Homeowners want to know whether a new threshold can be added without replacing the door frame, how a threshold is adjusted when new flooring raises the floor height, and which threshold type actually seals against KC winter drafts. A website that explains door thresholds earns the call. Free mockup, no commitment.

For Door Threshold Replacement in KC

Web Design for Door Threshold Replacement Companies in Kansas City

Door threshold replacement customers are KC homeowners whose exterior door threshold has corroded, split, or warped and is now letting cold air in at floor level, homeowners who installed new flooring that raised the floor height and the existing threshold no longer contacts the door bottom seal, or homeowners replacing an exterior door and needing the threshold cut and fitted to the existing door frame width. The central education is threshold types and their sealing function, height adjustment for new flooring, and how a threshold is cut and fitted to a non-standard frame width — three things that determine whether a threshold replacement solves the draft problem or just delays it. Threshold types: an exterior door threshold is a composite piece — typically an aluminum or solid wood saddle with a vinyl, silicone, or rubber insert that contacts the door bottom; the insert is the primary seal; an adjustable threshold (screws on the top face raise or lower the center fin height) is the most versatile type — it accommodates slight floor height variation without replacement; a non-adjustable threshold is a fixed height — if the floor height changes or the door sags slightly, the seal no longer contacts the door bottom and air passes through; in KC homes where wood floors expand and contract seasonally, an adjustable threshold is better than a fixed one because the floor height at the threshold location can vary up to 1/8 inch between winter and summer; saddle thresholds for transition between two interior floor heights are not weather seals — they are cosmetic transitions and should not be confused with exterior door thresholds. Height after new flooring: new hardwood or tile flooring raises the floor height by 3/8 to 3/4 inch — a threshold sized to the original floor height no longer makes contact with the door bottom seal; the adjustment options are: (1) install an adjustable threshold and raise the center fin to the new floor height; (2) install a taller threshold that bridges the old subfloor height to the new finish floor height; (3) cut and reinstall the existing door to a lower height — this is the most labor-intensive option and only needed if the door no longer clears the new flooring by less than 1/8 inch. Fitting to frame: exterior door frames are rarely exactly standard widths — trim, plinth blocks, and previous threshold installations affect the exact measurement; a threshold is cut to the door frame width between the interior casing legs minus the projection of any door stop on each side; threshold end cuts on aluminum thresholds require a metal-cutting blade; the ends are often caulked at installation to prevent water intrusion at the side-to-frame junction. A door threshold website that explains the adjustable vs. fixed type decision, what new flooring does to seal contact, and how a threshold is fitted to an actual frame earns the homeowner who has been feeling the draft all winter.

What homeowners research before door threshold replacement

  • Threshold types — adjustable vs. fixed, vinyl insert function, saddle vs. weather seal distinction
  • Height after new flooring — how much floor raise affects seal, adjustment vs. replacement decision
  • KC seasonal floor movement — hardwood expansion range, why adjustable is better than fixed in KC
  • Fitting process — frame width measurement, door stop subtraction, metal blade requirement for aluminum
  • Draft diagnosis — where air actually enters, threshold vs. door sweep vs. side seal source

What your door threshold replacement website would include

  • Threshold type section — adjustable vs. fixed comparison, insert material options, KC seasonal floor movement
  • New flooring height section — how much raise affects contact, three adjustment options, when door must be cut
  • Fitting guide — frame width measurement, door stop deduction, caulk at ends for water seal
  • Draft diagnosis section — how to identify threshold vs. sweep vs. side seal as draft source
  • Material section — aluminum vs. wood saddle, vinyl vs. silicone insert durability, KC temperature range
  • Quote form with door type, existing threshold condition, new flooring concern, draft description, timeline

What clients say

“The flooring height section brought in three jobs I wouldn't have gotten otherwise. Customers who had just had hardwood installed were calling me about cold air and assumed the door was the problem. After reading the section explaining how new flooring raises the floor height and the existing threshold no longer contacts the door sweep, they came to the estimate already knowing what happened. All three needed adjustable thresholds — quick jobs, good margin, and every customer was relieved because the fix was simpler than a door replacement. The draft diagnosis section also saved one customer from replacing a threshold that was fine — the problem was the side seal, not the bottom.”

— N. Brennan, door service and weatherproofing, Independence, MO

Simple pricing

A door threshold site with threshold type section, height adjustment guide, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with new flooring content, draft diagnosis, and fitting guide is $425–$750. One threshold replacement covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.

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