Rotted Sill, Caught in Time
Decay cut out completely and rebuilt in real wood — no filler, no new window.
A sash that free-falls, a latch that spins, a draft you can hear — each is one worn-out part with a printed catalog price, hardware from $115, balances $175. One scheduled visit clears the list; the windows never leave the wall.
Real WowFix job — drag to see the difference.
Real WowFix job — drag to see the difference.
The same price we quote on the phone. Tell us what's going on — or just snap a photo — and see your estimate instantly.
Estimated price
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Preliminary estimate — your final price is confirmed on-site at booking. No surprises.
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Smyrna's townhome waves — the rows that followed Market Village in the late '90s, the 2000s communities, the 2010s builds near the Battery — were fitted out the way volume builders fit everything: identical vinyl double-hungs, identical spiral or block-and-tackle balances, identical plastic tilt-latches, ordered by the thousand. Twenty-odd years of Georgia heat cycles wear identical parts identically. So when your kitchen sash starts guillotining down the moment you let go, the odds are excellent that unit 8 and unit 22 in your row have the same balance dying in the same jamb. None of that is a window problem. Balances run $175. Latches and locks start at $115. Casement cranks are $275. Every one is a stocked part with a catalog line — and none of them justifies the $1,000+ per opening a replacement salesman wants for the same symptom.
Metro-Atlanta visits run on scheduled routes with a firm date, and that geometry rewards batching: the stop that swaps your dead kitchen balance can re-spring every double-hung in the house, replace the cracked tilt-latches before they strand a sash mid-tilt, re-seat the locks that no longer pull tight, and lay fresh weatherstrip where the old foam has pressed flat. In a townhome row it gets better still — neighbors who book onto the same route date split the trip's efficiency, and the parts bin already matches everyone's windows, because the builder made sure of that. When a symptom belongs to a specialist — fog sealed between panes, a cracked pane, a soft sill — it moves to the right catalog line without a second company: sealed units from $198, glass from $198, wood rebuilds from $375.
List it, date it, fix it, warranty it — four steps and the punch list is gone.
Walk the house and note what each window does wrong in plain words — falls shut, won't lock, whistles, fogs. Every symptom maps to a catalog line before we arrive.
Dispatch places you on the scheduled metro-Atlanta route with a firm date, and the truck is stocked against your list — hardware by spec, glass pre-fabricated if the list needs it.
Balances, latches, locks, cranks and weatherstrip go in window by window, each at its own printed price on one written quote.
Every repaired window gets cycled, tilted and locked in front of you, and the whole visit is backed by a 5-year written workmanship warranty.
Window repair in Smyrna starts at $115 and is priced part by part from the same printed catalog we use across every metro — written down before a screwdriver comes out:
Every repair comes with a written workmanship warranty. If it's not right, we come back and make it right.
We fix the part that failed — glass, seal, sash or hardware — so you keep your windows and skip full-replacement cost.
Your repair is done by our own technicians, never subcontracted — visits run on scheduled routes with a firm appointment date.
A clear quote before any work starts. No hidden fees, no upsells, no pressure to replace what we can repair.
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We repair windows across Smyrna — the townhome rows around Market Village and West Village, the subdivisions off King Springs and Concord Road, the newer streets near the Battery — and throughout the metro on scheduled routes.
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No stock footage, no actors — this is one of our actual jobs. Watch a rotted, fogged-out window brought back to flawless, like-new condition.
Snap a clear photo of every foggy, cracked or stuck window in natural light. Morning light shows fog between the panes best and lets us quote faster — often before we arrive.
Jot down the symptom per window — fog between the glass, won't open or stay up, draft, cracked pane, or rotted frame. It tells us whether it's a glass-only swap (from $198) or hardware/wood work.
Move furniture, blinds and décor back roughly three feet so our crew can measure and work safely. It keeps the visit quick and your things out of the way.
If you have the original window brand, a sticker in the frame, or install paperwork, set it aside. It's not required, but it helps us match glass and parts on the first trip.
Unlock gates, secure pets, and clear the exterior path to the windows. Most glass-unit work is done from both sides, so outside access keeps everything one visit.
Decay cut out completely and rebuilt in real wood — no filler, no new window.
We fabricate an exact-profile piece from laminated lumber and splice it in.
New glass built to the window's exact size — frame and trim untouched.
The pane is the part that failed — so the pane is the part we replace.
A failed seal, not a failed window: the sealed unit is swapped, the frame stays.
Rotted bottom rebuilt on-site — a fraction of the ~$10,000 a new door runs.
Real jobs, real photos — swipe for more.
Lead Window & Door Repair Specialist
This content is written by Eugene Ko, a master craftsman with 17+ years of hands-on experience in residential and commercial window repair. Eugene has personally completed over 15,000 window and door repairs across North Carolina, so every answer here is grounded in real field experience — not guesswork.
Last updated: July 18, 2026