Your garage door is not working the way it should, and something looks wrong. Maybe it is sitting crooked in the opening. Maybe it is jammed partway up and will not move in either direction. Maybe a roller is visibly sitting outside the track channel, or one side of the door is noticeably lower than the other. Homeowners use the term "off track" for several different situations that look similar from the outside but are mechanically different, carry different levels of urgency, and have very different cost implications.
AGDoors Service responds to off-track calls across all of Palmhurst, TX the same day. Before we arrive, we want you to understand what you are looking at. Stop using the door immediately. Do not press the remote, do not try to force the door up or down manually, and do not attempt to guide a roller back into the track by hand. Then read this page.
The phrase "off track" gets used for at least five different situations. Each has a different likely cause, a different urgency level, and a different realistic cost range. Finding the one that matches what you are looking at takes less than a minute.
If your door is hanging visibly lower on one side than the other — either in the fully closed position or stuck partway open — the most likely cause is a cable or spring failure on the lower side. When a lift cable snaps or unspools from its drum, or when a spring breaks, the door loses balanced support on the affected side and the unequal load causes it to hang at an angle. This is the most urgent off-track scenario because the door is in a physically unstable position and can move unexpectedly. Do not operate the door in any way and call AGDoors Service immediately. Realistic cost range: $250 to $600 or more depending on whether the cable, spring, or both need replacement alongside the realignment.
If the door is stuck and will not move in either direction but appears to be sitting level with no visible drooping or angle, this is frequently a track obstruction or opener issue rather than a true structural derailment. A small object in the track channel, a debris buildup at a specific point, or an opener limit setting error can all produce a door that simply stops moving without any physical derailment of the rollers from the track. Before concluding the door is off track, check whether there is anything visible in the track channel at the height where the door stopped. Realistic cost range: $100 to $250 for a track obstruction or opener adjustment; higher if track damage is discovered on assessment.
If you can see one or more rollers sitting outside the track channel — the small wheels that are supposed to fit inside the track are visible on the outside of the track — this is a classic partial derailment. The cause may be a worn or cracked roller that failed and pulled the panel out of the track, a track section that has shifted or been bent enough to allow the roller to escape, or a debris or obstruction event. The urgency depends on how many rollers are out, whether the door is stable in its current position, and whether cables or springs are involved. Realistic cost range: $100 to $350 depending on whether the cause is a simple roller re-seat, a roller replacement, or a track section repair.
If one or more panels of the door are visibly buckled, bowed outward, or deformed — particularly at a hinge connection point — the door has experienced structural stress at that location. This happens when the door encounters significant resistance during operation, such as a cable failure that causes one side to drop suddenly, or when the door is operated while off track and the panel deformation absorbs the stress. A buckled panel affects whether the door can be realigned at all without panel replacement. Realistic cost range: $300 to $700 or more, depending on whether the panel can be replaced or whether the door's age and condition make full door replacement the more economical option.
Vehicle impact — backing into the door, clipping it with a vehicle, or a collision that affects the door structure — produces a specific pattern of damage: a deformed bottom panel, a bent track section at the impact point, and rollers that have been driven out of the track on the affected side. Vehicle impact off-track events almost always involve both panel damage and track damage, and the repair scope typically includes track section replacement rather than straightening. This is also the most likely scenario to be claimable under your auto insurance policy. Realistic cost range: $300 to $800 or more depending on the number of panels affected, the extent of track deformation, and whether cable or spring damage occurred as a secondary consequence.
You do not need to touch anything to gather useful information about your door's condition. Standing at a safe distance — outside the zone directly beneath or in front of the door — and observing five specific things takes under a minute and produces the information that allows AGDoors Service to dispatch the correctly prepared technician.
Look at the lift cables on each side of the door — the steel cables that run from the bottom corner of the door up through the track to the drum above. Are both cables taut and running straight, or is one hanging loose, coiled on the floor, or draped over another component? A hanging cable on one side is a strong indicator that the spring or cable on that side has failed and is the root cause of the derailment.
Look at the spring system above the door. If you have a torsion spring — a horizontal spring mounted on a shaft above the door opening — check whether there is a visible gap in the coil. A gap means the spring has broken. If you have extension springs — springs running along the horizontal tracks above each side of the door — check whether one appears shorter or less stretched than the other, or whether any safety cable appears to have released.
