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Torsion Spring vs Extension Spring | Which Does Your Door Need?
tips April 15, 2026 7 min read By Mockingbird Garage Doors Team

Torsion Spring vs Extension Spring | Which Does Your Door Need?

Garage door springs come in two fundamentally different designs. Understanding the difference helps you know what you have, what it costs to replace, and whether it makes sense to upgrade when the time comes.

Side-by-Side Comparison

FeatureTorsion SpringExtension Spring
LocationHorizontal shaft above door openingAlong horizontal tracks on each side
How it worksTwists to store energyStretches to store energy
Number per door1 or 2 (most 2-car doors have 2)2 (one per side)
Lifespan (standard)10,000 cycles10,000 cycles
SafetySafer — contained on shaftMore risk — can fly loose if cable breaks
NoiseQuieterMore noise during operation
Cost (standard, installed)$250–$520$145–$220
High-cycle upgrade availableYesYes, but less common
Typical applicationModern 2-car doors, 1990s-presentOlder or lighter single-car doors
Conversion to other typePossible, typically $300–$500 additionalSame

How Torsion Springs Work

A torsion spring is mounted on a steel shaft (the torsion bar) that runs horizontally above the door opening. When the door closes, the opener and door weight wind the spring (increasing tension). When the door opens, the spring unwinds, providing the counterbalancing force that makes the door feel lighter.

Torsion springs are safer because they are contained on the shaft — even if one breaks, the spring stays on the bar rather than flying free. The break causes a loud bang, but the pieces stay controlled.

How Extension Springs Work

Extension springs run along the horizontal section of track on each side of the door. When the door closes and the weight of the door descends, the springs extend (stretch). When the door opens, the springs contract, pulling the door up through the cable and pulley system.

Extension springs are an older design but still functional and available. Their primary safety concern: if a cable breaks, an extension spring under tension can snap free violently. Properly installed safety cables (running through the coils of the spring) prevent this — if your extension spring doors do not have safety cables, they should be added.

Which Does Your Door Have?

Look above the door:

  • Horizontal shaft with one or two coil springs wrapped around it: Torsion springs
  • No spring above the door; springs along the horizontal track above each wheel: Extension springs

Most doors built since the mid-1990s use torsion springs. Older homes, single-car doors, and low-headroom situations (where there is not enough space above the door for a torsion shaft) are more likely to use extension springs.

Should You Convert from Extension to Torsion Springs?

Conversion from extension to torsion springs is a worthwhile upgrade in these situations:

  • Safety concern: You want the enclosed, safer torsion design
  • Noise: Torsion systems are noticeably quieter
  • Door upgrade: You are installing a heavier insulated door that exceeds the capacity of the existing extension springs
  • Space: You have adequate headroom for a torsion shaft (typically 10–12 inches above the door)

Conversion cost is approximately $300–$500 on top of a standard spring installation. Many homeowners do this when replacing an aging door or after having extension springs break for the second time.

Why Texas Homeowners May Want to Upgrade Springs at Replacement Time

Whether you have torsion or extension springs, the replacement decision is the same in Texas: the cost premium for high-cycle springs is modest at the time of replacement, and the Texas climate (humidity in Houston, heat in Austin) shortens standard spring lifespan compared to the manufacturer’s baseline assumptions.

We recommend 25,000-cycle springs as the standard for Texas homeowners. At replacement time, it is an extra $50–$80 per spring — a fraction of the cost of a second service call.

Need Your Springs Replaced?

Mockingbird Garage Doors replaces both spring types across Houston and Austin. Call (713) 555-0192 or get a free estimate online.

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