Your shower door is the first fixture you touch every morning and the last one you deal with every night. When it works — closing smoothly, sealing tightly, keeping water where it belongs — you do not give it a second thought. When it does not work, you think about it twice a day, every day. The water that pools on the bathroom floor after every shower. The door that drags and scrapes instead of gliding. The frameless panel that has sagged just enough that it no longer closes flush. The mildew growing in seals that you cannot reach and cannot clean. The handle that wobbles in your wet hand.
Shower doors operate in the most punishing environment in your home. No other fixture endures what a shower door endures — direct water bombardment, steam saturation, soap and mineral buildup, daily temperature cycling from hot steam to cool air, constant humidity, and the mechanical stress of being opened and closed by wet hands multiple times every day.
And unlike most home fixtures, a shower door has zero tolerance for failure. A kitchen faucet that drips loses water down the drain. A window that leaks stains the sill. A shower door that leaks puts water on your bathroom floor — water that seeps under baseboards, penetrates grout, saturates subfloor, and promotes the kind of hidden mold and rot that turns a $100 seal replacement into a $5,000 bathroom renovation.
Harrison is the shower door repair team Cambria homeowners call when their shower door is not doing its job. We fix every type — frameless, framed, sliding, pivot, neo-angle, bathtub, walk-in, and steam enclosures. We repair every component — seals, hinges, rollers, tracks, clamps, handles, glass, and frames. And we verify our repairs with water testing before we leave, because a shower door repair is not complete until we have proven that the water stays where it belongs. Call Harrison, and end the daily reminder that your shower door needs attention.
The most common shower door complaint and the most consequential. Water escaping the shower enclosure after every use means a seal has failed, a panel is misaligned, a sweep is missing or worn, or the door is not closing flush against the frame or adjacent glass. The water you mop up after every shower is the water you can see. The water you cannot see — the moisture that seeps under the threshold, behind the baseboard, and into the subfloor — is the water that causes real damage.
A shower door that does not close smoothly — sticking, dragging against the frame or threshold, requiring lifting or jiggling to get it into position — has a mechanical problem in its hinge, roller, or pivot system. Mineral buildup on hardware, corroded hinges, worn rollers, and shifted frame alignment are all common causes. A door that does not close properly is a door that does not seal properly, which means it is also a leaking door.
Frameless shower doors — heavy tempered glass panels supported by hinges or clamps without a surrounding frame — are beautiful when properly aligned and frustrating when they are not. A frameless door that has sagged on its hinges, that no longer swings to the correct resting position, or that gaps along the seal line has lost the precise alignment that frameless installations require. The weight of the glass panel — typically 40 to 80 pounds — puts constant stress on the hinge and clamp hardware, and over time, that stress produces the gradual sagging and misalignment that compromises the door's function.
Sliding shower doors — bypass panels that ride on upper and lower tracks — depend on small rollers and precise track alignment for smooth operation. When rollers wear, tracks corrode or fill with mineral deposits, or guides shift out of position, the panels stick, bind, and jump off their tracks. A sliding shower door that requires special handling to stay on its track is a door with a roller, track, or guide problem that can be fixed.
The rubber and vinyl seals on shower doors — sweeps, jamb seals, and magnetic closure strips — are in constant contact with moisture and are the first surfaces in the bathroom to develop mold and mildew growth. Over time, the mold penetrates into the seal material itself, becoming impossible to clean from the surface. Seals that have become permanently discolored by mold growth are seals that need to be replaced — not just for appearance but for hygiene.
Shower door hardware — hinges, clamps, brackets, towel bars, handles, and mounting screws — operates in a corrosive environment that degrades metal finishes, loosens connections, and weakens mounting points. Chrome pits, brushed nickel tarnishes, and even stainless steel components can deteriorate in the persistent moisture environment of a shower. Loose hardware is more than a cosmetic issue — a loose hinge on a heavy frameless door is a safety concern.
