Shower Door Repair

Repair the shower door problem before it turns into a bigger one.

MetroGlass Pro handles leak issues, dragging doors, failing hardware, and bad install remediation for Manhattan and NYC buyers who want honest guidance on whether a door should be repaired or replaced.

Leak EvaluationHardware ProblemsBad Install RemediationRepair or Replace Guidance

What buyers usually notice first.

A repair lead usually starts with a symptom, not a diagnosis. These are the problems Manhattan buyers mention most when they call, text photos, or ask whether the enclosure can be saved.

Shower Door Leaking at the Bottom

Water escaping near the curb or door edge is often tied to sweep wear, silicone failure, or a door that was never aligned cleanly in the first place.

Door Dragging, Scraping, or Sagging

Doors that scrape tile, drift out of alignment, or stop closing cleanly usually need hardware review and a closer look at the original fit.

Loose Handle, Hinge, or Roller Problems

Handles, hinges, guides, sweeps, and rollers wear out, especially when the original install was rushed or the hardware was never adjusted correctly.

Bad Install by Another Company

Some problems are not normal wear at all. They come from poor measurements, wrong clips, careless sealing, or an installer who treated the bathroom like a quick stop.

Common Causes

The symptom is not always the real problem.

A leaking door is not always a simple leak fix. A dragging door is not always a quick adjustment. In Manhattan bathrooms, the real cause often comes back to the original measurement, the way the hardware was chosen, or how carefully the enclosure was installed.

Incorrect original measurements that leave the door out of alignment or force the wrong sweep and seal setup.

Worn sweeps, failing silicone, and loose hardware after years of daily use in a wet bathroom.

Bad installation details, like wrong clips, poor anchoring, rushed silicone work, or hardware that was never adjusted correctly.

Older framed systems with corroded parts, failing rollers, or outdated components that are no longer worth chasing.

Repair Strategy

The right repair starts with deciding what is worth saving.

Not every shower door problem is a quick adjustment. The useful answer is to sort the issue into repair, remediation, or replacement before money is spent.

Start with the actual failure point

A leak at the curb, hinge-side drip, loose handle, dragging sweep, or roller problem each points to a different fix. Clear photos help us avoid guessing.

Check whether the glass was ever fit correctly

If the original measurement was wrong, repeated sweep and silicone fixes may keep failing. That is when repair turns into replacement planning.

Separate worn parts from bad installation

Worn sweeps and loose hardware are normal repair work. Wrong clips, poor anchoring, and sloppy silicone usually need a more serious remediation conversation.

Use replacement when repair would waste money

Cracked glass, corroded framed systems, or a door that cannot align cleanly are usually better handled as a new shower door replacement.

Repair

A good repair can buy you time.

If the glass is sound and the problem is more about sweeps, sealant, alignment, or hardware, repair can be the right call. We would rather tell you that honestly than push a replacement you do not need yet.

Replacement

Sometimes replacement is the cleaner answer.

When the glass is the wrong size, the original install was poor, or the system is simply too dated to be worth chasing, a clean replacement is often the faster and better long term move.

Usually Repairable

What we can often fix.

Minor leaking caused by sweeps, silicone, or alignment issues
Loose handles, hinges, guides, or other hardware
Dragging doors that need adjustment or hardware review
Wear issues where the glass is still sound and correctly sized

Usually Better to Replace

When patching is not the smart move.

Cracked or chipped glass that creates a real safety concern
Bad original measurements that leave the enclosure fundamentally wrong for the opening
Old framed systems with too many failing parts at once
Installations where the cleaner long term answer is a new enclosure, not another patch

Symptom Checks

The kinds of repair calls we sort out every week.

Leaking at the curb or bottom edge

This can come from worn sweeps, old silicone, poor door alignment, or a bad original measurement that leaves the gap working against the bathroom every time the shower runs.

Door not closing smoothly

If the door drags, scrapes, or feels heavy in the wrong way, we look at hinges, guides, settling, and whether the enclosure was set up correctly for the opening to begin with.

Loose hardware or sliding issues

Loose handles, noisy rollers, worn guides, and wobble in the hardware can often be corrected if the glass is still sound and the system itself is worth saving.

An install that never felt right

Some repair inquiries are really remediation jobs. The shower leaked from day one, the clips look wrong, the silicone looks rushed, or the whole enclosure feels off every time you use it.

Quote Readiness

What helps us diagnose the repair faster.

A few clear details can separate a simple sweep or alignment fix from a replacement conversation. Send the problem photos first, then we can tell you what is worth checking on site.

Before requesting a repair quote

Photos of the full shower opening, taken straight on and from each side
Close-ups of the leak, sweep, hinge, roller, handle, track, or silicone problem
A short note on when the issue started and whether the door has been repaired before
Approximate opening width, door height, and whether the bathroom is in a co-op, condo, rental, or house
Any building requirements you already know, such as COI, freight elevator, or work-hour rules

Manhattan Specific

What repair work looks like in Manhattan bathrooms.

A repair call in Manhattan is rarely just about the door. Tight clearances, finished tile, older walls, occupied apartments, and building access rules all shape how carefully the next step needs to be handled.

Compact Layouts

In smaller Manhattan bathrooms, a little misalignment can create a big usability problem because the shower, vanity, toilet, and entry door all compete for space.

Older Walls and Finished Tile

Older walls, finished stone, and previous renovation work can all affect how a repair needs to be approached and whether the existing system is still worth saving.

Occupied Building Logistics

Even a repair or replacement still has to work within co-op and condo rules, access windows, doorman procedures, and building expectations if the property is occupied.

Common repair questions.

Can a leaking shower door usually be repaired?+

Sometimes, yes. If the glass is sound and the problem is coming from a worn sweep, failing silicone, or alignment issue, repair can often solve it. If the glass was measured wrong or the original installation was poor, replacement may be the better answer.

When should a shower door be replaced instead of repaired?+

Replacement is usually the better choice when the glass is cracked, the system is badly outdated, the frame is corroded, or the original installation was wrong enough that another repair would only buy a little time.

Can you fix a shower door another installer put in?+

Yes. We regularly evaluate shower doors installed by others, especially when the problem is bad alignment, poor sealing, wrong hardware, or an install that never felt right from day one.

Do you handle repair work in Manhattan co-ops and condos?+

Yes. We work in Manhattan apartments, co-ops, condos, brownstones, and other occupied buildings. If the building needs a COI or scheduling coordination, we plan for that up front.

Not sure if it should be repaired or replaced?

Send a few photos and tell us what the door is doing. We can usually point you in the right direction quickly.

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