Why Won’t My Garage Door Shut? | Fast Fixes Guide

Most “won’t close” issues come from misaligned safety sensors, incorrect travel limits, or a power/lock setting on the opener.

Your door stops, reverses, or hangs a few inches above the floor. Lights flash. The remote clicks but nothing moves. This guide walks you through fast, safe checks that solve the majority of “door won’t go down” problems without guesswork.

Garage Door Won’t Close? Quick Diagnostics

Start with simple, no-tools checks. You’ll sort power, lock mode, and safety beams first, then move to tracks, rollers, and opener settings. If you spot a broken spring or frayed cable, stop and book a pro. Those parts store enormous energy.

Common Symptoms And Fast Checks (At A Glance)

Symptom Likely Cause Quick Check
Door starts down, then reverses; opener light flashes Photo-eye sensors blocked or misaligned Clear debris; clean lenses; confirm both LEDs are solid and aligned
Opener clicks, lights on, but no movement Opener “Lock” on wall console Toggle lock/vacation button; try remote again
Remote/keypad dead; wall button works Remote batteries or radio interference Replace cells; test from different spot; try spare remote
Door stops short of floor every time Close-limit set too short Adjust close-limit per opener manual
Door touches floor, then pops up Close-limit past the stop point Back off close-limit in small steps
Door is heavy or crooked Broken spring or cable Look for gaps in spring coils or slack cable; call a pro
Half-close then stall in same spot Track damage or roller binding Inspect for dents, screws, or crushed track
Nothing works at all No power or tripped GFCI/breaker Check outlet, breaker, and GFCI near the garage
Opener hums; trolley doesn’t move Manual release disengaged Re-engage the release and try again

Step-By-Step: From Easiest To Advanced

1) Confirm Power, Wall Console, And Lock Mode

  • Make sure the opener is plugged in and the outlet is live. Test with a lamp.
  • Press the wall button. If the wall button works but remotes don’t, replace remote batteries next.
  • Look for a “Lock” or “Vacation” switch on the wall console. If it’s on, radio signals are ignored.
  • If nothing powers up, check the breaker panel and any nearby GFCI outlets.

2) Clear And Align The Photo-Eyes

Modern openers won’t close if something breaks the infrared beam near the floor. Dust, leaves, a bike tire, or sun glare can fool the system. Clean both lenses with a soft cloth. Confirm the indicator lights on each sensor are solid, not flickering. If one blinks, nudge the sensor until both are steady. LiftMaster’s guide shows the tell-tale flash codes and alignment steps in plain language; see how to align safety reversing sensors.

3) Check For Mechanical Obstructions

Roll a step stool along the interior and scan both tracks from top to bottom. Look for screws, packing tape, or a bent section that snags the rollers. Wipe the tracks; don’t pack them with grease. A dry, clean track with a small amount of lubricant on the rollers and hinges is the goal. If the door binds in one spot, a slightly bent track or flattened roller could be the culprit.

4) Verify The Manual Release Is Engaged

Pulling the red cord puts the opener into manual mode. If the trolley didn’t re-latch, the motor will run without moving the door. Slide the door until the trolley clicks back into the carrier, or follow your opener’s re-engagement step.

5) Adjust Close-Limit (Travel) Settings

Close-limit tells the opener where the floor is. Set too short, the door stops early; set too far, it hits the floor and bounces up. Most brands offer two dials or buttons for “up” and “down” travel. Make small changes, test, and repeat. Chamberlain’s support page outlines the fine-tuning steps, including “one turn equals two inches” for screw-type adjusters; see adjusting travel with manual screws.

6) Set Closing Force Sensitivity

If the door reverses before it reaches the floor—even with straight tracks and free-rolling hardware—closing force may be set too light. Each opener has a “force” adjustment. Nudge it in small increments and retest the safety reversal with a 2×4 laid flat, as your manual specifies. Never mask a heavy door by cranking force to the max. Fix friction first.

7) Inspect Springs And Cables (Eyes Only)

Look above the door for torsion springs or alongside for extension springs. A gap in a torsion spring’s coil or a dangling cable means a hard stop: do not lift the door or run the opener. This repair needs a trained tech with the right tools.

Sensor Rules And Safe Placement

External entrapment protection is required on residential openers. The standard behind it, referenced by the U.S. safety regulator, codifies the photo-eye system that stops a closing door when the beam breaks. See the CPSC’s update to UL 325 in the automatic residential operator safety rule.

Correct mounting matters. Industry guidance calls for sensors no higher than six inches from the floor so a child’s foot or small object isn’t missed. DASMA explains this “six-inch rule” and monthly test steps in plain terms; see the six-inch rule overview.

Brand-Specific Clues You Can Use

LiftMaster/Chamberlain/MyQ

  • Flashing opener light often points to photo-eye alignment or obstruction.
  • Some models show sensor status by LED color on the head unit or on each eye.
  • Travel and force adjustments are on the rear panel or via buttons on newer units.

Genie With Safe-T-Beam

Genie sensors use diagnostic LEDs. Solid lights indicate normal operation; certain blink patterns point to wiring or alignment. The company’s troubleshooting chart outlines source/receiver LED states and fixes; see Genie’s Safe-T-Beam diagnostics.

When It’s A Setting, Not A Broken Part

Lock/Vacation Mode

If wall control toggles the door but remotes are silent, check for a tiny padlock icon or “Lock” button. Turn it off, then test from the driveway.

