ProVia’s current entry-door lineup is built around three lines: Signet® fiberglass, Ascent™ fiberglass (introduced January 7, 2026), and Legacy™ steel. If you’ve been researching ProVia online and run into older references to Heritage® or Embarq®, those names are no longer the primary entry-door lineup — current ProVia entry-door navigation surfaces Signet, Ascent, and Legacy. For the ProVia Signet vs Ascent vs Legacy decision, here is how the three lines actually differ, who each is built for, and how to map older Heritage/Embarq references to current options.
What Are ProVia’s Three Entry-Door Lines?
The short version:
- Signet® — Premium fiberglass. The long-running flagship. Deep design vocabulary, broad glass and finish options, well-known dealer history. This is the line most existing ProVia owners in Ohio recognize.
- Ascent™ — New 2026 premium fiberglass. Introduced January 7, 2026. Features White Oak and Smooth surface options, 8-foot and 42-inch-wide configurations, broad hardware and glass compatibility. Positioned at or above Signet on premium configurations.
- Legacy™ — Premium steel. 20-gauge steel construction, foam-fill core, smooth or embossed surfaces. The security-and-durability play, and the value entry into the ProVia lineup.
Signet vs. Ascent: Which Fiberglass Line?
Both Signet and Ascent are premium fiberglass lines, both are built to order, both can be configured with sidelites/transoms/decorative glass, and both are ENERGY STAR-certified in qualifying configurations. The differences:
- Surface options. Signet has the broadest catalog of wood-grain and smooth surfaces — oak, mahogany, fir, cherry, walnut variants among others. Ascent leads with White Oak and Smooth, with the catalog expected to grow.
- Size range. Both lines support standard sizes; Ascent specifically calls out 8-foot heights and 42-inch widths as native configurations.
- Hardware compatibility. Ascent was designed in 2026 with broad current hardware compatibility, including multipoint lock options widely.
- Dealer / homeowner familiarity. Signet is the line older Ohio ProVia owners most often recognize; Ascent is newer and is just starting to fill out dealer showrooms.
- Price. At equivalent configurations, the two lines are close. Premium Ascent configurations with custom finish can sit at or slightly above premium Signet.
Pick Signet if: you want the deepest design vocabulary, the longest dealer track record, or you’re matching an existing Signet door elsewhere in the home.
Pick Ascent if: you want the newest hardware compatibility, an 8-foot or 42-inch native configuration, or the latest White Oak surface.
Legacy vs. Signet/Ascent: When Steel Makes Sense
Legacy is a different category — steel, not fiberglass. The decision is less “Legacy vs. Signet” and more “do you want fiberglass or steel?”
Pick Legacy if:
- You want a clean, painted, contemporary entry — no wood grain
- Slab-level dent and break-in resistance is the top priority
- The door is a back, side, or service entry where curb appeal matters less
- Budget is the constraint and you still want professional-class build quality
Pick Signet or Ascent if:
- You want a wood-grain stained look
- This is the primary front entry and curb appeal matters
- You want the long-term insulation edge fiberglass holds in Ohio winters
- You plan to stay in the home long enough that the up-front fiberglass premium pays back
For a deeper material-level comparison, see our fiberglass vs. steel entry doors guide.
What Happened to ProVia Heritage and Embarq?
This is the most common research question we hear from Ohio homeowners who started shopping ProVia six months to two years ago. Here’s the honest answer:
ProVia’s current public entry-door navigation features Signet, Ascent, and Legacy as the active lineup. Older Heritage® and Embarq® entry-door URLs now redirect to the main entry-door page rather than to standalone product pages. Heritage and Embarq references are still common on third-party blog posts, contractor pages, and older dealer marketing, which is why the names persist in homeowner research.
For a current quote: configurations and design choices that used to be specified as “Heritage” or “Embarq” can be mapped to current Signet, Ascent, or Legacy options. If you saw a specific glass package, finish, or panel design online under the older names, bring the photo or product code to your free in-home estimate. We’ll pull the equivalent in the current lineup.
How to Compare ProVia Lines During a Quote
If you’re getting a free in-home estimate from a ProVia dealer (Evolve included), here is what to ask to make a clean comparison:
- Which line is being quoted? Make sure your quote specifies Signet, Ascent, or Legacy explicitly — not just “ProVia.”
- What surface and finish? Wood-grain or smooth, factory color or stain, painted or stained.
- What glass package? Solid panel, decorative glass design, lite size, sidelites, transom.
