Search "garage door cost" and you'll find national averages that don't mean much once you're actually staring at a garage opening in Seattle, Tacoma, or Bellevue. Washington's mix of older housing stock, wet winters, and zip-code-specific labor pricing means the real number can land anywhere from under $1,500 to well over $3,000 — and the only way to know your number is to price your actual door.
What Washington homeowners actually pay, installed
- Single door, Traditional style, non-insulated: roughly $1,450–$2,000 installed
- Single door, Traditional style, insulated: roughly $1,750–$2,200 installed
- Double door, Traditional style, non-insulated: roughly $2,350–$2,850 installed
- Double door, Traditional style, insulated: roughly $2,550–$3,100 installed
Why the range exists even within Washington
Labor is priced separately from the door itself and varies by zip code and door width — a wider double door in a harder-to-access garage takes more time and more hands than a standard single. That's the biggest reason two homeowners a few miles apart can get different numbers for what looks like the same door.
Why insulation costs more here — and is usually worth it
Washington's wet, mild-but-damp winters make insulation one of the few upgrades that pays for itself in comfort, not just resale value — especially if the garage is attached to living space or used as a workshop. It typically adds a few hundred dollars to the installed price, which is a small premium against years of use.
Get your exact number, not another range
Ranges are useful for budgeting, but they're not a quote. Our wizard walks through your exact door size, style, insulation, and zip code and gives you a precise installed price in about two minutes — the same number you'd get after an in-person sales visit, just without the wait.