Homeowners want to know whether they need a pre-hung door or just a slab, why the door rubs on one side, and whether the problem is the door or the frame. A website that explains KC settling and shimming earns the call before a homeowner buys the wrong door at the hardware store. Free mockup, no commitment.
For Interior Door Installation in KC
Web Design for Interior Door Installation Companies in Kansas City
Interior door installation customers are KC homeowners whose doors rub at the top corner, latch only when lifted, or have a gap at the bottom that has widened over five to ten years — the result of KC clay soil with plasticity index between thirty and fifty that shrinks during summer drought and expands during spring rain, producing seasonal foundation movement that racks the door frames in the upper floors of KC homes built between nineteen-sixty and nineteen-ninety; homeowners finishing a basement or adding a bonus room above a garage who need new doors hung in new framing; homeowners replacing hollow-core doors throughout a KC ranch home with solid-core doors for sound attenuation between a home office and living space; or homeowners whose existing door frames have swollen or split casing at the jamb and need the entire pre-hung unit replaced rather than just the slab. The central education is pre-hung door rough opening sizing as the dimension that determines whether the installation goes smoothly — a pre-hung door for a standard thirty-two-inch opening requires a rough opening of thirty-four inches wide and eighty-two and one-half inches tall: door width plus one-half inch for each jamb leg plus three-quarter inch for shimming each side; door height plus one and one-half inches for the head jamb and one-half inch of clearance at the bottom; a rough opening that is one inch too narrow cannot be shimmed into plumb — the frame will bind; a rough opening that is two inches too wide requires sistering the king stud to narrow the opening or the door will not latch correctly. KC settling and shimming for plumb — a KC home built in the nineteen-seventies on clay soil has floor framing that may be out of level by three-eighths to three-quarters inch across a thirty-two-inch opening due to differential seasonal movement; the door jamb must be shimmed plumb independent of the rough opening framing; shims at the hinge locations and at the strike plate location carry the load and hold the jamb in position; a door hung in an out-of-plumb jamb will drift open or closed under gravity and the latch bolt will miss the strike plate; solid-core versus hollow-core for KC applications: a solid-core door weighs twenty-five to thirty pounds more than a hollow-core slab of the same size and requires three hinges instead of two; solid-core provides an STC rating of thirty-two to thirty-seven versus twenty-eight to thirty-two for hollow-core — the difference is audible in a KC bonus room above a garage used as a home office or music room; door swing planning in KC homes — the door must swing away from the closet, into the room, and not block a light switch or an outlet when fully open. An interior door installation website that explains rough opening sizing, KC clay soil settling and shimming for plumb, and solid-core selection for sound attenuation earns the KC homeowner who needs doors that actually latch and wants to understand why the last one did not.
What homeowners research before interior door installation
- Pre-hung vs. slab — when to replace the entire unit vs. just the door, jamb condition as the deciding factor
- Rough opening dimensions — door width + 2 in wide, door height + 2 in tall, shimming allowance per side
- KC settling and shimming — clay soil seasonal movement, plumb independent of rough opening, shim locations
- Solid-core vs. hollow-core — STC rating difference, weight and hinge count, bonus room and home office use
- Door swing — swing direction planning, clearance from switches and outlets, hand (left vs. right) selection
What your interior door installation website would include
- Rough opening section — standard sizing formula, what happens when opening is too narrow or too wide
- Shimming section — KC clay soil settling, plumb process, hinge and strike plate shim locations
- Pre-hung vs. slab section — jamb condition checklist, when casing damage requires full unit replacement
- Material section — solid-core STC advantage, three-hinge requirement, hollow-core appropriate uses
- Settling section — KC seasonal movement patterns, why doors that latched in spring bind in summer
- Quote form with door count, hollow vs. solid preference, current problem (rubs, drifts, gaps), home age
What clients say
“The settling section explains something I used to spend ten minutes on every call. KC homeowners in older ranch homes are convinced the door they just bought is defective because it rubs at the top corner — they don't connect it to the clay soil that moves the house three-eighths of an inch every summer. After the section went up explaining that a KC home on clay sits on a living substrate and that the door frame moves with it, customers understood why shimming for plumb is a skill and not just screwing in hinges. The solid-core section also converts customers — once KC homeowners see the STC number difference and hear that their bonus room door will actually block sound to the hallway, the upgrade is an easy yes.”
— T. Caldwell, interior door installation and finish carpentry, Prairie Village, KS
Simple pricing
An interior door installation site with rough opening guide, KC settling section, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with shimming process, solid-core comparison, and pre-hung vs. slab content is $425–$750. One door installation covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.
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