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Minnesota cost guide

Door Replacement cost in Minnesota

Minnesota tracks the U.S. national baseline — strong contractor density offsets cold-climate code costs. Below are 2026 doors cost ranges adjusted for Minnesota, plus a state-specific estimator and FAQ.

Door Replacement cost in Minnesota — 2026 estimate guide
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Minnesota renovation cost vs. the U.S. average

Minnesota tracks the national baseline. Here's what does and doesn't drive cost in Minnesota, and how it compares to neighboring states.

Read the Minnesota cost-driver breakdown

Doors cost in Minnesota vs. the U.S. average (2026)

Mid-range total cost (small / medium / large project sizes), state-adjusted vs. national baseline.

1 door

-15% vs U.S.

Single swap

$304–$851

U.S. avg: $358–$1,001

2–4 doors

-15% vs U.S.

Partial swap

$1,094–$2,917

U.S. avg: $1,287–$3,432

5+ doors

-15% vs U.S.

Whole-house or large project

$2,917–$7,901

U.S. avg: $3,432–$9,295

Cost ranges in Minnesota

Total project ranges (low–high) by size and quality tier. Includes labor, materials, permits, and 10% contingency.

SizeBudgetMid-rangeHigh-end
1 door
Single swap
$234 – $655$304 – $851$515 – $1,440
2–4 doors
Partial swap
$842 – $2,244$1,094 – $2,917$1,851 – $4,937
5+ doors
Whole-house or large project
$2,244 – $6,078$2,917 – $7,901$4,937 – $13,371

Ranges scope: Interior doors. For other scopes (fixtures, layout changes, etc.) use the full doors calculator.

All ranges are built from publicly available contractor data and industry benchmarks, then adjusted for Minnesota using labor and material indices. Updated twice yearly. Always get 3+ written bids before committing.

What drives doors pricing in Minnesota

The three structural factors that make Minnesota track close to the national average for renovation projects in 2026.

Twin Cities-metro labor

Minneapolis-St. Paul trade rates run $50–$70/hr — close to national average. Greater Minnesota outside the Twin Cities drops 10–18% lower.

Cold-climate code requirements

Minnesota's residential code requires R-49 ceiling insulation, high-R wall systems, and certified envelope air-sealing. Adds $1,000–$3,500 of mandatory work.

Strong skilled-trade pool

Minnesota has one of the deepest licensed-trade pools in the Midwest. Competitive bidding and short backlogs keep pricing stable.

Full Minnesota cost-driver breakdown

Minnesota vs. neighboring states (doors cost)

Relative cost-index versus each bordering state. Useful if you're sourcing materials, vetting cross-border contractors, or weighing where to take on the project.

Compare all 11 project types across Minnesota metrosSide-by-side 2026 pricing for kitchen, bathroom, roofing, solar, windows, and 6 more.Open metro hub

Doors cost in Minnesota: 2026 in context

Minnesota is at national parity (within a few percent of the U.S. average) for door-replacement projects in 2026. A typical mid-range door-replacement project for an entry-door replacement (single 36-inch slab + frame) or a single sliding-glass patio-door swap runs about $1,094–$2,917 in Minnesota in 2026, including labor, materials, permits, and a 10% contingency. That single fact reshapes how you should run the bid process — in cheaper states a contractor can underbid by 15% and still make margin, while in expensive states the same 15% spread can hide either a great deal or a contractor cutting corners on prep work.

The bulk of the Minnesota delta comes from door material (fiberglass vs steel vs solid wood), pre-hung vs slab installation, and storm-door upgrades. These three line items move together — when one is high in a market, the others usually are too. That's the structural reason Minnesota door-replacement prices don't simply track the national index by a flat percentage.

Why Minnesota's climate matters for door-replacement costs

Minnesota is a cold-climate state with a 5-7 month heating season, and that climate fact reshapes the door-replacement job in ways most homeowners miss until the bid arrives. Material choices that survive freeze-thaw cycles, scheduling around the build season, and code requirements written for cold-weather building all push costs above what a Sun Belt homeowner pays for the same scope.

Door installers book up in spring after winter air-seal complaints. Fall is the most underbooked door-install season — 5-10% off typical. Minnesota-specific contractor availability shifts the math: in busy seasons (typically when the weather is good), the same crews quote 8-15% higher than they will quote in the slow shoulder months. Building your door-replacement project schedule around your state's slow season, not the calendar year's slow season, is one of the highest-ROI moves a homeowner can make.

Permit and code expectations for door-replacement work in Minnesota

Minnesota sits in the middle of the permit-overhead distribution. Most municipalities charge $250–$600 in permits with 2-4 week review windows, and code amendments are present but not aggressive. The door-replacement permit add-on here is real but predictable — budget it explicitly rather than rolling it into a contingency line.

Practical playbook for Minnesota door-replacement permits: confirm the permit requirement with your specific municipality (cities and counties often diverge from state default), have the contractor pull the permit (so they carry liability for code compliance, not you), and ask for the inspector's punch list in writing after each inspection. If your contractor offers to "skip the permit and split the savings," walk away — the savings disappear the first time you try to sell the home.

How to run the bid process for a door-replacement project in Minnesota

Bid spread — the gap between the highest and lowest bid you collect for the same scope — is the single best signal of whether you're getting a fair door-replacement price in Minnesota. In a parity-cost state like Minnesota, expect a 20-30% bid spread across three bidders working from identical scope. Anything tighter means your bidders are colluding on price (rare) or you wrote your scope too loosely (common); anything wider means at least one bid has a substantially different interpretation of the scope.

Fiberglass entry doors with an insulated core have the best 20-year ROI — they don't warp like wood and don't dent like steel. For Minnesota specifically: verify each bidder's license status on the state contractor-licensing board (most state boards have a free online lookup), require proof of general-liability insurance ($1M minimum) and workers' comp, and ask for two recent door-replacement-job references — calls to actual recent clients catch more red flags than any online review system.

Doors cost FAQs for Minnesota

More cost guides for Minnesota

Doors cost in other states