A garage door that suddenly refuses to open is usually caused by one of eight things. Some are safe two-minute fixes you can do yourself. Others, like a broken spring, need a professional. Work through this list in order before you call anyone.
1. Dead remote battery
The simplest cause is still the most common. Try the wall button inside the garage. If the door opens from the wall but not the remote, replace the remote battery (usually a CR2032 coin cell) and test again.
2. No power to the opener
Check that the opener's light is on. If not, check the power point with another appliance and look for a tripped breaker in your switchboard. After a Sydney storm blackout, some openers also need the time or travel limits reset.
3. Lock mode is switched on
Most wall consoles have a lock or holiday button that disables remotes. It is easy to press by accident. Hold the lock button for a few seconds to toggle it off, then test the remote.
4. Blocked or misaligned safety sensors
If your door opens but refuses to close, the photo-electric safety beams near the floor are the usual suspect. Clear away bins, leaves or cobwebs, wipe the lenses, and check both sensor lights are on steady. A blinking light means the two eyes are out of alignment; gently bend the bracket until the light steadies.
5. The trolley is disengaged
If the motor runs but the door does not move, the manual release cord (the red rope) has probably been pulled, disconnecting the door from the opener. Most openers re-engage automatically the next time you run them with the door aligned; check your opener's manual for the exact re-engage step.
6. A broken spring
Stop here if you heard a loud bang from the garage recently. That bang was almost certainly a torsion spring snapping. Look above the door: a visible gap in the spring coil confirms it. The spring does the heavy lifting, so the opener cannot raise the door without it, and forcing it can burn out the motor or drop the door. Do not attempt to lift the door or fix the spring yourself. This one is genuinely dangerous. Read our full guide to broken garage door springs, or book a repair.
7. Snapped or frayed cables
The lifting cables run down each side of the door. If one snaps, the door usually sits crooked in the opening or jams part-way. Like springs, cables are under tension. Leave them to a technician.
8. The door has come off its tracks
Bent tracks, worn rollers or an impact (a car nudge is the classic) can push rollers out of the track. If the door is visibly out of its guides, do not keep running the opener; each cycle makes the damage worse.
When to call a professional
Anything involving springs, cables, tracks or the door sitting crooked is professional territory; the stored tension in these parts causes serious injuries every year. We repair all major brands across Sydney with same-day response, Monday to Saturday. Call 0410 888 118 and we will diagnose it properly the first time. If the door is beyond repair, our cost guide shows what a replacement runs in 2026.
Frequently asked questions
How do I open my garage door manually?
With the door fully closed, pull the red manual release cord, then lift the door by its handles. If the door feels extremely heavy, a spring is likely broken. Stop and call a technician.
Can I drive my car out with a broken spring?
We do not recommend it. Without spring tension the door can slam shut under its own weight. Wait for the technician; same-day service means you are rarely stuck for long.
Do you charge a call-out fee?
We quote before any work begins, and inspections are free. Call us and tell us what the door is doing; we can often narrow the fault down on the phone.