- What hardware? Builder-grade, designer, multipoint lock, smart lock, deadbolt.
- What size? Standard 36″x80″, 42″ width, 8-foot height, double door.
- What’s the lead time? Custom ProVia configurations typically ship in 4–8 weeks from order.
- What warranty applies? ProVia manufacturer warranty on glass, finish, and components, plus the installer’s workmanship warranty in writing.
ProVia Signet vs Ascent vs Legacy: Quick Decision Framework
Use the three-line comparison this way during a quote: start with the material, then narrow by design. If the priority is the most realistic wood look and the broadest long-running catalog, Signet belongs at the top of the list. If the project calls for the newest White Oak look, 8-foot height, or 42-inch width, Ascent is the line to compare directly against Signet. If the door is a back entry, side entry, garage-to-house entry, or budget-sensitive front entry where painted steel is acceptable, Legacy is the practical option.
The wrong way to compare the lineup is to ask only which line is “best.” Each line can be the right answer in a different opening. The better question is which configuration solves the home’s exposure, security, finish, and budget constraints with the fewest compromises.
That framing also keeps the quote conversation grounded in the opening itself instead of in a generic product hierarchy.
What Do ProVia Doors Cost?
Most Ohio installations land in these ranges (door + standard installation):
- ProVia Legacy steel: $2,800–$5,500 installed
- ProVia Signet fiberglass: $3,800–$7,500 installed
- ProVia Ascent fiberglass: $4,500–$8,500 installed
Custom configurations — sidelites, transoms, 8-foot heights, double doors, full-lite decorative glass — can move the final price well above these ranges. Our full ProVia door cost guide for Ohio covers what’s inside the range.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Ascent the new Heritage?
Not exactly a one-to-one replacement. Ascent is a new fiberglass line introduced in January 2026 with its own design language. Configurations homeowners used to specify as “Heritage” can typically be mapped to a current Signet or Ascent equivalent during the quote process, but Ascent is not branded as “Heritage 2.0.”
Is Embarq still available?
ProVia’s current public entry-door navigation centers on Signet, Ascent, and Legacy. Embarq references on older online content are no longer the primary entry-door lineup. If you found a specific Embarq configuration in your research, bring the details to your quote — we can identify the closest current equivalent.
Is Legacy a steel or fiberglass door?
Legacy is steel — 20-gauge steel construction with foam-fill core. It’s the security-and-durability line in the ProVia entry-door lineup.
Which ProVia line looks most like wood?
Signet and Ascent fiberglass with wood-grain surface options. Both lines achieve a remarkably realistic wood look without the maintenance penalty of real wood. Legacy is steel and does not offer wood-grain finishes.
Which ProVia door is most secure?
At the slab level, Legacy 20-gauge steel is the hardest to dent or breach. In real-world break-in scenarios, the lock package, strike plate reinforcement, and frame integrity matter as much as slab material — meaning Signet or Ascent with a quality multipoint lock, reinforced strike, and laminated sidelite glass is functionally as secure as Legacy.
Are ProVia doors made in the USA?
Yes. ProVia is headquartered in Sugarcreek, Ohio, and manufactures in-state. That’s part of why we offer it as our premium door line for Ohio homeowners — local manufacturing and local warranty support.
Can I see all three lines in a showroom?
We can walk you through samples of all three lines during a free in-home estimate. ProVia also publishes online visualizers so you can preview Signet, Ascent, and Legacy configurations against your home’s exterior.
Related Reading
- ProVia Door Cost in Ohio: What You’re Actually Paying For
- Fiberglass vs. Steel Entry Doors: Which Is Right for Your Ohio Home?
- Entry Door Replacement Cost in Ohio: A Real Pricing Breakdown
- Signs It’s Time to Replace Your Exterior Door
- Door Installation & Replacement in Ohio
Ready to Get Started?
Tired of guessing what your door project should cost? Schedule a free in-home estimate. We’ll measure your opening, walk you through fiberglass and steel options, show you how ProVia Signet, Ascent, and Legacy compare, and give you a transparent installed quote — no pressure, no bait-and-switch.
Cleveland: (216) 941-5470 | Akron / Canton: (330) 449-0513 | Columbus: (614) 852-4608 | Cincinnati / Dayton: (513) 776-1805
Or request a free quote online: evolveegress.com/get-a-quote.
Evolve Egress & Exteriors has installed exterior doors, egress windows, and basement upgrades for 30,000+ Ohio homeowners since 2004. In-house crews. Free estimates. Lifetime workmanship warranty. Learn more about our door installation services.