Your garage door opener has stopped working, and you are not sure why. Maybe nothing happens when you press the remote. Maybe the motor runs but the door does not move. Maybe it works from the wall button but not the remote, or it started acting strangely after a power outage, or it worked yesterday and does not work today with no obvious explanation. Opener problems are the most ambiguous category of garage door failure because the same symptom — door not responding — can have five completely different causes ranging from a dead battery to a broken spring to a failed circuit board.
AGDoors Service in Madison, GA wants you to understand what is wrong before you approve any repair. This page is designed to help you get there. Work through the diagnostic section below, then call us. We service all makes and models of garage door openers across all of Madison, GA with same-day response, written quotes before starting, and honest guidance on whether repair or replacement makes more financial sense for your specific situation.
Answer these five questions in order. Each answer narrows down the likely cause. By the time you reach the end, you will have a specific diagnosis category rather than a vague sense that something is wrong — and you will be able to describe the situation clearly when you call AGDoors Service in Madison, which directly affects how prepared the technician is when they arrive.
Press the wall-mounted button inside the garage. If the door opens and closes correctly from the wall button but does not respond to the remote, the problem is isolated to the remote rather than the opener unit itself. Start with the battery — replace it before concluding the remote has failed. If a new battery does not resolve it, the remote may have lost its programming and needs to be re-paired to the opener. If the remote is confirmed operational and still will not work, the remote receiver inside the opener unit may have failed. If neither the wall button nor the remote produces any response from the opener, move to Question 2. The problem is not the remote.
With both the remote and wall button confirmed unresponsive, check whether the opener makes any sound — a click, a hum, a brief motor sound — when you press either control. If there is complete silence and no light on the opener unit, the opener has no power. Check the circuit breaker for the garage circuit. Check whether the opener is plugged into the ceiling outlet. If your garage has a GFCI outlet, check for a tripped reset button. If the outlet has power but the opener still shows no signs of life at all, an internal fuse or the power supply board has failed and requires a technician. If there is a click but no motor sound and no movement, a failed capacitor is the most likely cause. If there is a motor hum but no door movement, move to Question 3.
A motor that runs without producing door movement points to one of two causes. First check the manual disconnect cord — the red rope hanging from the trolley carriage on the drive rail. If this cord has been pulled, the door is disconnected from the opener drive mechanism. To re-engage: close the door manually, then pull the disconnect cord toward the motor unit until you feel or hear a click. If the door is confirmed connected and the motor still runs without moving the door, the drive gear has almost certainly stripped. The drive gear is a nylon gear inside the opener head that transfers the motor's rotation to the drive mechanism. A stripped gear is one of the most common opener repairs and is typically completed in under an hour.
This is the most important question in the diagnostic sequence and the one that most homeowners skip. It identifies a specific situation where what appears to be an opener problem is actually a spring problem. Pull the red manual disconnect cord to release the door from the opener drive. Then lift the door by hand. A garage door with properly functioning springs should feel relatively light — liftable with one hand and holding its position at any height without dropping. If the door feels extremely heavy — as if you are lifting its full physical weight with no assistance — the springs have failed. The opener has been trying to lift the door without spring counterbalance. Call AGDoors Service and describe this specific finding — the technician will arrive with springs rather than opener components. If the door feels normally light, the spring system is functioning and the problem is genuinely in the opener. Move to Question 5.
If the opener failure followed a power outage, a storm, a surge, or any unusual event, the most likely cause is a logic board failure triggered by the power event. Modern garage door openers rely on a circuit board to control motor operation, remote signal reception, sensor processing, and travel limits. Power surges — even brief ones — can damage or destroy the logic board. Logic board replacement is a moderate-to-high cost repair, and on an older opener, it is the scenario most likely to tip the repair-vs-replace calculation toward replacement. If the failure did not follow any unusual event, the problem is a gradual wear failure in one of the components identified in Questions 1 through 4. Call AGDoors Service with your answers to all five questions.
Once you have worked through the five questions, use this section to understand the likely cost of what you have found. Knowing which tier your problem falls into before the technician arrives eliminates the surprise that produces most negative experiences with garage door repair companies.