Look at the vertical track sections on each side of the door. Are they still firmly mounted to the wall with all brackets in place, or has one pulled away from the wall or shifted position? A track section that has moved away from the wall will have a visible gap between the track back and the wall surface. Also check whether either track section is visibly bent, creased, or deformed.
Look at the door panels, particularly the bottom panel and the second panel from the bottom. Are they flat and square, or is one visibly buckled, bowed, or deformed at a hinge point? Panel deformation changes the repair scope significantly and is important to communicate when you call.
Look at the rollers — the small wheels on each side of each panel section that are supposed to sit inside the track channel. Count how many rollers you can see sitting outside the track rather than inside it. One roller out versus three rollers out are very different situations.
When you call, tell the dispatcher: your door's current position (closed, open, or partially open), which of the five situations best matches what you see, the cable condition (both taut, or one hanging), whether you can see a gap in the spring, the track condition (in place or shifted/bent), whether any panels appear buckled, and how many rollers are visibly outside the track. This information routes the technician with the correct components to complete the job in a single visit.
Off-track repair has the widest genuine cost range of any single garage door repair type. A simple roller re-seat on a closed, stable door with no secondary damage can cost $100 to $150. A vehicle impact event with two deformed panels, a bent track section, and a snapped cable can cost $700 or more. Both are described by homeowners as "my garage door came off track."
An off-track repair is inexpensive when the derailment was caused by a simple, isolated event — a single roller re-seat with no damaged track, no cable involvement, no panel deformation, and a door that is closed and stable. An off-track repair becomes expensive when any of the following applies: secondary component damage from operating the door after the derailment; root cause complexity from a broken spring or snapped cable; track damage requiring replacement; panel damage requiring sourcing and replacement; or vehicle impact involving both track and panel damage. The single most important factor in whether an off-track repair stays inexpensive is how quickly the homeowner stops using the door after the derailment.
When the door is hanging at an angle because a cable or spring has failed, the cost includes the cable or spring replacement as the primary repair plus the realignment as the secondary step. The two repairs cannot be separated — realigning the door without fixing the component that caused the uneven load means the door will come off track again.
When the door is stuck but sitting level with no derailment of the rollers, the repair is typically limited to clearing the obstruction, adjusting the opener, or addressing a minor track misalignment. This is the lowest-cost off-track scenario.
The cost range reflects whether the cause was a worn roller requiring replacement (lower end), a track section requiring adjustment (middle range), or a combination of roller replacement and track work (upper end). If the assessment reveals multiple rollers near end of life, replacing the full set during the same visit prevents a second derailment.
When a panel is structurally deformed, the repair scope includes both the panel replacement and the realignment. Panel cost varies significantly by door material, style, and whether matching panels are available. Discontinued door models may require custom fabrication.
Vehicle impact events are the highest-cost off-track scenario because they almost always involve both track replacement and panel assessment. Track sections deformed by impact cannot be reliably straightened and must be replaced. If the vehicle impact is documented, this cost may be partially or fully claimable under the property damage portion of your auto insurance policy.
A realignment without root cause identification is a temporary fix, not a repair. A worn roller that was not replaced will pull the panel out again. A loose track bracket that was not tightened will allow the track to shift again. A cable snap that was not replaced will reassert its uneven load. AGDoors Service identifies the root cause on every off-track call before beginning any realignment work. The root cause is documented in the written quote and addressed as part of the repair scope.
Every garage door that comes off its track came off for a reason. The door did not derail spontaneously. Something made it happen. The quality of an off-track repair is determined almost entirely by whether the technician identified and addressed that root cause.
The door appears to have simply come off track (the obvious cause), but the actual root cause is a cable that snapped and created an uneven load that pulled the door out of the track on the heavier side. The visible symptom is a roller outside the track. The correct repair is cable replacement followed by realignment. A technician who realigns without replacing the cable leaves the uneven load in place.
