How Much Does Exterior Door Replacement Cost in Orange County, CA?
Exterior door replacement in Orange County costs $936–$3,510. See local labor rates, wildfire-rated options, and financing tips for 2026.
What homeowners in Orange County actually pay.
Local market ranges built from regional labor, materials, and permitting data — not national averages.
Entry Door Replacement (Fiberglass)
Sliding Patio Door Replacement
Storm Door Installation
National avg $800–$3,000 (typical $1,500) × 1.17x local adjustment = $936–$3,510 (avg $1,755). Rounded to nearest $5.
Why Orange County prices look like this.
Labor Costs and What Local Contractors Charge
Hazard Ratings and Door Specifications to Know
Climate Zone 3B and What It Means for Door Performance
Energy Efficiency and the $0.332/kWh Electricity Context
Financing Options at 6.36% Mortgage Rates
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Questions buyers ask about exterior door replacement in Orange County.
Short answers to the most common things we hear about local pricing, scope, and timing.
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What does a fiberglass entry door replacement cost in Orange County in 2026?
Installed cost runs $936–$3,510, with a midpoint around $1,755. That reflects national averages multiplied by a 1.17x local adjustment driven by the LA-OC metro carpenter wage of $37.79/hr. Steel doors land at the lower end; premium fiberglass with decorative glass or multi-point locking hardware approaches the upper end.
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How much does a sliding patio door replacement cost in Orange County?
Expect $1,755–$5,265 installed, with a typical project around $3,275. The spread depends on door width, glass package (tempered vs. laminated low-e), and whether the track and rough opening need modification. Labor alone runs four to six hours at $37.79/hr for the carpenter portion.
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Do I need a fire-rated door in Orange County?
If your home sits in a High or Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone, California code may require WUI-rated exterior assemblies. Orange County's wildfire risk score is 99.81 (Relatively High per FEMA NRI), covering significant portions of the county's hillside and canyon communities. Check your parcel's HFHZ designation with the California Department of Forestry before specifying a product.
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How does Orange County's climate affect which door I should buy?
IECC Zone 3B is warm and dry, so the priority is blocking summer solar heat gain rather than extreme cold. Choose a door with a low SHGC (below 0.25 for sidelite glass) and a U-factor at or below 0.17 to qualify for ENERGY STAR. With electricity at $0.332/kWh, a tight-sealing door can save $17–$50 per year on cooling costs.
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Is a storm door worth adding in Orange County?
Storm doors run $350–$935 installed here. Near the coast, a storm door adds a second barrier against marine moisture and salt air, extending the life of the primary door. In wildfire zones, a full-view storm door with tempered glass also provides an ember buffer. For inland valley homes with no coastal exposure, the payback is less clear-cut.
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Can I get a tax credit for a new exterior door in California?
The federal 25C tax credit covers up to $500 for exterior doors meeting ENERGY STAR requirements (U-factor 0.17 or lower for Zone 3B). California does not currently layer a separate state credit on top, but utility rebate programs through Southern California Edison or TECH Clean California sometimes include envelope air-sealing measures bundled with door installation. Confirm eligibility with your installer before purchase.
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How does Orange County's home value affect door replacement decisions?
With a median home value of $915,500, roughly 5.31x the national average, material and finish upgrades tend to hold value better here than in lower-cost markets. Spending an extra $500–$800 on a premium fiberglass door with a factory finish, multi-point lock, and composite frame is often recoverable at resale, whereas in a $200,000 market the same upgrade might not pencil out.
How these numbers were built.
Cost estimates are derived from government data including the U.S. Census Bureau (ACS), Bureau of Labor Statistics (OEWS), FEMA National Risk Index, EIA energy data, IECC climate zone classifications, Federal Reserve (FRED), and HUD Fair Market Rents.