Why Your Garage Door Won’t Close in San Jose — and What to Do About It Right Now
A garage door that refuses to close is almost always caused by one of three things: blocked or misaligned safety sensors, a broken torsion spring, or an opener that’s lost its logic. In most San Jose homes, the sensors are the first place to check — they’re low to the ground, right at the door opening, and in our climate they get knocked out of alignment more often than people realize. If you’d rather skip the troubleshooting and have Anthony come take a look, call (833) 991-7288 — estimates are free and there’s no pressure.

The Most Common Reasons a Garage Door Won’t Close
After 14 years working on garage doors across San Jose, Anthony Perez has seen the same patterns repeat themselves hundreds of times. The failure mode your door is showing right now almost certainly falls into one of these categories.
Misaligned or Dirty Safety Sensors
Federal law requires all openers manufactured after 1993 to include photo-eye sensors positioned about four to six inches off the ground on either side of the door. When those sensors can’t see each other clearly — whether because one got bumped, a cobweb crossed the beam, or afternoon sun is shining directly into the lens — the opener interprets it as an obstruction and refuses to close.
In the older ranch-style homes along the Berryessa and Cambrian corridors, these sensors often sit on original mounting brackets that have been painted over, bumped by car doors, and generally abused for 30-plus years. A misalignment of even a few degrees is enough to break the beam. On a LiftMaster or Chamberlain opener, a blinking amber sensor light is the tell. On a Genie, you’ll usually see the opener light flash and the door reverse after a second or two.
This is one case where a homeowner can reasonably try a fix before calling anyone. See the step-by-step below.
A Broken Torsion Spring
A broken spring is the most dramatic and most common reason a door simply won’t move — up or down. San Jose’s daily marine-layer cycle plays a real role here: cool, moist Bay air pushes into the Santa Clara Valley each morning and then burns off by midday, and that daily thermal swing fatigues torsion springs over time through repeated contraction and expansion. A spring that might last 20 years in a drier inland climate can fail meaningfully sooner here.
You’ll usually hear a torsion spring break — a loud bang, like a gunshot in the garage. After that, the opener motor runs but the door barely lifts, or the door feels extremely heavy when you try to move it by hand. Do not try to operate the door with a broken spring. The hardware is under enormous tension, and an amateur repair attempt on torsion springs or cables can cause serious injury. Spring repair in San Jose typically runs $210–$400 depending on spring size, door weight, and whether both springs need replacing (replacing both at once is almost always the right call).
An Opener Logic or Limit Problem
Sometimes the door physically can close — the springs are fine, the sensors are aligned — but the opener stops it short of the floor or reverses for no apparent reason. This points to a travel-limit or force-sensitivity setting that’s drifted out of spec. On older Craftsman or Chamberlain units common in the 1990s-era homes of Evergreen and Silver Creek, these settings are physical dials inside the opener head. Newer LiftMaster smart openers handle it in firmware, and a power surge or dead battery backup can scramble those settings. Opener repair runs $140–$380 in the San Jose market depending on brand and what specifically needs adjustment or replacement.
Track Problems and Rollers
A door that starts to close but then stops, grinds, or pops off track usually has a bent track section or worn rollers. Debris buildup, a car bumping a vertical track, or just decades of use without lubrication are the typical culprits. Track realignment runs $140–$285 here, and roller replacement is $130–$260. On its own, this is a straightforward repair. Left alone, it eventually damages the door panels themselves, which is a much larger expense.
How to Check Your Sensors Before Calling Anyone
If your door reverses right away or won’t close at all and you don’t hear anything mechanical breaking, walk through these steps first. This takes about five minutes and fixes the problem a meaningful portion of the time.
- Clear the opening. Walk the full width of the door opening and look for anything that could interrupt the sensor beam — a garden hose, a trash bag, a child’s bike, anything. The sensors sit about 4–6 inches off the floor on each side.
- Look at the indicator lights. On most LiftMaster and Chamberlain openers, the sending sensor (usually on one side) glows green and the receiving sensor (other side) glows amber when properly aligned. If either light is off or blinking, alignment is the issue.
- Wipe the sensor lenses. Use a dry cloth. Dust, spider webs, and dried moisture from San Jose’s morning marine layer all interrupt the beam.
- Gently realign the receiving sensor. Loosen the wing nut just enough to swivel the sensor bracket, aim it directly at its partner, and tighten while watching for a steady indicator light.
