Skip to main content
REGIONAL COST GUIDE · Madera County, CA

How Much Does Window Replacement Cost in Madera County, CA?

Window replacement in Madera County, CA averages $765 per window. See local cost ranges, wildfire-smart glass options, and 2026 financing tips.

Cost range $325 – $1,310
Average $765
Updated May 17, 2026
COST BREAKDOWN

What homeowners in Madera County actually pay.

Local market ranges built from regional labor, materials, and permitting data — not national averages.

Single Window Replacement (double-hung)

$325 Avg: $765 $1,310

Full Home Replacement (10 windows)

$5,450 Avg: $9,265 $16,350

Bay / Bow Window

$1,635 Avg: $2,725 $4,360

National avg $700 × 1.09x local adjustment = $765

Why Madera County prices look like this.

Scheduling window replacement in late winter or early spring, before Madera County's wildfire season pushes repair demand, is one of the more reliable ways to hold down costs in a market running about 9% above national averages. Local glazier wages of $33.18/hr drive that premium, and labor accounts for 40-60% of any quote you receive. Madera County's median home value of $367,700, at 2.13x the national home-value ratio, means energy-efficient windows return more value here than in lower-cost markets. A double-pane or low-E upgrade reduces both summer cooling load (the county logs 1,576 cooling degree-days annually) and ongoing exposure to wildfire season demand spikes. The local glazier workforce numbers 160 workers in the Fresno metro, a relatively small pool. Getting three competing quotes at least four to six weeks before your target install date is the fastest way to avoid surge pricing.

Labor Costs for Window Replacement in Madera County

Glaziers in the Fresno metro, which covers Madera County, earn a mean of $33.18/hr (OEWS 2025), compared to the national mean of $28.70/hr. That 15.6% wage premium feeds into every installation quote you receive. For a standard double-hung replacement, labor accounts for roughly 40-60% of total cost, with materials passing through near list price. The local workforce of 160 glaziers is relatively small for a county with a FEMA wildfire risk score of 99.36. Post-fire rebuild cycles can drain available labor for weeks at a time, shifting leverage toward contractors. Locking in a contract before fire season (June through September) rather than after is one concrete way to protect your budget. Some contractors offer multi-window discounts: replacing 10 or more units in a single mobilization cuts per-window labor cost meaningfully compared to staggered single-window projects.

Wildfire, Flood, and Hail Risk: What Madera County Homeowners Should Know

Madera County's FEMA NRI overall risk score of 96.44 (Relatively High) is dominated by wildfire at 99.36 (Relatively High). For windows, wildfire creates two concerns: radiant heat warps vinyl frames, and airborne embers shatter single-pane glass. Tempered or fire-rated glazing adds upfront cost but extends service life in a county where wildfire probability over a 30-year ownership horizon is near certain. Inland flood risk scores 93.99 (Relatively High). Windows at or near grade need proper flashing and water-managed frames to prevent infiltration during high-water events. Hail scores 76.40 (Relatively Moderate) and lightning 72.77 (Relatively Moderate), both supporting the case for impact-resistant glass if you are comparing options at the quote stage. Winter weather is Relatively Moderate at 67.95 but, combined with zero annual snowfall at valley elevations, is unlikely to drive frame selection decisions. Tornado risk of 19.31 (Very Low) is not a material factor here.

Climate Zone 3B and Window Efficiency in Madera County

Madera County sits in IECC Climate Zone 3B (mixed, dry southwest). Heating degree-days total 2,138 annually, about 42% below the national median of 3,700 HDD, so window insulation value is a supporting concern rather than the primary driver. Cooling degree-days at 1,576 represent a moderate but real summer load. For Zone 3B, the optimal window spec combines a solar heat gain coefficient (SHGC) below 0.25 on south- and west-facing units with a U-factor below 0.30 to handle overnight lows. The B moisture regime designation means conditions are dry, favoring fiberglass or vinyl frames over wood for longevity. No annual snowfall at valley elevations removes the structural snow-load consideration that affects frame specifications in California mountain counties. The DOE southwest HVAC region classification aligns with recommendations for reflective low-E coatings that reject afternoon solar gain, the dominant energy cost driver at this latitude and climate type.

