How our SMS program works, what messages you'll get, and how to opt out at any time.
Last updated: January 1, 2026
OnPoint Pro Doors operates two separate SMS programs for Denver-metro customers: a transactional SMS program (appointment confirmations, on-the-way alerts, service completion receipts) and a marketing SMS program (occasional service reminders, seasonal specials, hail damage advisories). You can opt into one, both, or neither β they are independent.
You consent to receive SMS messages from OnPoint Pro Doors only by explicitly checking the corresponding consent checkbox on our reserve form, or by texting one of our published numbers and confirming opt-in via reply. We do not auto-enroll customers into SMS programs. We do not buy or import phone number lists.
Standard message and data rates may apply per your wireless carrier's plan. SMS messages are typically counted toward your text messaging plan, and data rates may apply if a message contains a link you tap. OnPoint Pro Doors does not charge any additional fee for SMS messages.
SMS messages are supported on all major U.S. wireless carriers including AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, Sprint (now T-Mobile), US Cellular, MetroPCS, Cricket, Boost Mobile, Mint Mobile, Visible, Google Fi, and most regional carriers. Carriers are not liable for delayed or undelivered messages.
Reply STOP to any SMS message you receive from us. You will receive one final confirmation message that you have been unsubscribed, and no further marketing or transactional SMS will be sent to that phone number. If you opt out of transactional SMS but still need a service appointment, we will simply call you instead.
Reply START to a number you previously opted out of, or check the consent box on our reserve form again. We honor opt-out requests permanently until you re-opt-in.
Reply HELP to any SMS message and you will receive an automated response with our phone number, hours, and a link back to this page. For human help, call (303) 732-8236.
Phone numbers and SMS engagement data are handled per our Privacy Policy. We do not sell or share SMS subscriber information with third parties for their marketing purposes.
We may update these SMS terms from time to time. The "Last updated" date at the top of this page will reflect the most recent revision. Material changes will be communicated to active SMS subscribers via SMS.
Questions? Call (303) 732-8236 or email our customer service team. We respond to SMS-related questions within one business day.
Same-day service across the Denver metro. Free estimates. Honest pricing. Real warranty. Call now and talk to a real person β usually answered in under 60 seconds.
π Call Now · (303) 732-8236MonβSat 7amβ9pm · 24/7 Emergency Dispatch · Licensed & Insured in Colorado
Golden · Castle Rock · Centennial · Westminster · Highlands Ranch · Longmont · Arvada · Lakewood
Spring Replacement · Maintenance Tuneup · Off Track Repair · Cable Roller Repair · Remote Keypad · Opener Repair
Broken Cable · Off Track · Hail Damage · Loud Noise · Opener Grinding · Door Wont Open
Fort Collins Hail · Castle Rock Hail · Arvada Hail · Lakewood Hail · Highlands Ranch Hail
While every customer call is a little different, certain failure modes show up over and over in our Front Range dispatch logs. Knowing what to watch for can save you several hundred dollars in collateral damage and can help you describe the issue accurately when you call.
Our Denver dispatch volume is highly seasonal, and knowing the pattern can help you plan maintenance:
If you have lived in another part of the country before moving to Colorado, you may notice that garage doors here have specific quirks. The combination of high-altitude dry air, intense UV exposure, hail risk, and 50Β°F temperature swings creates wear patterns that simply do not show up in milder climates. Spring tension calculations, lubricant selection, weatherseal lifespan, and panel paint durability are all different here. A Denver garage door technician who has worked the Front Range for years brings specialized knowledge that a generic national-chain dispatch system cannot match.
That is why local matters in this trade. We have spent years figuring out which spring brands hold up best in our climate, which opener models survive the cold-thickened lubricant problem, which weatherseal compounds resist UV punishment, and which insurance carriers handle hail claims fastest. That accumulated local knowledge is the actual product we sell β the parts and labor are commodity. The expertise is not.
A residential garage door is the largest moving part on most homes β bigger than any window, door, or appliance. With proper care, it should last 25 to 30+ years. Without care, it can become a weekly headache by year 8. A few basic maintenance habits make the difference:
Once per year, hit the rollers, hinges, and torsion spring with a spray-on garage door lubricant (NOT WD-40 β that is a degreaser, not a lubricant). Quality silicone-based or synthetic spray-on lube costs $8 at any hardware store. This single 5-minute habit doubles roller life, prevents the squealing operation that drives Denver homeowners crazy, and reduces opener motor strain.
Once a month while you are walking out to the car, spend two minutes looking at: spring coils (any visible gaps or breaks?), cables (any frayed strands?), rollers (any flat spots or chipped plastic?), tracks (any visible bends or loose mounting bolts?), bottom seal (any cracks or daylight visible?). Spotting a small problem at month 4 is a $120 fix. Letting it cascade until month 10 is a $400 fix. The math always favors early intervention.
Place a roll of paper towels or a 2x4 flat on the floor under the closing door. The door should hit the obstruction and reverse to fully open. If it does not, the safety sensors or force settings are out of spec β call us. This safety mechanism is required by federal law on all openers manufactured after 1993, but it can drift out of calibration over time. A non-reversing door can crush a kid's bike, a pet, or worse.
