Broken Spring Replacement
We replace torsion and extension springs using high-cycle components, restoring balanced door operation and preventing further damage.
We restore damaged garage doors within hours, ensuring your property remains secure. Our technicians arrive equipped for most common repairs.
We replace torsion and extension springs using high-cycle components, restoring balanced door operation and preventing further damage.
Our technicians re-spool or replace frayed and broken cables, ensuring your garage door lifts and lowers smoothly and safely.
We troubleshoot and repair all major garage door opener brands, addressing motor failures, sensor issues, and remote control malfunctions.
We carefully re-align garage doors that have come off their tracks, inspecting rollers and hinges to prevent recurrence and ensure smooth movement.
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We aim to dispatch a technician to your location within 60-90 minutes for most emergency calls within the Greater Montreal area. Our goal is to address your issue as fast as possible.
We handle all common emergency repairs, including broken springs, snapped cables, malfunctioning openers, off-track doors, and damaged panels. We service all major garage door brands.
Yes, our emergency repair services are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, including holidays. You can call us anytime for urgent garage door problems.
Repair costs vary depending on the specific issue and parts required. We provide a detailed quote before starting any work. Our pricing is transparent, with no hidden fees.
All Rapid Garage technicians are certified, extensively trained, and fully insured. They carry all necessary licenses to perform garage door repairs safely and effectively in Quebec.
We provide emergency garage door repair services throughout Greater Montreal, including Laval, Longueuil, the West Island, and surrounding communities. Contact us to confirm service in your specific area.
We cover the following cities and surrounding regions. We Serve customers within a 50-mile radius of each.
Most emergency requests follow the same working rhythm before the first visit, and a little preparation on your side keeps the on-site time short and the cost predictable. Once the written estimate is approved, Rapid Garage confirms a date window and a single point of contact for the visit. You will receive a short message the working day before, including the arrival window and the name of the person on site, so there is no guessing about who is at the door.
To prepare, the most useful things you can do are simple and take only a few minutes. Clear access to the area we will work in — including any cupboards, panels or covers we may need to open — saves billable time and reduces the chance of an unexpected delay. If pets are usually in that part of the home or building, please plan to keep them in another room while we work. Where parking is limited, leaving a short note about where to load and unload tools is more helpful than it sounds.
We bring our own consumables, protective coverings and tidy-up materials, so you do not need to provide anything for the visit itself. If a specialist part has been ordered for the job, the order reference is included in the confirmation note so you can check it has arrived if it shipped to your address. After the work is finished, we walk through what was done, what was tested, and the realistic maintenance cadence for the next 90 days.
The headline figure on a emergency estimate is rarely the only number that matters. Three things tend to move a final invoice up or down compared with the initial scope: the condition of the existing setup once we open it up, parts that were not visible at the quoting stage, and how accessible the working area turns out to be in practice. We document all three on the written estimate so you can see in advance where the realistic range sits, and we never proceed past the agreed scope without written approval.
The repair-or-replace decision is the most common question buyers ask, and the honest answer depends on three factors. First, the age of the existing setup compared with its expected service life — once you are past 70 percent of that life, repair costs tend to compound. Second, whether the part that has failed is the cheapest part of the assembly or the most expensive. Third, whether replacement parts are still in production from the original supplier, because once a manufacturer ends support the next failure becomes much harder to plan for.
If the maths still favours repair, we will say so plainly and quote only that work. If replacement is the better long-term call, we walk through the realistic options at three price points and the genuine differences between them. There is no commission on parts, so the recommendation is the same one we would make on our own building.
A four-step working rhythm that keeps scope predictable and decisions visible at every stage.