Energy Savings from New Windows in Madera County

California's residential electricity rate of $0.332/kWh (February 2026) is among the highest in the country, which raises the dollar value of each unit of heat gain prevented. A west-facing single-pane window in Madera County, which averages 5.95 peak sun hours per day, acts as an unintended heat source through afternoon peak-rate hours. Low-E coatings with SHGC below 0.25 directly cut that load. With 1,576 cooling degree-days, summer is the dominant energy season for windows here. Upgrading from single-pane to double-pane low-E reduces heat transfer on both the cooling and heating sides of the ledger. The county's strong solar resource (5.26 kWh/m² average daily global horizontal irradiance) underscores why glazing selection matters: the same sunlight that makes rooftop solar attractive also drives heat gain through uncoated glass. Treating glazing efficiency as part of the home's overall energy envelope produces a better return than addressing it in isolation.

Financing Your Window Replacement in Madera County

The 30-year fixed mortgage rate of 6.36% (week of 2026-05-14) makes cash-out refinancing an expensive route for a project in the $5,450-$16,350 range. A HELOC, which tracks closer to prime rate, is a lower-cost draw for Madera County homeowners who have built equity against the county's median home value of $367,700. A 10-window project averaging $9,265 represents about 2.5% of that median home value, a reasonable amount to carry on a short-term HELOC rather than a 30-year instrument. Manufacturer and installer financing programs sometimes beat both options with promotional zero-interest periods. FY2026 fair market rents in Madera County run $1,376/month for a two-bedroom unit: the full project cost equates to about 6.7 months of that rent. For investors with rental units in the county, window upgrades that reduce tenant utility costs can support rent premiums that shorten the payback period.
Move on this

Compare Window Replacement quotes in Madera County, CA.

Tell us about your project — we'll match you with up to three licensed, insured pros nearby. Usually within 24 hours.

Get Free Quotes Free · No obligation

Find Local Window Replacement Providers Near You

Enter your ZIP to see rated window replacement pros serving your area.

FREQUENTLY ASKED · 07

Questions buyers ask about window replacement in Madera County.

Short answers to the most common things we hear about local pricing, scope, and timing.

  1. What does a single window replacement cost in Madera County, CA?

    Expect $325-$1,310 per window, with an average around $765 for a standard double-hung unit. Those figures reflect national averages multiplied by Madera County's 1.09x services adjustment, which accounts for local glazier wages of $33.18/hr. Bay and bow windows run higher, from $1,635 to $4,360.

  2. How much does a full home window replacement cost in Madera County?

    Replacing 10 windows runs $5,450-$16,350, with an average of $9,265. The range is wide because frame material, glass package (single-pane vs. double-pane low-E), and window type drive significant cost variation per unit.

  3. Why are window replacement costs higher in Madera County than the national average?

    Glazier wages in the Fresno metro average $33.18/hr, compared to the national mean of $28.70/hr, a 15.6% premium. Combined with a local services adjustment of 1.09x, that wage difference adds roughly 9% to project costs versus national baselines.

  4. How does Madera County's wildfire risk affect window selection?

    The county's FEMA wildfire risk score is 99.36 out of 100 (Relatively High). That argues for tempered or fire-rated glass and non-combustible frames (fiberglass or metal clad) on exterior-facing windows. Single-pane vinyl windows are the most vulnerable to radiant heat and ember impact during a wildfire event.

  5. Will new windows reduce my electricity bill in Madera County?

    California's residential electricity rate is $0.332/kWh. Upgrading from single-pane to double-pane low-E windows reduces cooling load in a county with 1,576 annual cooling degree-days. The exact savings depend on window orientation and the gap between old and new U-factors, but west-facing replacements in a zone averaging 5.95 peak sun hours per day see the largest return.

  6. What IECC climate zone is Madera County in, and how does it affect window specs?

    Madera County is in IECC Climate Zone 3B (mixed, dry southwest). The recommended specification for Zone 3B is a U-factor below 0.30 and a solar heat gain coefficient (SHGC) below 0.25, particularly on south- and west-facing windows. That combination controls afternoon solar gain, the dominant energy cost driver in this climate.

  7. What is the best way to finance window replacement in Madera County right now?

    The 30-year fixed mortgage rate is 6.36% as of May 2026, making refinancing expensive for a $5,450-$16,350 project. A HELOC against Madera County's median home value of $367,700 is a lower-cost option. Installer financing with promotional zero-interest periods can also undercut mortgage-based financing at this project size.

SOURCES · 08

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.

Cost guide · Companion CTA

Get Quotes

Compare prices from top-rated, licensed professionals in your area.

  • Free for homeowners
  • No obligations
  • Licensed pros