Several opener failures cost nothing to resolve if the homeowner catches them first. Replace the remote battery before concluding the remote has failed — dead batteries account for a significant share of "my opener stopped working" calls. Check the wall lock button on the wall console — many openers have a vacation lock button that disables the remote, and it is easy to press accidentally. Check the circuit breaker and the outlet power. Check whether the manual disconnect cord has been pulled. None of these require a technician.
Remote reprogramming, keypad replacement, and antenna issues fall into this tier. If the wall button works but no remote or keypad will operate the opener, the receiver circuit has failed — this is a repairable component on most opener units and falls at the lower end of this tier. Remote replacement and reprogramming for all major brands is a standard service that AGDoors Service technicians complete in a single visit across Madison, GA.
Safety sensor replacement, sensor alignment requiring new hardware, and limit switch module replacement fall in this tier. Sensors themselves are inexpensive components — typically $20 to $50 for the unit — but when combined with the service call, fall in this range. Both are repairs that extend the unit's useful life without raising the repair-vs-replace question for units under twelve years old.
Stripped drive gears are the single most common mechanical opener failure and fall reliably in this tier. The parts cost is modest — gear and sprocket kits are $20 to $50 — and the labour is straightforward for a trained technician. Trolley carriage replacement falls in the same tier. Both of these repairs are appropriate for openers of any age in otherwise sound condition, and neither raises the replacement question unless the unit has other concurrent failures.
Logic board and capacitor failures fall here. The capacitor is the lower end of this tier — the component costs $10 to $30 but the service call and labour bring the total to $150 to $200. Logic board replacement depends heavily on board availability and the specific model — boards for common current-generation openers are readily available and fall in the middle of this tier, while boards for discontinued models may be harder to source and approach the upper end. On openers over ten years old, a logic board failure is the specific scenario where the repair-vs-replace calculation most often tips toward replacement.
Motor failure is the most expensive single opener repair and the scenario most likely to make replacement more financially rational than repair. A motor replacement typically costs $200 to $350 in parts and labour — and on an opener that is over ten years old, spending that amount on the motor leaves a unit whose other components are equally aged and increasingly likely to fail. At this tier, a new opener installation in Madison, GA typically costs $300 to $550 installed, which resets the entire unit's service life and often includes improved safety features, quieter operation, and in some cases smart connectivity. AGDoors Service will always present both options — repair cost versus replacement cost — before asking you to choose.
This section gives you the specific thresholds and scenarios to apply to your situation and your quote.
A garage door opener has an expected service life of 10 to 15 years under normal residential use. When an opener is under 8 years old, repair is almost always the right answer for all but the most expensive failures. When an opener is 8 to 12 years old, repair is right for lower-tier failures (drive gears, sensors, remotes) but the repair-vs-replace calculation becomes relevant for higher-tier failures (logic board, motor). When an opener is over 12 to 15 years old, any repair that costs more than 40 to 50 percent of a replacement unit's cost should prompt a serious replacement conversation.
The 50% rule: if the cost of the repair exceeds 50% of the cost of a comparable new opener installed, replacement is usually the better long-term financial decision. A standard chain or belt drive opener installed in Madison, GA typically costs $300 to $500 all-in. Under the 50% rule, a repair that costs more than $150 to $250 on an older opener warrants asking for a replacement quote before deciding. AGDoors Service provides both costs on every job where the repair-vs-replace question is relevant — you see both numbers before choosing.
Repair is unambiguously the right choice when the opener is under ten years old, the failed component is in Tier 1 through Tier 4, and the rest of the unit is functioning correctly. A stripped gear on a five-year-old belt drive opener is a repair. A failed sensor on a seven-year-old opener is a repair. A remote receiver failure on an opener of any age where the unit is otherwise sound is a repair. In these scenarios, the repair extends the unit's service life by several years at a fraction of the replacement cost.
