Door replacement cost in Ohio — front, patio & entry door prices.
No “call for pricing” — even though there’s no such thing as a typical door. Build yours below for your real, installed range in about 60 seconds.
Build your door. See your price.
Most companies make you sit through a sales visit just to hear a number. We’ll show you a real, honest range in about a minute — then email you a copy to keep.
What does door replacement cost in Ohio?
Here are honest, installed prices for door replacement in Ohio — the same numbers the builder above uses. A front entry door runs about $5,500 ($3,700–$12,000); a sliding patio door around $2,975 ($1,950–$9,000); a French door around $9,500 ($7,000–$22,000+); a storm door around $1,800 ($1,100–$3,000). Sidelites, a transom, premium fiberglass, or a French configuration move the number up — your exact figure is confirmed at your free in-home measure.
See it — entry, patio, French & storm
| Door type (installed) | Ballpark · full range | What sets the price |
|---|---|---|
| Storm doorOver your existing entry | ~$1,800$1,100–$3,000 | Prehung vs. universal, and full-view vs. partial-view glass. |
| Front entry door — singleSteel (Good) · fiberglass (Better/Best) | ~$5,500$3,700–$12,000 | Steel vs. fiberglass vs. premium fiberglass, glass and hardware tier. |
| Entry door with sidelites / transomA grand entrance | ~$9,000$8,400–$22,000 | One or two sidelites, a transom above, decorative glass, double doors. |
| Patio (sliding) door2, 3, or 4 panel | ~$2,975$1,950–$9,000+ | Panel count, 8-foot height, and glass & hardware package. |
| French (swinging) patio doorPremium configuration | ~$9,500$7,000–$22,000+ | French doors are a premium, higher-cost configuration than a slider. |
Ranges are installed and include professional installation, haul-away of your old door, factory finish, hardware, and Evolve’s workmanship warranty plus the manufacturer’s product warranty. Converting a window into a door, extending an opening, or cutting a new opening is custom structural work confirmed at the free measure. The builder above prices your exact door; these are honest door installation prices to set expectations.
6 things that move your door replacement cost
Why two Ohio homes get very different quotes for “a new door” — and what the builder above is really pricing.
1. Door type & system
A storm door, a single entry slab, a sliding patio door, and a swinging French door price very differently. Type is the biggest lever — French doors are a premium configuration; a single slider is the value path.
2. Material & tier
Steel (our Good tier) is the strongest value. Fiberglass (Better) won’t dent, warp, or rust and gives realistic wood-grain looks. Premium fiberglass (Best) is the flagship. Each step up moves the entry door replacement cost.
3. Sidelites & transom
Glass on the sides (sidelites) and above (a transom) turn a single door into a grand entrance — and are the fastest way to move the price up. A plain single slab is the most budget-friendly front door replacement.
4. Glass & hardware
Standard, enhanced, and premium decorative glass & hardware packages each raise the price. Decorative and full-view glass are the biggest discrete line items on an entry or storm door.
5. Panel count & size
On patio doors, 3-panel and 4-panel configurations and 8-foot heights cost more than a standard 2-panel slider. Double entry doors roughly scale with the extra slab and hardware.
6. Changing the opening
Reusing the existing opening is simplest. Converting a window into a door, extending an opening, or cutting a new one is custom structural work we confirm and price in writing at the free measure.
Door pricing changes fast once the opening changes.
Every Evolve door estimate includes professional installation, haul-away of your old door, plus Evolve’s workmanship warranty and the manufacturer’s product warranty. The builder above accounts for the variables that move the range before it shows your installed number.
The door system matters
Steel, fiberglass, premium fiberglass, sliding patio, swinging French, and storm doors all price differently. Sidelites, transoms, panel count, glass, hardware, and finish can move the range fast.
The opening matters
Reusing the existing opening is simpler. Extending an opening, converting a window into a door, or cutting a new opening is custom structural work that we confirm in person before final pricing.
The calculator keeps it honest
Rather than handing you one generic table, the builder prices the configuration you describe and unlocks the installed range after the last step.
Cleveland, Columbus & Cincinnati
Door Installation in Cleveland, OH
Across Cuyahoga, Lake, Lorain & Summit counties, a single entry door installs in the $3,700–$12,000 range; patio doors land $1,950–$9,000. Older brick and stone openings can sit higher.
📞 (216) 941-5470Door Installation in Columbus, OH
Across Franklin, Delaware & Licking counties, expect $3,700–$12,000 for an entry door and $1,950–$9,000 for a patio door installed, with premium fiberglass and wood-clad at the top.
📞 (614) 852-4608Door Installation in Cincinnati, OH
Across Hamilton, Butler, Warren & Clermont counties, entry doors install in the $3,700–$12,000 range and patio doors run $1,950–$9,000 and French doors $7,000–$22,000+. Serving Greater Cincinnati & Southwest Ohio.
