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Garage Doors

The fastest-consolidating vertical in residential services.

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Garage Doors
The garage door is the largest moving piece of residential equipment and the most used entry point into the home. It is also the fastest-consolidating service vertical in residential PE.

Garage doors run through a different sales motion than other trades. The builder channel (new construction) trains every homeowner to recognize a handful of brands, and the service channel (repair, spring replacement, opener swap) operates off that brand recognition. A platform that controls the new-build relationship with a regional builder captures ten to fifteen years of downstream service revenue. That is why C.H.I. Overhead Doors sold to Nucor for $3 billion at 13 times EBITDA in 2022 - a trade multiple that re-priced the entire sector.

Then there is the service consolidation. Oak Hill Capital acquired Guild Garage Group in March 2026 for over $800 million at approximately 16 times EBITDA. Precision Door Service (Authority Brands portfolio) runs a franchised national network. Local independents with strong review density and tight route economics are being acquired at 6-9 times EBITDA and rolled into these platforms. The gap between the platform multiple and the tuck-in multiple is the investment thesis.

The operational complexity is in balancing new-construction cycles (builder-dependent, lumpy) against service revenue (steady, high-margin, recession-resistant). Platforms that get the mix wrong either starve through a housing downturn or leave margin on the table in good years.

$3BNucor's acquisition of C.H.I. Overhead Doors in 2022 - 13x EBITDA and the sector reset
16xOak Hill's multiple on Guild Garage Group. Platform EBITDA multiples run 2-3x higher than tuck-in multiples.
10-15Years of downstream service revenue captured by the platform that owns the builder relationship
THE REPLACEMENT THESIS
268%
ROI on garage door replacement in Zonda's 2025 Cost vs. Value report - #1 ranked home improvement.

Top-ranked replacement ROI matters less to a homeowner than it does to a referral partner. Real estate agents driving curb appeal recommendations is a meaningful demand channel and the platforms that built those relationships own the lead flow.

THE INSTALLED BASE
70M+
U.S. homes are now 20+ years old, driving replacement demand of 4-5M doors annually.

The homes driving demand were built before modern garage door technology existed. Every replacement is an upgrade conversation, not a like-for-like swap. Operators who train installers as advisors capture the upgrade revenue.

THE TALENT CONSTRAINT
27,000
Total U.S. garage door technicians - vs. 400,000+ HVAC technicians. First-generation talent pool.

Twenty-seven thousand technicians nationally is roughly one tech per fifteen markets. Every platform competing for the same trained installer pool. Most operators in this category have never run a candidate sourcing function at the scale PE requires.

The installer who can hang a steel door in 90 minutes is not the leader who can navigate Big Four dealer-tier economics, ServiceTitan standardization, dual-workforce management, and 30,000 annual torsion-spring injuries. They perform like different executives because they are.
The vertical sits where HVAC was around 2014-2016: early innings, founder-retention dominant, and rapidly attracting institutional capital. The executive talent pool is approximately two years behind deal pace. Every platform is competing for the same thin pool of operators who combine trades-specific knowledge with institutional-quality leadership.
Where the search breaks down
  • Replacing a retained founder-CEO with a generic home-services operator who lacks garage-door credibility - the dual workforce of installers versus service techs, the Big Four dealer-tier preservation requirements, and the torsion-spring safety protocols are not transferable from HVAC or plumbing, and attrition starts within weeks
  • Hiring a CFO who does not understand deferred revenue from prepaid installs, warranty reserve accruals across 1-5 year spring/opener/labor warranties, or seasonal EBITDA normalization - garage door service has a double-peak seasonality (winter spring failures, post-winter tune-ups) that HVAC CFOs misread as poor Q1 execution
  • Treating the Director of Fleet Operations as a standard home-services hire - garage door trucks carry $10-$30K of inventory per vehicle (springs at multiple cycle ratings, cables, drums, rollers, hinges, bottom brackets, multi-OEM opener SKUs), and route density is constrained by two-person install crews with oversized vehicles
  • Undervaluing the VP of Dealer Relations - the Big Four manufacturers (Clopay, Overhead Door, C.H.I., Amarr) collectively control 70-80 percent of U.S. garage door manufacturing, and Premier-dealer / Double Diamond / Master Authorized status is worth 0.25-0.5x EBITDA in valuation premium, delivers preferred pricing, co-op marketing dollars, and lead routing that cannot be replicated through volume rebates alone
What we bring to it
  • We know the difference between an operator who has genuinely built a service-agreement flywheel and one who runs an install-heavy business at low margin - the buyer-preferred revenue mix is 35-40 percent installation, 35-45 percent service-repair, and 15-25 percent recurring service agreements, and operators skewing above 60 percent installation take a 0.25-0.5x EBITDA-multiple discount
  • We have mapped the HVAC CFOs in the market who understand ServiceTitan consolidation, dual-workforce comp structures, and fleet CapEx modeling - this is the single largest crossover talent pool into garage door platform CFO roles, and we know which ones have already made the jump successfully
  • We understand where residential and commercial garage door leadership overlaps and where it does not - commercial door platforms (dock doors, rolling steel, fire-rated sectionals) run fundamentally different sales motions, service-call economics, and technician certification requirements than residential service, and we do not present a residential VP of Operations for a commercial platform search or vice versa
  • The retained-founder-to-professional-operator transition is the hardest leadership move in garage doors. We know which former owners have made it successfully, which ones Guild and A1 have equity-partnered to extend runway, and which ones will revert the moment integration pressure builds.