The door appears to have a track section that is bent or misaligned (the obvious cause), but the actual root cause is a roller that seized on its stem and began dragging against the track wall rather than rolling smoothly. Over many cycles, the dragging roller pushed the track inward, creating a visible bend. The correct repair is roller replacement followed by track straightening or replacement. A technician who straightens the track without replacing the seized roller will find the track bent again within months.
The door is stuck at a specific point and there is visible debris in the track at that height (the obvious cause). The actual root cause is a spring that has lost significant tension, causing the door to travel unevenly and contact the track wall at the low-tension point on every cycle. The debris has accumulated at the contact point rather than causing it. A technician who clears the debris without assessing the spring balance will find the door sticking at the same point again.
Before approving a quote for off-track repair in Palmhurst, TX, ask the technician: "What caused this, and what specifically are you doing to prevent it from happening again?" A technician who can answer this question specifically — naming the component that caused the derailment and explaining how that component is being addressed — is providing a complete repair. A technician who cannot answer this question, or who gives a vague answer about general wear and tear, is likely providing a realignment without root cause assessment.
AGDoors Service technicians in Palmhurst, TX begin every off-track call with a full system assessment before touching the door. The assessment covers cable condition, spring tension, roller condition across all panels, drum condition, track geometry, opener trolley, and mounting hardware. The root cause finding is documented and presented in the written quote before any work begins. If addressing the root cause requires a part — roller set, cable, spring component, track section — it is in the quote. The written quote tells you what caused the derailment and what is being done about it. You approve the full scope before any realignment work begins.
The repair process for an off-track door involves working with a heavy, potentially unstable door system. Here is what you can expect from a complete AGDoors Service off-track repair visit in Palmhurst, TX.
When the AGDoors Service technician arrives, their first action is to secure the door in its current position using clamps or locking pliers on the track below the lowest rollers. This prevents unexpected movement before the assessment begins. The technician then walks through the full system check — cable condition, spring condition, all roller positions, track geometry along its full length, mounting hardware, and panel condition. You will be able to watch this assessment from a safe distance. The technician should be narrating what they are finding as they work through it.
After the assessment, the technician presents a written quote. The quote should name the root cause of the derailment specifically. It should list the repair scope — what is being done and why each item is in the scope. It should separate parts from labour so you can see where the cost is coming from. And it should confirm the warranty terms for both parts and labour. Take whatever time you need to review it. If the technician recommends a scope that seems unexpectedly broad, ask them to show you specifically what they found for each component they are recommending.
Once the quote is approved, the technician begins work in a specific sequence: addressing the root cause component first, then performing any necessary track work, then realigning the door. You will hear metal sounds during this process. Stay outside the immediate work zone. The total repair time for most off-track events in Palmhurst, TX is 60 to 120 minutes. Vehicle impact events and repairs involving multiple secondary components can take longer. The technician will give you an honest time estimate after completing the assessment.
The operational test: the door is run through at least five full open-and-close cycles using both the remote and the wall button. The door should travel smoothly on both sides simultaneously with neither side leading or lagging. It should not scrape, grind, or hesitate at any point in its travel. The balance confirmation: the technician disconnects the opener using the manual release cord and positions the door at mid-travel by hand. A correctly balanced and realigned door holds its position at mid-travel without drifting up or down. Both of these tests are standard on every off-track repair. If a technician attempts to close a job before completing both, ask for them before signing off.
Off-track events are disproportionately preventable. Unlike spring failures, which are often sudden and unpredictable, the most common off-track causes — worn rollers and loose hardware — are detectable before they produce a derailment.
Steel rollers are the component most directly responsible for preventable off-track events across Palmhurst, TX and nationally. A standard steel roller has a rated service life of 5 to 7 years under normal residential use. As the roller approaches end of life, its wheel develops flat spots, its bearing begins to run rough, and eventually the stem seizes. A seized roller drags rather than rolls, creating lateral force against the track wall on every cycle that eventually pulls the roller out of the track entirely. The visible warning signs are visible from a floor-level observation: a wheel that does not spin freely, a grinding or scraping sound at a specific point in the door's travel, or visible cracking on the roller wheel surface. Upgrading from steel rollers to nylon rollers at the time of replacement adds modest cost and approximately doubles the service life.