- Test the close function. If the lights are both steady and the door still won’t close, the problem is mechanical, not sensor-related — time to call.
A garage door doesn’t lie — it shows you exactly what’s been ignored. If the sensors pass this check and the door still won’t cooperate, something mechanical has been building toward this moment for a while.

What This Typically Costs in San Jose
Pricing varies based on what’s actually wrong, but here’s a realistic range for the repairs most commonly tied to a door that won’t close:
| Repair Type | Typical San Jose Range |
|---|---|
| Safety sensor realignment / replacement | $85–$175 |
| Torsion spring repair | $210–$400 |
| Cable repair | $155–$295 |
| Opener repair (logic, limits, board) | $140–$380 |
| Track realignment | $140–$285 |
| Full garage door repair (diagnostic + fix) | $175–$710 |
One note specific to San Jose: if your opener is a pre-2019 model and needs replacement, California’s AB 869 requires the new unit to include a battery backup — a law that came directly out of Bay Area earthquake and wildfire power-outage experience. Virtually every opener swap Anthony does in the older Berryessa and Cambrian neighborhoods triggers this conversation. It’s not a upsell — it’s a code requirement, and in a city that sits near both the Calaveras and Hayward faults, the battery backup is genuinely useful to have. Opener installation including a compliant battery-backup unit runs $295–$650 in this market.
For a deeper look at the full scope of repair pricing in the area, the Garage Door Repair in San Jose page breaks it down by service type. And if you want to understand what a Garage Door Repair visit actually covers from start to finish, that page has the full picture.
Why San Jose Homeowners Call Premier Garage Door Service
Anthony Perez grew up in Willow Glen and has been working on garage doors in this city for 14 years. He’s not a dispatcher sending out a crew — he’s the person who shows up, diagnoses the problem, and does the work. That matters when you’re dealing with something that affects your home’s security and you want a straight answer, not a sales pitch.
Premier Garage Door Service has earned 524 verified reviews at a 4.7-star average — real neighbors across San Jose, from Almaden Valley to Alum Rock, who’ve had their doors repaired by Anthony directly. The work covers virtually any system: LiftMaster, Chamberlain, Genie, Clopay, and several others. If you have a door that won’t close, the diagnostic process is the same regardless of brand — and Anthony has seen enough of them to get to the answer quickly.
When your garage door can’t wait, that’s exactly what emergency service is for. If a broken spring or failed opener leaves your garage exposed overnight, Anthony can respond urgently — because a door stuck open in San Jose isn’t an inconvenience you schedule around next week.
Frequently Asked Questions
Your garage door reverses after moving a few inches because either the safety sensors are blocked or misaligned, or the opener’s down-force sensitivity is set too high. The sensor issue is the more common cause — check for a blinking or unlit sensor light first. If the sensors look fine and the door still reverses, the force or travel-limit settings likely need adjustment by a technician. Call (833) 991-7288 and we can walk you through it or come out for a free assessment.
Fixing a garage door that won’t close in San Jose typically costs between $175 and $710 depending on what’s actually wrong. A sensor realignment or adjustment is toward the lower end of that range; a broken torsion spring or opener replacement with a compliant battery-backup unit is toward the higher end. The only way to give you an accurate number is a quick diagnostic — and that estimate is free. Call (833) 991-7288.
Yes, you can close most garage doors manually by pulling the red emergency-release cord to disconnect the trolley from the opener, then pulling the door down by hand — but only if the torsion springs are intact. A door with a broken spring is extremely heavy and can drop suddenly; in that case, leave it in place and call a technician. For doors in San Jose homes near active fault lines, also verify your emergency-release functions properly before you actually need it.
A misaligned sensor shows a blinking or off indicator light but clears up when you gently adjust the bracket back into alignment — the light returns to steady and the door closes normally. A bad sensor doesn’t respond to realignment: the light stays off or the door still won’t close even when both indicators appear steady. Replacement sensors for LiftMaster and Chamberlain openers are inexpensive parts; the labor to install and re-sync them typically runs under two hours.
If the steps above didn’t solve it, or if you’d rather just have a professional confirm what’s going on, call (833) 991-7288 — Anthony will give you a straight answer, no pressure, and the estimate is free. Premier Garage Door Service San Jose has been handling exactly this kind of problem across San Jose for 14 years.
Written by Anthony Perez, Owner & Lead Technician at Premier Garage Door Service San Jose, serving San Jose, CA.