Four specific scenarios make replacement the better investment regardless of the unit's age. First: the repair cost approaches or exceeds 50% of a new unit's installed cost. Second: the same unit has required two or more repairs in the past three years — a pattern that indicates systemic wear rather than isolated failure. Third: the motor has failed on an opener that is over twelve years old. Fourth: the unit predates modern safety standards — specifically, openers manufactured before 1993 that do not have auto-reverse safety sensors. In any of these four scenarios, the long-term cost of continued repair almost always exceeds the cost of a new installation.
When replacement is already the right financial decision, the follow-up question is whether the replacement unit should be a like-for-like swap or an upgrade. The right time to consider a smart opener upgrade is precisely when you are already replacing the unit. The situations where a smart upgrade makes genuine financial sense: households in areas of Madison, GA that experience frequent power outages (battery backup makes the opener functional during outages); households where the garage is attached to a bedroom or living space (belt drive units are significantly quieter than chain drives); and households where remote access monitoring has practical value (delivery management, checking whether the door was left open, granting temporary access). AGDoors Service presents the upgrade cost clearly and alongside the standard replacement cost — you choose based on the numbers and your priorities, not on a sales pitch.
Most homeowners call a garage door company and say "my opener isn't working." That is an accurate description but it is not a useful one for dispatch purposes. The information the dispatcher receives determines which components the technician loads onto the truck.
Your opener's brand and model number — look on the motor head unit on the ceiling. The door's current position — fully closed, fully open, or stopped partway. What the opener does when you press the remote or wall button — be specific: nothing at all, light only, a click but no motor sound, a hum but no movement, the door starts and reverses, or the door moves partway and stops. Whether the door feels unusually heavy when lifted manually — this is the most important single piece of information. And how long ago the failure started and whether anything preceded it — a failure after a power outage points to a logic board issue; a gradual failure points to mechanical wear.
Stand directly below the opener motor head and look at the label on the housing. The brand name is usually printed prominently. The model number is typically on a sticker or plate and follows a format of letters and numbers — for example, LiftMaster 8365, Chamberlain B970, or Genie 7155. If the label is not visible from the floor, take a photo with your phone and zoom in — most modern phones can read small labels clearly. If the model is not legible, the brand name alone is still useful and allows the dispatcher to stock components for that manufacturer's most common failure points.
You do not need to know what is wrong. You need to describe what the opener is doing — or not doing. A technician who knows the symptom can diagnose the cause on arrival; a technician who has been told the wrong cause arrives with the wrong parts. Tell the dispatcher what you observe, not what you conclude. "The motor runs but the door does not move" is better than "I think the gear is stripped." "The opener makes a clicking sound but does not start" is better than "I think the capacitor is broken." The symptom description is accurate. The cause conclusion may not be.
AGDoors Service carries parts for all major residential garage door opener brands on every truck serving Madison, GA. If your opener brand is listed below, the technician arrives prepared to service it without a parts run for the most common failure types.
The two most commonly installed brands nationally and the most comprehensively stocked on every AGDoors Service truck in Madison, GA. We carry drive gear and sprocket assemblies, logic boards for current and recent model series, safety sensor units, motor capacitors, remote and keypad units, and trolley carriage components for both brands.
The second-largest installed base nationally. We stock circuit boards, carriage inserts, drive components, and sensor units for the most common Genie residential model lines. For older Genie screw drive systems, we carry the plastic carriage insert that is the most common wear item in that configuration.
Craftsman — manufactured by Chamberlain under contract for Sears and sharing significant internal components with Chamberlain and LiftMaster units. Parts availability for Craftsman is strong and most Craftsman repairs use the same components as the corresponding Chamberlain models. We also service Marantec, Skylink, Ryobi, and older units from manufacturers whose brands have been discontinued.
Call AGDoors Service and describe the opener when you call — brand, model if readable, and the specific symptom. The dispatcher will confirm parts availability before sending a truck. For less common or older models, we confirm availability honestly and tell you if a parts run is likely before dispatch. You are never told a part is available and then surprised by a second visit.
