Why Is My Garage Door Not Opening?

A garage door not opening usually means the opener lost power, the door is locked, a spring broke, or the safety sensors are blocked. Some problems take only a minute to check. Other problems can be risky, so it helps to know what is safe to test and what needs a trained tech.

If Your Garage Door is Not Opening, Check These First

A garage door not opening does not always mean the opener is bad. Many times, the cause is a dead remote, no power, a locked door, or something blocking the path. Start with the simple checks first. They can save you time and help you avoid damage.
  1. Press the wall button.
  2. Try the remote again.
  3. Replace the remote batteries.
  4. Check the opener light.
  5. Make sure the opener is plugged in.
  6. Check the breaker box.
  7. Look for a manual lock.
  8. Move items away from the door.
The wall button gives you a clear clue. If the wall button works but the remote does not, the remote may need batteries or a reset. If neither works, the opener may not have power. Also, check the inside lock. Some garage doors have a slide lock near the side of the door. If someone turns it, the opener may pull against the door, but the door will stay closed. If the opener starts and stops before the door fully moves, the issue may be linked to an opener stops problem. This can happen when the opener senses excessive force or the door has excessive drag.

The Opener Runs, But the Door Does Not Move

If the opener runs but the door does not move, the issue may be in the opener rail, trolley, drive belt, chain, or garage door spring system. The motor can make noise even when it is not lifting the door. Look at the opener rail while someone presses the wall button. The trolley should move along the rail. If the motor runs but the trolley does not move, the opener may have a worn gear, a loose chain, a broken belt, or a faulty drive part. If the trolley moves but the door stays down, the emergency release may be pulled. This is the red cord that hangs from the opener rail. It lets you open the door by hand when power goes out. To reconnect many openers, close the door fully and run the opener. The trolley may snap back into place. Do not try this if the door is crooked, stuck halfway, or too heavy to lift. When the motor runs, but the door stays still, stop using the opener until you find the cause.

Safety Sensors Can Stop the Door From Working Right

Safety sensors can stop a garage door from working when they are blocked, dirty, or out of line. They sit near the floor on both sides of the garage door opening. Each sensor sends or reads a small light beam. If the beam is blocked, the opener may refuse to move the door the right way. This problem is common in busy garages with tools, bikes, boxes, or trash cans near the door. Check for these sensor issues:
  • A box blocks the beam.
  • A broom or bike sits in front of the sensor.
  • Dust covers the lens.
  • Spider webs block the light.
  • One sensor was bumped.
  • A sensor wire came loose.
  • A sensor light is blinking or off.
Clean the lenses with a soft cloth. Then look at the lights on both sensors. Most systems show steady lights when the sensors line up. A blinking light often means one sensor needs a small adjustment. Move the sensor slowly. Do not bend the bracket hard. Small changes can realign the beam. If the sensor lights stay off, the problem may be wiring, a bad sensor, or a power issue from the opener. I would not keep pressing the remote when the opener keeps failing the same way.

A Broken Spring Can Keep the Door Closed

A broken spring can prevent the garage door from opening because the opener cannot lift the door’s full weight on its own. The spring does most of the heavy lifting. Most garage doors use torsion springs above the door or extension springs on the sides. These springs hold a lot of tension. When one breaks, the door may feel very heavy or only open a few inches. You may have a broken spring if you notice these signs:
  • You heard a loud bang in the garage.
  • The door opens a few inches and stops.
  • The opener hums or strains.
  • The door feels too heavy to lift by hand.
  • You see a gap in the spring.
  • One side of the door lifts higher.
  • The cables look loose.
Do not try to replace a spring yourself. Garage door springs can cause serious injury. The spring tension can snap fast, and the door can drop without warning. If the door feels heavy, do not force it open. For this type of issue, spring repair is the safer next step. A trained tech can replace the spring and balance the door so the opener does not work too hard. If you keep using the opener, you may burn out the motor or bend the opener rail.

The Door May Be Jammed or Off Track

A garage door may not open when a roller pops out, a track bends, or the door jams against the frame. The opener may pull hard, but the door will not move the right way. Look at both sides of the door. The rollers should sit inside the metal tracks. The door should look straight. The gaps on both sides should look even. Common signs of a track or roller problem include:
  • The door looks crooked.
  • A roller sits outside the track.
  • The track has a dent.
  • The door shakes hard.
  • The door stops at the same spot.
  • You hear scraping sounds.
  • The cable looks loose.
Do not force the opener if the door sits at an angle. A crooked door can fall, bend panels, or break cables. This can turn a small repair into a larger one. Track problems can happen after a car bumps the door, a roller wears out, a bolt loosens, or storm debris gets in the way. In South Florida, rain, heat, and salt air can also wear down metal parts. If the door looks uneven, track repair may be needed before the opener can move it again. The track must hold the rollers in the right path for the door to open smoothly.

Remote and Keypad Problems Can Look Like Opener Failure

A bad remote or keypad can make it seem like the garage door opener is broken. In many cases, the opener works fine from the wall button. Start with new batteries. Then stand close to the opener and press the remote. If it works up close but not from the driveway, the remote may have a weak signal. For a keypad, enter the code slowly. Make sure the buttons respond. If the keypad lights up but the door does not move, the code may need to be reset. Remote and keypad problems can come from:
  • Dead batteries
  • Worn buttons
  • Lost opener code
  • Weak signal
  • Damaged antenna
  • Weather damage
  • Old keypad wiring
The opener antenna should hang down from the motor unit. If it is tucked up or damaged, the signal may not reach the opener well. If your remote problems started after changing batteries, the remote may need to be synced again. Some remotes also fail when the buttons wear out inside the case.

Power Issues Can Make the Opener Seem Dead

A garage door opener needs steady power to work. If the outlet, breaker, or GFCI outlet trips, the opener may not respond at all. Look at the opener light first. If no light turns on, check the power cord. Make sure it is plugged in all the way. Then check the breaker box. A tripped breaker can shut off the garage outlet. Some garages also use a GFCI outlet. If that outlet trips, it may cut power to other outlets in the garage. Press the reset button on the GFCI outlet if you see one. Then test the opener again. Power problems can happen after storms. Miami homes deal with heavy rain, heat, and power surges. A surge can damage the opener board, wall button, or sensor wiring. If the breaker keeps tripping, stop resetting it. That can point to a bad motor, a shorted wire, or an outlet problem. We do not want to ignore an electrical issue near a moving garage door.

When You Should Stop Troubleshooting

Stop troubleshooting when the door feels heavy, crooked, stuck, or unsafe. A garage door can weigh hundreds of pounds, and one bad move can cause injury. Call a garage door tech if you see any of these signs:
  • Broken spring
  • Loose cable
  • Hanging cable
  • Door off track
  • Bent track
  • Door stuck halfway
  • Door slams shut
  • Opener smells hot
  • The door feels too heavy
  • The opener runs, but the door does not move
A garage door that won’t open can seem like a small issue at first. But the cause may sit in the spring system, cables, opener gear, or track.

Get the Door Open Without Making It Worse

When your garage door will not open, start with the simple checks. Test the remote, wall button, power, lock, sensors, and door path before you assume the opener is bad. If those checks do not resolve it, the door may have a broken spring, a jammed roller, a damaged track, or a worn opener part. Do not force the door when it feels heavy or uneven. A careful repair can get the door moving again without adding more damage.