Newer Colorado homes (built or with permitted opener replacements after certain date thresholds) require battery backup on garage door openers. The intent: if the power goes out during a snowstorm, you can still get out of the garage. If your opener is older than 5 years, it likely does not have a battery backup. Adding one is typically $89 to $149 and can be done at any service visit.
Once a year (ideally late September or early October before cold weather), have a technician do a full inspection: spring balance test, cable inspection, roller wear measurement, hinge tightness, opener force calibration, sensor alignment, and full lubrication. Cost in the Denver metro: $89 to $129. Catches problems before they become emergencies. Pays for itself many times over.
OnPoint Pro Doors is a Colorado-registered, locally-staffed garage door repair, installation, and hail damage company serving the entire Denver metro and the broader Front Range. We are not a national chain with a Denver phone number. We are not a lead-routing service. We are a local operation with local trucks, local techs, and local accountability. Every job carries a written 1-year labor warranty, manufacturer parts warranties, and a no-surprise pricing guarantee.
Call (303) 732-8236 for same-day service across the Denver metro β Aurora, Lakewood, Boulder, Centennial, Highlands Ranch, Parker, Castle Rock, Westminster, Thornton, Arvada, Wheat Ridge, Englewood, Littleton, Brighton, Broomfield, Commerce City, Northglenn, Greeley, Loveland, Fort Collins, Longmont, and the surrounding 60-mile radius from Denver.
While every customer call is a little different, certain failure modes show up over and over in our Front Range dispatch logs. Knowing what to watch for can save you several hundred dollars in collateral damage and can help you describe the issue accurately when you call.
Our Denver dispatch volume is highly seasonal, and knowing the pattern can help you plan maintenance:
If you have lived in another part of the country before moving to Colorado, you may notice that garage doors here have specific quirks. The combination of high-altitude dry air, intense UV exposure, hail risk, and 50Β°F temperature swings creates wear patterns that simply do not show up in milder climates. Spring tension calculations, lubricant selection, weatherseal lifespan, and panel paint durability are all different here. A Denver garage door technician who has worked the Front Range for years brings specialized knowledge that a generic national-chain dispatch system cannot match.
That is why local matters in this trade. We have spent years figuring out which spring brands hold up best in our climate, which opener models survive the cold-thickened lubricant problem, which weatherseal compounds resist UV punishment, and which insurance carriers handle hail claims fastest. That accumulated local knowledge is the actual product we sell β the parts and labor are commodity. The expertise is not.
A residential garage door is the largest moving part on most homes β bigger than any window, door, or appliance. With proper care, it should last 25 to 30+ years. Without care, it can become a weekly headache by year 8. A few basic maintenance habits make the difference:
Once per year, hit the rollers, hinges, and torsion spring with a spray-on garage door lubricant (NOT WD-40 β that is a degreaser, not a lubricant). Quality silicone-based or synthetic spray-on lube costs $8 at any hardware store. This single 5-minute habit doubles roller life, prevents the squealing operation that drives Denver homeowners crazy, and reduces opener motor strain.
Once a month while you are walking out to the car, spend two minutes looking at: spring coils (any visible gaps or breaks?), cables (any frayed strands?), rollers (any flat spots or chipped plastic?), tracks (any visible bends or loose mounting bolts?), bottom seal (any cracks or daylight visible?). Spotting a small problem at month 4 is a $120 fix. Letting it cascade until month 10 is a $400 fix. The math always favors early intervention.
Place a roll of paper towels or a 2x4 flat on the floor under the closing door. The door should hit the obstruction and reverse to fully open. If it does not, the safety sensors or force settings are out of spec β call us. This safety mechanism is required by federal law on all openers manufactured after 1993, but it can drift out of calibration over time. A non-reversing door can crush a kid's bike, a pet, or worse.
Newer Colorado homes (built or with permitted opener replacements after certain date thresholds) require battery backup on garage door openers. The intent: if the power goes out during a snowstorm, you can still get out of the garage. If your opener is older than 5 years, it likely does not have a battery backup. Adding one is typically $89 to $149 and can be done at any service visit.
Once a year (ideally late September or early October before cold weather), have a technician do a full inspection: spring balance test, cable inspection, roller wear measurement, hinge tightness, opener force calibration, sensor alignment, and full lubrication. Cost in the Denver metro: $89 to $129. Catches problems before they become emergencies. Pays for itself many times over.
OnPoint Pro Doors is a Colorado-registered, locally-staffed garage door repair, installation, and hail damage company serving the entire Denver metro and the broader Front Range. We are not a national chain with a Denver phone number. We are not a lead-routing service. We are a local operation with local trucks, local techs, and local accountability. Every job carries a written 1-year labor warranty, manufacturer parts warranties, and a no-surprise pricing guarantee.
Call (303) 732-8236 for same-day service across the Denver metro β Aurora, Lakewood, Boulder, Centennial, Highlands Ranch, Parker, Castle Rock, Westminster, Thornton, Arvada, Wheat Ridge, Englewood, Littleton, Brighton, Broomfield, Commerce City, Northglenn, Greeley, Loveland, Fort Collins, Longmont, and the surrounding 60-mile radius from Denver.