📞 (513) 776-1805What moves your price up or down
▲ Drives it up
- Sidelites and transoms (glass on the sides & top)
- Premium fiberglass & decorative glass
- 3-panel, 8-foot, and swinging French configurations
- Changing, extending, or cutting a new door opening
- Double doors and oversized openings
▼ Brings it down
- A single door slab, no sidelites
- Steel instead of premium fiberglass
- Classic glass & standard hardware
- Reusing the existing opening (no conversion)
- Fewer sidelites, transoms & decorative glass
Why do door replacement prices vary so much in Ohio?
Honest answer: a “new door” can mean a hollow builder slab swapped into your old frame, or a full ProVia or Marvin system with sidelites, decorative glass and a weather-tight install. Here’s exactly what separates a cheap quote from a fair one — so you know what you’re actually comparing.
Why some companies are cheaper
A rock-bottom door price usually means a stock big-box slab, a steel skin instead of premium fiberglass, builder-grade hardware, a slab-only swap that reuses a frame that may be out of square, and subcontracted labor with a thin warranty. Finishing, capping, haul-away and hardware often get added back later. Cheap isn’t automatically wrong — just know what you’re getting.
Why some companies cost more
Higher quotes typically buy a premium system (ProVia, Marvin, Andersen), a factory finish, real multi-point hardware, properly flashed and foam-sealed installs by our own W-2 crews, full haul-away, and a workmanship warranty that’s actually honored. A door is your home’s most-used moving part — you’re paying for one that seals, swings true and looks right for decades.
Hidden costs to watch for on any quote
Before you sign anywhere, confirm the price already includes exterior trim & capping, hauling away the old door, hardware and lockset, factory finish, jobsite protection, and warranty coverage. Evolve bakes the normal install scope into the number you see here — no line-item surprises. True custom work — converting a window opening into a door, extending an opening, cutting a new opening, or rebuilding a rotted frame — is confirmed and priced in writing before work begins.
The real lifetime cost — not just the sticker
A quality door and install lasts 25–30 years, and a new front door is one of the best resale investments you can make: entry-door replacement consistently ranks among the highest return-on-investment home improvements year after year. Factor in fewer drafts, better security and curb appeal, and the effective cost lands well below the sticker. Source: Remodeling “Cost vs. Value” report.
Is replacing your door really worth it right now?
Straight answer: if your door still seals, locks and looks good, a swap can wait — and we’ll tell you that. But if it’s drafty, sticking, rusted, rotted, hard to lock, or just dated, a new door pays you back in security, comfort and curb appeal almost immediately. We’d rather give you the honest call at the measure than sell you a door you don’t need.
Have door prices gone up? Yes — entry and patio door costs rose sharply (about 15–25%) from 2020–2023 on material and labor inflation, then largely stabilized through 2024–2025. There’s no known near-term reason to expect a drop, so “waiting for prices to fall” rarely pays off. (Residential construction cost trend, NAHB / industry data.)
Every Evolve door install includes
One-day installs
Our own W-2 crews — never subcontractors. Most doors are hung and finished in a single day.
Warranties that back it up
An industry-leading workmanship warranty from Evolve, plus the manufacturer’s product warranty — current terms vary by manufacturer. Factory-finished — no painting by us.
Flexible financing
Spread your project over low monthly payments with terms that fit your budget.
Door cost FAQs
How much does it cost to replace a front door in Ohio?
A new entry door installed in Ohio runs about $5,500 ($3,700–$12,000). A plain steel or fiberglass single door is around $3,700–$12,000; adding sidelights, a transom, or decorative glass moves it toward $18,000–$22,000 for a grand entrance — the most elaborate double-door entries run higher. Every Evolve estimate includes professional installation, haul-away, plus Evolve’s workmanship warranty and the manufacturer’s product warranty.
How much does a patio or French door cost in Ohio?
A patio (sliding) door runs about $2,975 installed ($1,950–$9,000); premium 3-panel and 8-foot configurations reach the top of that range. Exterior French doors are a premium, higher-cost configuration — generally $7,000–$22,000+ installed.
How much does a storm door cost?
Storm doors (ProVia, Andersen & more) run about $1,100–$3,000 installed. Entry-level models start near $1,100; mid-range models land in the middle; full-view models with premium glass reach the top of the range.
What does it cost to change or create a door opening?
Converting a window into a door, extending an existing door opening, or cutting a new opening is custom structural work. We confirm feasibility, framing, water management, and final pricing at your free in-home measure before anything is ordered.
Should I choose fiberglass or steel for my entry door?
Steel (our Good tier) is the strongest value — secure and budget-friendly with a smooth, paint-ready finish. Fiberglass (Better & Best) won’t dent, warp, or rust and offers the most realistic wood-grain looks and richest stains, so it holds up beautifully on a sunny or exposed entry. The builder above prices both so you can compare.
Why is the price a range and not one number?
Your exact price depends on a quick in-home measure — site access, existing frame condition, and final color and glass choices can move it. The estimate gives you a real, honest range so you know what to expect before anyone visits.
Ready to lock in your exact price?
Book a free in-home measure and we’ll confirm everything in writing — exact pricing, feasibility, and timeline. No pressure, no call center.



