5 Warning Signs of a Garage Door Repair Scam in Ontario

Around 32% of Ontario homeowners say they’ve been the victim of a renovation scam. Garage door repairs are one of the easiest ways to become the next one.  Working on garage doors across the GTA, we’ve seen customers hit by the same handful of scam tactics again and again. Here are the six warning signs of a garage door scam and what to do about each one.
Your garage door spring quote mainly comes down to four things: door size, spring type, hardware condition, labor, and current parts pricing. A better way to say it is that spring replacement pricing reflects both the part itself and the amount of work needed to restore the door safely.

1. An Unregistered or Untraceable Business

Under Ontario’s Business Names Act, any business operating under a name other than the owner’s own legal name has to be registered with the province. 

Plenty of legitimate garage door companies work out of a home or a truck, so the lack of a storefront isn’t necessarily a red flag on its own. But if a company can’t confirm they have liability insurance, or the business name they give you doesn’t turn up anywhere (no municipal registration, no online presence), that’s usually a sign of a garage door repair scam.

💡 Quick tip: Always check the business’s name and license number against Ontario’s business registry

2. Cash-Only Payment Demands

Garage door repair scammers push cash because it’s untraceable and near-impossible to get back. While paying cash isn’t inherently a problem, if a company insists on it and refuses card, e-transfer, or any other traceable method, that’s worth questioning.
💡 Quick tip: Full payment upfront, especially in cash, isn’t standard practice for garage door technicians. Installations typically involve a deposit with the balance due on completion; repairs are usually paid for once the work’s done.

3. Unsolicited Contact (Door-Knockers and Fake Ads)

A lot of reported garage door scams start with unsolicited door-to-door contact, often offering a “free safety inspection” or claiming they noticed your door looked unsafe from the street. 

From there, they can easily claim you have broken springs=< or frayed cables (these are usually problems you can’t verify for yourself without taking apart your door). They’ll either: 

  • Push you to agree to same-day repairs on the spot, before you’ve had a chance to check pricing or get a second opinion
  • Quote a price that jumps once they’re already inside your garage, using the “while I’m here” moment to add on parts you didn’t ask for
💡 Quick tip: Don’t book with a door-knocker on the spot, no matter how urgent it sounds. Check the company’s background and track record first, and get a second quote before agreeing to anything.

4. Refusing to Provide a Written Estimate

Under Ontario’s Consumer Protection Act, once a written estimate is given, the final bill can’t legally exceed it by more than 10% without your agreement. A company that won’t put a quote in writing leaves you with nothing to hold them to if the bill comes in way higher than what you were told.

💡 Quick tip: Always get a written estimate before any work starts.

5. Aggressive Upselling & High-Pressure Tactics

If a technician recommends a costly “full rebuild” after only a quick glance, or claims working parts are suddenly unsafe, that’s a classic pressure tactic. A true full rebuild should be backed by clear evidence of wear or failure, not a rushed inspection.

💡 Quick tip: Ask for part numbers before agreeing to anything so you can check pricing yourself. When in doubt, get a second opinion before you agree.

Garage Door Scam Tips

Warning SignWhat To Do Instead
Unregistered or untraceable businessCheck the legal name and licence number against Ontario’s business registry
Cash-only payment demandsInsist on a traceable payment method; full payment upfront isn’t standard
Door-knockers and unsolicited “free inspections”Never book on the spot; get a second quote first
Refusal to provide a written estimateAlways get a written estimate before any work starts
Aggressive upselling or high-pressure “full rebuild” pitchesAsk for part numbers and get a second opinion when in doubt

Worried About Garage Door Repair Scams? Get a Second Opinion

If a quote, a technician’s pitch, or anything about a recent call still doesn’t sit right, calling in a second opinion is the easiest way to know for sure. At Vitas, we offer free on-site estimates, so getting a second, no-pressure look at your door doesn’t cost you anything either way.