Sunlight And Sensor Glare

Direct sun can swamp the receiver eye in late afternoon. A small hood, lens shield, or slight angle change often clears false trips. Keep the beam straight and the lenses clean.

Cold Weather Drag

Thick grease and stiff seals add drag. Wipe excess grease from tracks, add a light garage-rated lubricant to rollers and hinges, and reset force if needed. Only minor tweaks—don’t mask real binding.

DIY Fixes You Can Do In Minutes

  • Clean sensor lenses and realign until both LEDs are solid.
  • Remove debris near the sensor line: rakes, toys, bike tires, storage bins.
  • Tighten loose track brackets with a nut driver; keep tracks plumb and parallel.
  • Replace remote batteries and re-sync per your manual.
  • Adjust close-limit a quarter-turn at a time, test, repeat.
  • Lubricate rollers, hinges, and the center bearing with a light garage-door lube.

When To Call A Technician

Some issues look simple but carry real risk. If you spot any of the items below, pause the opener and book service. A trained tech will relieve spring tension, true the track, and set the safety system within spec.

Issue DIY Or Pro Notes
Broken torsion/extension spring Pro only High tension; improper handling can cause injury
Frayed or off-spool lift cable Pro only Door can drop; requires reset and balance
Bent track or crushed radius Pro preferred Needs true-up and proper fasteners
Opener gear failure or grinding Pro preferred Gear/shaft kits or replacement opener
Intermittent sensor wiring fault DIY or Pro Re-terminate splices; replace brittle wire
Severe door imbalance Pro only Balance and safety tests per standard

Safety Tests You Should Run Monthly

Two quick tests give you confidence that the door will stop when it should. Industry guidance calls for regular checks of both the inherent reversing mechanism and the photo-eyes. Start the door down and wave a small object through the beam; the door should reverse to fully open. Then test the contact reversal using a sturdy piece of wood laid flat under the door. DASMA’s sensor documents describe these checks and placement rules in clear terms; see the six-inch rule guidance.

Close-Limit And Force: Getting The Balance Right

Think of travel as “how far” and force as “how hard.” If travel is off, the door stops short or bounces. If force is off, the door reverses early or pushes too hard. Dial in travel first, then fine-tune force. Chamberlain’s page on manual adjusters gives exact turn-to-distance tips that translate well to older models; see the limit/travel adjustment steps.

Remote And Keypad Fixes

  • Replace batteries. Many remotes use CR2032 or similar coin cells.
  • Re-program the remote. Use the “Learn” button on the opener head, then press the remote.
  • Reduce interference. LED bulbs, routers, and metal doors can block signals. Test with the car outside the garage and the engine off.
  • Check keypad mounting. If the keypad is loose or waterlogged, reseal and replace batteries.

Track, Roller, And Hinge Health

A smooth door puts less strain on the opener and helps the safety system read load correctly. Spin each roller by hand with the door disconnected in manual mode. Any roller that scrapes or wobbles needs replacement. Tighten hinge screws that have backed out of the stile. If the track is out of plumb, loosen the mounting nuts slightly, tap the track into position, and snug the hardware. Small moves make a big difference.

Cold, Heat, And Seasonal Tweaks

Weatherstripping can stiffen in winter and stick in summer. If the seal drags, trim and re-seat it. In winter, add a hair more closing force after confirming the door rolls freely. In summer, you may back force down a touch once friction drops. Test the reversal each time you adjust.

What If The Lights Just Blink?

Blink codes often point straight to the fault. On many LiftMaster units, steady flashing during a close command means the photo-eyes disagree. Genie models use sensor LED patterns to flag wiring or alignment. Cross-check your brand’s code chart. If the eyes won’t go solid after cleaning and aiming, inspect the low-voltage wires for staples through the jacket or brittle sections near the floor.

Simple Maintenance Plan To Prevent “Won’t Close” Surprises

  • Monthly: sensor test, contact reversal test, quick wipe of lenses.
  • Quarterly: tighten track brackets and hinge screws; lube rollers and hinges.
  • Twice a year: clean tracks, inspect weatherstrip, check door balance in manual mode.
  • Yearly: review opener travel/force after seasonal changes or after any door work.

When Replacement Makes Sense

If the opener predates photo-eyes or lacks rolling-code security, an upgrade adds safety and reliability. New units ship with compliant entrapment protection, better diagnostics, and quieter drives. The U.S. safety regulator’s rule that references UL 325 brought the modern safeguards most homes rely on today; see the CPSC update to UL 325.

Quick Fix Cheat Sheet

  • Lights flash and door reverses: clean/align photo-eyes until LEDs are steady.
  • Remote dead, wall works: swap batteries and check lock mode.
  • Stops short or bounces: tweak close-limit in small steps.
  • Reverses early with free-rolling door: add a click of closing force, then retest safety.
  • Heavy or crooked door: stop and call a pro for springs/cables.

Sources And Standards Behind These Fixes

The alignment steps and sensor behaviors come from manufacturer support and industry bodies: LiftMaster’s sensor alignment page explains flashing-light clues and aiming; Genie’s diagnostic chart decodes Safe-T-Beam LEDs; and trade guidance from DASMA lays out sensor height rules and monthly tests. You’ll find the core safety baseline in the U.S. regulator’s reference to UL 325, which frames modern entrapment protection.