Shower glass can sustain chips from contact with shampoo bottles, razors, and other shower items. Cracks can develop from impact or from stress at hardware mounting points. And hard water mineral deposits — calcium, magnesium, and silica — can etch the glass surface over years of exposure, creating a permanent haze that no amount of cleaning will remove. Each of these conditions requires a different response, and Harrison evaluates glass condition as part of every shower door service.
Constant Water and Steam Assault: No other fixture in your home is subjected to the volume and frequency of direct water contact that a shower door endures. Every shower delivers minutes of pressurized water spray, steam, and splash directly onto the door's glass, seals, hardware, and frame. This daily water assault is the primary driver of every form of shower door deterioration.
Hard Water Mineral Deposits — Cambria's Hidden Destroyer: Cambria's water supply contains dissolved minerals — calcium, magnesium, and silica — that deposit on glass and hardware surfaces as the water evaporates. These deposits build up gradually, creating the white, cloudy film on glass that becomes increasingly difficult to remove over time. On hardware, mineral deposits accelerate corrosion by trapping moisture against metal surfaces. On seals, mineral deposits harden the rubber and reduce its flexibility. On tracks, mineral deposits create rough surfaces that impede roller movement.
Soap Scum, Shampoo, and Chemical Residue Buildup: Soap, shampoo, conditioner, and body wash leave residues that combine with hard water minerals to create soap scum — a stubborn film that coats every surface in the shower enclosure. This buildup is not just cosmetic. On tracks and rollers, it creates friction that impedes movement. On seals, it promotes mold growth. On hardware, it traps moisture and accelerates corrosion.
Humidity That Never Fully Dries: Bathrooms in Cambria — even well-ventilated ones — maintain higher humidity levels than other rooms. The shower door and its components exist in a state of near-constant moisture exposure. Seals never fully dry. Hardware never fully dries. Frame joints never fully dry. This persistent moisture eliminates the drying periods that would otherwise slow corrosion and mold growth.
Daily Thermal Cycling — Hot Showers in a Cool Bathroom: Every shower creates a thermal cycle — the glass, hardware, and seals heat rapidly when hot water and steam contact them, then cool as the bathroom returns to ambient temperature. This daily expansion and contraction stresses seal adhesion, hardware connections, and caulk joints. Over thousands of cycles, thermal stress contributes to seal peeling, hardware loosening, and caulk cracking.
Daily Mechanical Stress — Opening, Closing, Bumping, Grabbing: Shower doors are operated by wet hands — gripping handles, pushing glass, pulling doors, sliding panels — with less precision and more force than dry-handed operation of other doors. The mechanical stress of daily wet-handed operation loosens hardware, wears hinges and rollers, and stresses the connections between glass and hardware.
Restore Your Hardware: (888) 670-9331Frameless Shower Doors: Heavy tempered glass panels supported by hinges, clips, or clamps without a surrounding metal frame. Frameless doors require the most precise hardware alignment and are the most sensitive to hinge wear and sagging.
Semi-Frameless Shower Doors: A hybrid design with minimal framing — typically a framed header and threshold with frameless glass panels between them. We repair both the frame components and the frameless glass-to-hardware connections.
Framed Shower Doors: Fully framed enclosures with metal framing around every glass panel edge. We repair frame corrosion, seal failures, hinge and pivot hardware, and glass retention within the frame system.
Sliding / Bypass Shower Doors: Two or more glass panels on parallel tracks that slide past each other. We repair rollers, tracks, guides, bumpers, and towel bar handles. Sliding shower doors are the most common enclosure type on bathtub installations.
Pivot and Hinged Shower Doors: Doors that swing open on a single pivot point or on traditional hinges. We repair pivot pins, hinges, swing alignment, strike alignment, and the waterproofing challenges unique to pivot and hinged designs.
Neo-Angle & Curved Enclosures: Neo-angle doors have unique hardware geometry. Curved enclosures require specific roller and track hardware matched to the curve radius. We service all with the brand-specific parts they demand.
