Hear from Our Customers
That fog between your window panes isn’t going away on its own. Neither is the draft coming through your frame or the crack spreading across your glass.
Window repair in Fremont, NH means dealing with real problems caused by real weather. Heavy snow loads stress frames. Ice expansion cracks seals. Wind-driven storms shatter glass without warning.
We fix the specific issue causing your problem. Broken window glass replacement happens same-day when it’s an emergency. Foggy window repair restores your view and your insulation by replacing failed seals and desiccants. Window frame restoration stops air leaks that spike your heating bill every winter.
You get your windows working right again without replacing the entire unit. That’s hundreds saved, sometimes thousands, depending on how many windows you’re dealing with.
Paradise Remodeling Inc has handled window repairs across Fremont, NH long enough to know what fails first in our climate. It’s usually the seals on south-facing windows, then the hardware on double-hungs that haven’t been maintained.
We’re not a call center dispatching random crews. You’re getting technicians who understand how New Hampshire weather beats up windows and what it takes to fix them properly. We use materials rated for freeze-thaw cycles and installation techniques that account for seasonal expansion.
Fremont homeowners deal with temperature swings that go from single digits to sixties in the same week during spring. Your window repairs need to handle that. We make sure they do.
You contact us with your window issue. We ask specific questions about what you’re seeing—condensation, cracks, drafts, hardware failure—so we know what to bring.
We schedule an assessment, usually within 24-48 hours for standard repairs. Emergency window repair in Fremont, NH happens faster when you’ve got broken glass or security concerns. We board up immediately if needed, then handle the permanent fix.
During the visit, we inspect the damage and explain exactly what failed and why. You get a clear price before any work starts. No surprises, no upselling to full replacement unless that’s genuinely your only option.
Most repairs finish same-day. Glass replacement, seal repair, and hardware fixes typically take a few hours depending on window size and type. Frame restoration might need a follow-up visit if we’re addressing rot or structural issues that require custom work.
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Broken window glass replacement covers everything from baseball impacts to storm damage. Single-pane, double-pane, tempered, decorative—we source the right glass and install it with proper sealing for New Hampshire weather.
Foggy window repair addresses failed insulated glass units where moisture gets trapped between panes. We remove the affected glass, replace the desiccant that absorbs moisture, re-seal the unit, and restore your R-value. This works for most double-pane windows unless the frame itself is compromised.
Window frame restoration fixes rot, air leaks, and structural damage. Fremont’s freeze-thaw cycles are brutal on wood frames, especially on older homes near Route 107 where original windows are still common. We remove damaged sections, treat for moisture, and rebuild with rot-resistant materials.
Hardware repairs include broken sash locks, worn balances, failed tilt latches, and stuck operators on casement windows. These are the parts that fail from regular use, and replacing them costs a fraction of new windows while making yours function like new again.
Defogging services handle condensation issues when seals haven’t completely failed but moisture is building up. We drill, extract moisture, apply anti-fog solutions, and plug the access points. It’s a temporary fix compared to full seal replacement, but it works when you need a budget option.
Single-pane glass replacement runs $75-80 per window. Double-pane seal repair typically costs $150-300 depending on size. Full window replacement starts around $400-800 per window for decent quality.
The math is straightforward. If your frame is solid and only the glass or seal failed, repair saves you 60-80% compared to replacement. That matters when you’re dealing with multiple windows.
Replacement makes sense when frames are rotted, windows are outdated single-pane units you want to upgrade, or you’re dealing with custom sizes that make repair parts expensive. We’ll tell you honestly which route makes financial sense for your specific situation. Sometimes repair buys you a few more years while you budget for eventual replacement. Sometimes it’s a permanent fix that lasts another decade.
Depends on what caused the fogging and how long it’s been happening. If the seal failed recently and the spacer isn’t corroded, we can disassemble the unit, replace the desiccant, and re-seal it. You get clear glass and restored insulation.
If moisture has been sitting between panes for months, you might have mineral deposits etched into the glass or corrosion on the aluminum spacer. At that point, the glass itself needs replacement, not just the seal.
Defogging is another option where we extract moisture without full disassembly. It’s cheaper—usually $80-150 per window—but it’s not as permanent as seal replacement. The fog might come back in a year or two. We use it mostly for homeowners who need a quick fix before selling or who want to stretch their budget across more windows. For windows you’re keeping long-term, proper seal replacement is worth the extra cost.
Same-day for genuine emergencies where you’ve got broken glass, security risks, or weather exposure. We’re talking shattered windows from storms, break-ins, or accidents that leave your home vulnerable.
We’ll board up the opening immediately to secure your house and keep weather out. Then we measure for glass replacement and typically install the permanent fix within 24-48 hours once we’ve sourced the right glass.
Standard repairs that aren’t emergencies usually happen within a few days of your call. We keep common glass sizes and hardware in stock, so most jobs don’t require special ordering. Custom sizes or specialty glass might add a few days for sourcing. Winter storms obviously create backlogs when half of Fremont is dealing with ice damage at once, but we prioritize based on severity—broken glass beats foggy seals every time.
Seal failure on double-pane windows tops the list. New Hampshire’s temperature swings cause expansion and contraction that eventually breaks down the seal. You’ll notice fog or condensation between the panes, usually starting on windows that get the most sun exposure.
Ice dams cause a lot of damage to lower sashes and frames. When ice builds up and melt water backs up, it seeps into frame joints and freezes again. That expansion cracks wood, damages seals, and creates rot that needs frame restoration.
Hardware failure happens faster here than in milder climates. Sash locks and balances wear out from the constant expansion and contraction of frames. Windows that operated fine in summer suddenly stick or won’t lock come winter.
Storm damage is the obvious one—high winds and hail crack glass, and flying debris during nor’easters causes most of our emergency calls. Older windows with thin glass are especially vulnerable.
If you’re currently losing heat through failed seals, broken glass, or gaps in frames, yes. How much depends on how bad the problem is and how many windows are affected.
A single failed double-pane window loses about the same heat as leaving a door cracked open. Multiply that by five or six windows and you’re basically heating the outdoors. Fixing those seals and stopping the air leaks can cut 10-15% off your heating bill in a typical Fremont winter.
Frame repairs that eliminate drafts around the sash make a noticeable difference in comfort even if the energy savings are modest. You’ll feel less cold air near windows and your furnace won’t cycle as often.
The payback period on window repair is usually one to two winters, sometimes less if you’re fixing multiple problem windows. That’s way better than the 10-15 year payback on full window replacement, which is why repair makes sense when your frames are still solid.
We handle repairs on double-hung, casement, slider, awning, bay, bow, and picture windows. Each type has different common failure points, but the repair principles are the same—replace what’s broken, restore the seal, fix the structure.
Double-hungs are what we see most in Fremont’s older homes. They usually need balance replacement or sash lock repairs. Casement windows tend to have operator and hinge issues. Sliders need track cleaning and roller replacement.
The window material matters more than the style. Wood, vinyl, aluminum, and fiberglass all repair differently. Wood frames can be restored even with significant rot. Vinyl frames sometimes need full replacement if they’re cracked because you can’t really repair broken vinyl structurally.
Aluminum frames repair well but often aren’t worth it because the windows are old enough that replacement makes more sense. We assess each situation individually and tell you what’s actually fixable versus what’s throwing good money after bad.