Everything else that leads to off-track events — loose track mounting hardware, cable fraying that precedes a snap and derailment, spring tension loss that produces uneven door travel — is caught by a comprehensive annual tune-up before it produces a failure. A standard AGDoors Service tune-up in Palmhurst, TX includes roller inspection across all panel positions, track alignment check and hardware tightening, spring tension assessment and balance testing, cable condition inspection, opener force and limit adjustment, and a written condition report that flags any items approaching end of life. The cost of a tune-up is a fraction of the cost of an off-track repair.
| Situation | Typical Cost Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Situation 2: Level and stuck — track/opener issue | $100–$250 | Obstruction clearance, opener adjustment, minor track work |
| Situation 3: Single roller out — simple derailment | $100–$300 | Roller re-seat; higher includes roller replacement |
| Situation 3: Multiple rollers — full roller replacement | $150–$350 | Nylon roller upgrade recommended |
| Situation 1 or 3: Derailment with cable involvement | $200–$450 | Cable replacement plus realignment |
| Situation 1: Crooked door — spring and cable both | $300–$600+ | Spring replacement, cable, realignment |
| Situation 3 or 4: Track section repair/replacement | $200–$450 | One section; higher for full track replacement |
| Situation 4: Buckled panel plus realignment | $350–$700+ | Depends on panel availability and door model |
| Situation 5: Vehicle impact — track and panel | $300–$800+ | Full scope assessed on-site; insurance claim possible |
| After-hours / emergency surcharge | Add $75–$150 | Disclosed before dispatch |
All pricing reflects typical ranges for Palmhurst, TX. Written quote provided before any work begins.
Off-track calls where the door is stuck open are treated as emergency priority by AGDoors Service across Palmhurst, TX regardless of the time of day. A door stuck open overnight exposes the home, the vehicle, and the contents of the garage — this is a security situation as much as a mechanical one. Emergency and after-hours calls carry a surcharge of $75 to $150 disclosed before dispatch.
Vehicle impact damage is the off-track scenario most commonly covered by insurance. If your vehicle or another vehicle backed into the door, the damage is typically claimable under the property damage section of an auto insurance policy. Storm damage may be covered under the dwelling section of a homeowners policy. Wear-related off-track events — worn rollers, loose hardware, deferred maintenance — are generally not covered by any standard insurance policy. AGDoors Service will document findings clearly so you can make an informed decision about whether to submit a claim. Check your deductible before filing — if the repair cost is close to your deductible amount, paying out of pocket may be more practical.
Off-track repair in Palmhurst, TX ranges from $100 for a simple roller re-seat on a closed, stable door with no secondary damage to $800 or more for a vehicle impact event with track deformation, panel damage, and cable involvement. Most standard off-track repairs without secondary component damage fall in the $150 to $350 range. The cost depends primarily on the root cause of the derailment and which components need replacement as part of the repair. AGDoors Service provides a written quote after on-site assessment and before any work begins on every call.
A door hanging lower on one side has almost certainly lost cable or spring support on the lower side. A cable that has snapped or unspooled from its drum removes balanced support on that side and the door drops under its own weight. A broken spring removes the counterbalancing force on the affected side and produces the same visible asymmetry. Either condition is a genuine emergency — the door must not be operated in any way. The lower side is carrying more than its design load and can move suddenly and unpredictably. Call AGDoors Service immediately and describe the specific asymmetry — which side is lower and by approximately how much.
Stop using the door entirely and call AGDoors Service in Palmhurst, TX. Vehicle impact off-track events almost always involve both panel deformation and track damage at the impact point and require professional assessment before any attempt at realignment. If you intend to file an insurance claim for the damage, tell the dispatcher when you call — the technician will document the damage scope specifically for insurance submission purposes. Vehicle impact damage is typically covered under the property damage section of an auto insurance policy.
Two observations give you the answer without touching anything. First, look at both lift cables on each side of the door — the cables that run from the bottom corners up through the track to the drum above. If one cable is hanging loose, coiled on the floor, or draped over another component, the cable on that side has failed. Second, look at the torsion spring above the door. If there is a visible gap in the spring coil — a space of one to several inches where the metal has separated — the spring has broken. Either finding means the root cause is a cable or spring failure rather than a track or roller issue, and the repair scope includes that component replacement before any realignment.