The cost ranges below align with the failure tiers described earlier in this page. Use them alongside your five-question diagnosis to arrive at a realistic expectation before the technician quotes the job.
| Failure Type | Typical Repair Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Remote battery replacement and reprogramming | $25 to $75 | Often resolved on diagnostic call |
| Keypad replacement and programming | $50 to $125 | Includes new keypad and programming |
| Safety sensor replacement | $75 to $175 | Per sensor; includes alignment and testing |
| Limit switch module replacement | $75 to $200 | Varies by brand and model |
| Drive gear and sprocket kit | $100 to $200 | Most common mechanical opener repair |
| Trolley carriage replacement | $75 to $175 | Includes reconnection and testing |
| Capacitor replacement | $100 to $175 | Quick repair; often resolved in one visit |
| Logic board replacement | $150 to $300 | Varies significantly by brand and model |
| Motor replacement | $200 to $350 | See repair vs replace guidance above |
| Full opener replacement — standard | $300 to $500 | Unit, installation, programming |
| Full opener replacement — smart | $400 to $650 | Includes MyQ setup and device pairing |
| After-hours / emergency surcharge | Add $75–$150 | Disclosed before dispatch |
All pricing reflects typical ranges for Madison, GA. Written quote provided before any work begins.
When a repair quote for an opener that is over ten years old falls above $200 to $250, AGDoors Service presents a replacement cost alongside the repair cost so you can compare both before deciding. A new standard opener installed in Madison, GA typically costs $300 to $500. If the repair cost is $250 and the replacement cost is $350, the additional $100 for a new unit resets the entire service life of the opener and eliminates the risk of another near-term failure on the same aged unit. That conversation happens before you approve anything.
Emergency opener calls outside standard business hours carry a surcharge of $75 to $150 disclosed before dispatch. An opener failure that leaves the garage door stuck open overnight is a genuine security emergency that warrants an after-hours call. An opener failure where the door is closed and the car is accessible through another route can typically wait for standard-hours service at the lower rate. The dispatcher will help you assess urgency honestly when you call.
When the opener light activates but the door does not move, the power supply is functioning and the control circuit is receiving the signal. The most common cause is a disconnected manual release cord — check whether the red rope hanging from the trolley has been pulled, and re-engage the door to the drive by pulling the cord toward the motor unit until you feel a click. If the door is connected and still does not move, a stripped drive gear is the most likely cause. The motor is running but its rotation is not being transmitted to the drive mechanism. This is a moderate-cost repair that AGDoors Service can complete in a single visit.
When the wall button operates the door normally but no remote will work, there are three possible causes in order of likelihood. The remote battery is dead or weak — replace it first. The remote has lost its programming and needs to be re-paired to the opener — a quick process that the AGDoors Service dispatcher can often walk you through over the phone. The remote receiver circuit inside the opener has failed — this is the component that receives the radio frequency signal from remotes, and its failure means no remote will work regardless of battery condition or programming. A failed receiver requires a technician.
The test is simple and takes under a minute. Pull the red manual disconnect cord on the opener to release the door from the drive. Lift the door by hand to approximately waist height and release it. A door with functioning springs holds its position and feels noticeably light — most people can lift it with one hand. A door with failed springs feels extremely heavy — as if you are lifting its full physical weight of 150 to 400 pounds with no assistance, because you are. If the door feels this heavy, stop using the opener immediately. You have a spring problem, not an opener problem. Call AGDoors Service and describe specifically that the door felt very heavy when lifted manually — the technician will arrive prepared for spring replacement.
It is most likely a stripped drive gear, not a motor failure. When the motor hums without producing any movement, the motor itself is starting and running — the hum is the motor operating. What is not happening is the transmission of that rotation to the drive mechanism. A stripped nylon drive gear allows the motor to spin freely while transmitting nothing to the chain, belt, or screw. A failed capacitor hum is typically briefer and the motor never fully reaches operating speed. A stripped gear produces a sustained hum as the motor runs at normal speed through a disconnected gear. Either diagnosis is a moderate-cost repair that does not indicate the opener needs replacement.