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Roles We Place
Every seat on this list is hard to fill. The garage door executive pool runs deep in technicians. Thin in operators who have scaled inside PE.
CEO / Platform President
Must navigate an acquisition pace of 15-25 add-ons per year while retaining the founder-operators and field technicians that made each acquisition worth buying. Balances the install vs repair revenue mix, builder channel vs aftermarket strategy, and the decision between geographic density, commercial expansion, and multi-trade diversification. The rarest profile: technically credible and institutionally fluent at the same time.
Chief Financial Officer
Owns parts inventory accounting, install vs repair gross margin tracking, and acquisition evaluation where the value is in route density and recurring repair pull-through - not just trailing EBITDA. Must model storm impact on replacement cycles, manage working capital through builder payment terms, and navigate OEM rebate structures. Not a general-industry brief.
VP of Operations
Accountable for revenue per truck per day, install completion times, parts turnover, and technician utilization across multiple branches. In a PE-backed platform this role drives integration of acquired companies - migrating onto ServiceTitan, harmonizing pricing books, building SOPs that allow a $3M acquired company to operate inside a $200M platform without losing the local relationships that made it worth acquiring.
General Manager
Branch or regional P&L owner. $10M-$50M revenue. Manages dispatch, residential vs commercial mix, technician productivity, and the install/repair split. The seat requires fluency in both worlds - an installer-focused GM who has never run service operations will struggle with the recurring repair flywheel that drives margin.
VP of Builder Channel Sales
A role specific to garage doors and roofing. Manages relationships with national homebuilders (Lennar, D.R. Horton, KB Home) and regional builders for new construction install volume. Different sales motion entirely - longer cycles, contract pricing, multi-year master agreements. The talent pool is small and most candidates come from window/door manufacturers or building products distribution.
VP of Service & Repair
Builds and scales the recurring repair business that drives margin. Sets technician training programs for spring repair, opener replacement, and weather-seal work. Manages the conversion from one-time install customer to lifetime service relationship. Drives same-day service capability that competitors cannot match.
Director of Workforce Development
Less than 1 percent of garage door technicians hold IDEA accreditation. The skilled labor shortage is acute. This leader builds the apprenticeship pipeline, manages safety training, develops the career pathway from helper to lead installer to service technician. Designs the retention mechanism that reduces the 30 percent annual turnover typical in install-heavy operations.
VP of Commercial Doors
Leads commercial door sales for platforms expanding beyond residential. Commercial doors require different product knowledge (high-speed doors, rolling steel, fire doors), different sales cycles (facility manager relationships, GC bidding), and different service infrastructure (24/7 emergency response for distribution centers). Largely untapped consolidation opportunity.
Other Verticals
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Talk.
You have a garage door platform. Oak Hill bought Guild. Nucor bought C.H.I. The consolidation window is now, and the talent pool is thin.