A door that repeatedly comes off track has a root cause that has not been identified and addressed. The three most common repeat off-track patterns are: worn rollers that keep pulling panels out of the track because they were not replaced when the first derailment occurred; a loose track mounting bracket that allows the track to shift on every cycle and was not retightened during the repair; and a spring that has lost tension and is causing the door to travel unevenly on every cycle, stressing the track and rollers at a specific point. If your door has come off track more than once, the previous repair did not address the root cause. Call AGDoors Service and tell the dispatcher specifically how many times this has happened.
Yes, in most cases. Vehicle impact damage to a garage door is typically covered under the property damage section of an auto insurance policy — the same coverage that applies when a vehicle hits any other structure. If you caused the impact with your own vehicle, file a claim under your own auto policy. If another vehicle caused the impact, their insurance is the primary source. The key steps: document the damage with photos before the repair begins, tell the AGDoors Service technician you intend to file a claim, and ask for a written damage description and repair scope to submit with the claim. Check your deductible before filing — if the repair cost is close to your deductible amount, paying out of pocket may be more practical than filing a claim that could affect your premium.
No, not without taking interim security measures. A door stuck open leaves the garage, your vehicle, and potentially your home interior accessible. While waiting for AGDoors Service to arrive in Palmhurst, TX, take these steps: lock the interior access door between the garage and the living space of your home if one exists. Move any valuables from the garage into the house. If a second vehicle is available, park it across the driveway opening as a visible deterrent. Do not attempt to improvise a way to close or partially block the door opening with the door itself — forcing a door that is off track risks causing additional damage or injury. Call AGDoors Service and tell the dispatcher the door is stuck open. Stuck-open calls are treated as emergency priority.
It depends on what the root cause assessment found. If the assessment confirmed that the derailment was caused by a truly isolated, one-time event — a single piece of debris in the track, for example — and all components were found to be in sound condition, then a realignment alone may be the correct and complete repair. The technician should be able to explain specifically what they assessed and what they found. If the assessment identified a worn component as the root cause and the technician realigned without replacing it, the repair is incomplete and the door will likely come off track again. Ask the technician: "What caused this derailment, and what specifically did you do to prevent it from happening again?" A complete repair has a specific answer to both parts of that question.
A simple roller re-seat with no secondary component damage or root cause work typically takes 30 to 60 minutes. A repair that includes roller replacement and track adjustment takes 60 to 90 minutes. A repair involving cable or spring replacement as the root cause, followed by realignment, typically takes 90 to 120 minutes. Vehicle impact repairs with panel assessment and track section replacement can take 2 to 3 hours depending on scope. AGDoors Service technicians confirm the estimated repair time after completing the on-site assessment, before work begins.
It depends on the extent and type of track damage. Tracks that have shifted out of position because of loose mounting hardware can be repositioned and the hardware retightened without track replacement — this is the lowest-cost track correction. Tracks that have developed minor bends from roller contact can sometimes be straightened to a geometry close enough to original to guide the rollers correctly. Tracks that have been deformed by vehicle impact, or that have been bent enough to create a visible kink or crease in the track channel, generally cannot be reliably straightened to their original geometry and must be replaced. The technician's on-site assessment confirms which category applies to your specific track condition and quotes accordingly.
AGDoors Service covers all of Palmhurst, TX for same-day off-track garage door repair. Our technicians are based across the Palmhurst metro area and carry roller sets, track sections, cable replacement components, and spring hardware on every truck to complete most off-track repairs in a single visit. Stuck-open calls are treated as emergency priority.
Every AGDoors Service off-track repair includes a root cause assessment before the quote, a written quote that documents the cause and the scope before work begins, and a full operational test and balance confirmation before the technician leaves.
Stop using the door. Observe the five things from a safe distance. Call AGDoors Service and describe what you see. We will dispatch the correctly prepared technician, assess the root cause before quoting, fix the cause and the door in the right order, and test the completed repair in your presence before leaving. Written quote before we start. Warranty on parts and labor. Same-day service across all of Palmhurst, TX.
(888) 670-9331 — Same-Day Off-Track Repair