Steam Shower Enclosures: Steam showers require a fully sealed enclosure that contains steam as well as water. The sealing requirements are significantly more demanding than standard showers. We repair steam shower seals, hardware, and ventilation with the airtight standards that steam enclosures demand.
Bottom Seal and Sweep Failures: These flexible strips contact the threshold. They compress, harden, and shrink. We replace bottom seals and sweeps with quality replacements matched to your door's profile.
Side Seal and Jamb Seal Gaps: Gaps as small as a sixteenth of an inch can allow significant water escape. We replace side seals to restore continuous waterproof contact.
Threshold and Curb Seal Restoration: When caulk cracks or separated, water finds its way into the subfloor. We remove deteriorated caulk and reapply quality mold-resistant silicone sealant.
Replace Your Seals: (888) 670-9331We replace worn rollers and deep-clean tracks to remove packed sand, dirt, and soap scum. Floor guides and bumper stops are restored to prevent panels from drifting or jumping off track.
We adjust heavy glass panels to correct sagging and misalignment. Hinge adjustment or relocation is performed to ensure the door closes flush. We also replace pivot pins and pins to restore smooth, controlled door movement.
We replace shattered tempered panels and handle etched or stained glass. Handles, towel bars, and knobs are repaired or replaced with quality hardware. Frame corrosion treatment and refinishing are available for aluminum and nickel frames.
What Happens Under the Floor When Water Escapes Daily: A leaking shower door deposits water on the bathroom floor during every shower. Day after day, this hidden moisture accumulates in materials that were never designed to be wet. The moisture seeps under the baseboard and into the subfloor structure where it cannot be seen.
Mold Growth Behind Walls and Under Flooring: Persistent moisture creates ideal conditions for mold growth in concealed locations. Remediation of concealed mold is expensive and disruptive.
Subfloor Rot and Structural Deterioration: Wood subfloor and floor joists that are exposed to persistent moisture deteriorate — softening, rotting, and eventually losing structural integrity.
The Cost of Ignoring a Leaking Shower Door — $50 Seal vs. $5,000 Floor: A new set of shower door seals costs $50 to $150. The cost of repairing a subfloor that has been damaged by months of water intrusion: $2,000 to $5,000 or more. The math is straightforward. Fix the seal now, or fix the floor later.
We run the water, observe where it goes, and watch how the door operates under actual use conditions. A dry-condition inspection misses the leak paths that only appear under pressure.
We catalog every issue — not just the most obvious leak, but every compromised seal, every alignment problem, every hardware issue, and every condition that is contributing to the door's malfunction.
We present our findings and our recommended repair plan with clear pricing. You approve the plan and the price before we start.
We execute the repair with mold-resistant silicone caulk, quality seals, and corrosion-resistant hardware. Every material is selected for durability in demanding shower conditions.
After the repair, we run the shower again at full pressure. Water testing verifies that the repair has eliminated the leaks, not just reduced them.
| Repair Type | Typical Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Seal, Sweep, & Weatherstrip Replacement | $100 — $300 |
| Roller & Track Repair (Sliding) | $100 — $250 |
| Hinge Repair & Alignment (Frameless) | $100 — $300 |
| Handle & Hardware Replacement | $75 — $200 |
| Caulking & Waterproofing Restoration | $100 — $250 |
| Glass Panel Replacement | $200 — $600 |
Repair Now vs. Water Damage Later: The cost of shower door repair — typically $100 to $600 — is a fraction of the cost of water damage repair ($5,000+) that results from months of a leaking door.
Every shower you take with a leaking door puts water where water should not go. Harrison ends both problems with one visit. We diagnose the leak, fix the mechanical issue, replace the worn seals, and test the repair with running water before we leave.
The fix is faster and cheaper than you think. Call Harrison today.
Call (888) 670-9331 Now