It depends on what has failed and what the repair costs. A 12-year-old opener with a stripped drive gear at $100 to $200 is worth repairing — the gear failure does not indicate systemic wear and the repair extends the unit's service life meaningfully at low cost. A 12-year-old opener with a failed logic board at $200 to $300 is the borderline case — the repair cost is approaching 50 to 70 percent of a new unit's installed cost, and if the board failed, the motor and other components of the same age are not far behind. AGDoors Service presents both the repair cost and the replacement cost for all jobs in Madison, GA where this question applies, so you can make the comparison with real numbers before deciding.
In most cases it is the sensors. Safety sensors sit near the floor on each side of the door opening and send an infrared beam between them. When anything breaks that beam — or when one sensor is misaligned, dirty, or damaged — the opener interprets an obstruction and reverses the door. Check the indicator lights on both sensor units. Both should show solid lights — typically one amber, one green. If either light is blinking or off, that sensor is misaligned or obstructed. Clean the lens with a dry cloth and adjust the bracket until both lights are solid. If the sensors are confirmed solid and the door still reverses on closing, the close limit setting on the opener is likely set incorrectly. Both are AGDoors Service repairs, but the sensor check is something you can try yourself before calling.
Five things help most: your opener's brand and model number (on a label on the motor head unit), the door's current position (closed, open, or partway), what the opener does when you press the remote or wall button (nothing at all, light only, a click, a hum, partial movement, or reversal), whether the door feels unusually heavy when lifted manually after disconnecting the opener, and how long ago the problem started and whether anything unusual preceded it. These five pieces of information allow the AGDoors Service dispatcher in Madison, GA to route the right technician with the right inventory, which is the difference between a one-visit repair and a two-visit repair.
The cost depends on which component has failed. Remote and keypad repairs run $25 to $125. Sensor replacement runs $75 to $175. Drive gear replacement runs $100 to $200. Logic board replacement runs $150 to $300 depending on the model. Motor replacement runs $200 to $350, at which point full replacement at $300 to $500 installed is worth considering. After-hours calls carry a surcharge of $75 to $150 disclosed before dispatch. AGDoors Service provides a written quote on every job after on-site diagnosis and before any work begins. Use the five-question diagnostic section on this page to identify which tier your problem likely falls in before calling.
Yes, when replacement is already the right financial decision. If the repair is the right choice — a minor failure on a unit that has years of service life remaining — a smart opener upgrade is a separate conversation for another time. If replacement is right because the unit is old or the repair cost is high, the incremental cost of upgrading to a belt drive with battery backup and smartphone connectivity is worth considering at the replacement decision point. AGDoors Service installs all major smart opener configurations across Madison, GA, including LiftMaster and Chamberlain units with MyQ connectivity, and presents the cost comparison between standard and smart replacement options on any job where replacement is recommended.
Yes. An opener failure that self-resolves is almost never a problem that has fixed itself. It is almost always a component that is at or near end of life, failing intermittently before failing completely. Common self-resolving failures include: a logic board that is overheating and resetting after cooling, a capacitor that is failing but not yet completely dead, and a drive gear that is stripped but still occasionally engaging. Each of these will fail completely in the near future — the self-resolution is a warning, not a resolution. Scheduling a diagnostic visit while the opener is intermittently functional is significantly less stressful than scheduling an emergency call when it fails completely and the car is inside. Call AGDoors Service in Madison, GA and describe that the opener failed and then started working again — the technician knows exactly what to look for.
AGDoors Service covers all of Madison, GA for same-day garage door opener repair — all makes and models, all drive types, repair or replacement with honest guidance on which makes more financial sense for your specific unit and your specific quote. Our technicians are based across the Madison metro area and carry parts inventories for all major opener brands on every truck.
We do not route calls through a national dispatch centre. When you call AGDoors Service in Madison, GA, you reach a local dispatcher who knows the area, routes the nearest prepared technician, and confirms an honest arrival window before you hang up.
You now know what question to ask yourself to identify the likely cause, which cost tier that cause falls in, whether your situation points toward repair or replacement, and exactly what to tell us when you call. AGDoors Service diagnoses before quoting and quotes before starting on every job across Madison, GA. Written quote. All makes and models. Same-day service. No surprises.
(888) 670-9331 — Same-Day Opener Repair