St. Paul Garage Door Pros

Home  ›  Common Problems  ›  Garage Door Not Closing Fully

Act Now — High Urgency

Garage Door Not Closing Fully
in St. Paul, MN

When a garage door won't close completely, it leaves your home and belongings exposed. This is a common problem in St. Paul after winter, when frost heave shifts garage floors and walls by small amounts that are enough to knock sensors and tracks out of position. Homes in areas with heavy clay soil, like parts of the North End and South St. Paul, see more frost movement than neighborhoods built on sandier ground. A gap at the bottom also lets cold air and animals in.

Quick Answer

A garage door that won't close all the way usually has a sensor problem, a limit setting that's off, or an obstruction in the track. In St. Paul, frost heave can shift the concrete floor and move sensor brackets out of alignment over winter. A technician can check the sensors, adjust the close limit on the opener, and inspect the track. A door that won't close fully is a security problem, so call (218) 274-5818 and get it looked at.

Garage Door Not Closing Fully in St. Paul

Telltale Signs

Warning Signs to Watch For

  • The door descends partway then reverses back to the open position
  • The door stops with a gap of several inches at the bottom
  • The door closes with the remote but not with the wall button, or vice versa
  • The sensor lights on the track are blinking or one is off
  • The door closes only when you hold the wall button continuously
  • The bottom of the door hits the floor on one side before the other

Root Causes

What Causes Garage Door Not Closing Fully?

1

Sensor Obstruction or Misalignment

The safety sensors at the base of the door track stop the door from closing if anything breaks the beam between them. Frost heave in St. Paul moves sensor brackets out of alignment each spring, and even a small misalignment makes the opener act as if something is blocking the door. Spiderwebs, dirt, or a forgotten trash can in front of a sensor cause the same problem.

The Fix

Sensor Cleaning and Realignment

A technician cleans the sensor lenses, realigns the brackets until both indicator lights are solid, and then tightens the brackets so they do not shift again with normal floor movement.

2

Close Limit Set Too Short

Garage door openers have an adjustable close limit that tells the motor how far to travel before stopping. After a technician or homeowner works on the opener, or after the opener unit shifts slightly on its bracket, that setting can be off. The door stops before the weatherstripping touches the floor because the motor thinks it has already reached the ground.

The Fix

Close Limit Adjustment

A technician locates the limit adjustment screws or settings on the opener unit and increases the close travel distance in small increments until the door seals fully at the floor. This takes a few test runs to dial in correctly.

3

Uneven Floor from Frost Heave

St. Paul's heavy clay soil holds water and expands when it freezes, pushing up garage floor slabs unevenly. When one side of the floor is higher than the other, the door contacts the raised side before the other side reaches the floor and triggers the auto-reverse, thinking it hit an obstacle. This gets worse each year the floor goes unrepaired.

The Fix

Bottom Seal Adjustment and Floor Assessment

A technician can adjust the bottom seal profile to better conform to a slightly uneven floor and recalibrate the auto-reverse force. If the floor displacement is large, a concrete contractor may need to address the slab itself.

Self-Diagnosis

Which Cause Applies to You?

Check the signs you're observing to narrow down the likely root cause before your inspection.

What You're Seeing Sensor Obstruction or Misalignment Close Limit Set Too Short Uneven Floor from Frost Heave
Door reverses immediately when it reaches the floor, one sensor light is blinking
Door stops consistently two to four inches above the floor with no reversal
Door closes fully on one side but leaves a gap on the other side
Door closes only when you hold down the wall button the entire time
Problem started in spring after a hard winter
Door stopped closing at the correct height after someone worked on the opener