind-Borne Debris Region; you need either an impact-rated door (typically $900-$2,500 installed with permit and inspection) or a code-approved storm panel system. The permit itself runs $50-$200 and the inspection adds 1-2 weeks to the timeline, but skipping it voids your homeowners windstorm coverage on that opening entirely.

On the upside, properly permitted impact-rated storm doors can qualify for a 5-15% discount on the wind-mitigation portion of your homeowners premium in Florida and the Gulf states. A wind-mitigation inspector confirms the door has Florida Building Code or Miami-Dade NOA approval, the permit pulled, and the install passed inspection. Over a 10-year ownership period that credit often offsets the entire $200-$600 premium an impact-rated storm door commands over a standard model.

In Florida and Gulf-coast jurisdictions, always confirm Florida Building Code or Miami-Dade NOA approval on the door product, pull the permit, and pass inspection — those three steps unlock 5-15% windstorm-premium credit that pays back the upgrade in 3-5 years.

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Last Updated: Apr 19, 2026

This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Results are estimates and should not be considered professional financial, medical, legal, or other advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making important decisions. UseCalcPro is not responsible for any actions taken based on calculator results.

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