Pool Screen Repair in Orlando, FL
Orlando Pool Screen Repair fixes the enclosures that make Florida pools usable — torn and sagging panels, full cage rescreens, lanai and patio screens, and the doors that drag and refuse to latch — across Orlando, Winter Park, Oviedo, Lake Mary, Sanford, Winter Springs, and Altamonte Springs. One torn panel or a whole tired cage: call or send the quote form and it gets sized honestly.
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One torn panel is a panel job. When failures cluster across a cage, the math flips toward rescreening — and you see that math, not a sales pitch.
Standard mesh, fine no-see-um weave, heavier pet-resistant screen, privacy panels — the replacement matches what the panel has to survive, not just what is on the truck.
Screens fail at panels; cages fail at fasteners, spline, cables, and doors. A repair request can cover the torn mesh and the nearby parts that affect how long the fix lasts.
What Pool Screen Problems Can Be Repaired
Four jobs cover most calls. A torn or blown-out panel — branch through the roof section, dog through the wall, or just sun-rotted mesh letting go — handled on the panel replacement page. A whole cage gone gray and brittle, tearing at a touch — that is rescreening territory. Screened lanais and porches with their own panel and frame problems — lanai repair. And the most-used moving part on the property: the screen door that drags, slams, or stopped latching, which rides along with every job above.
Why Orlando Pool Screens Wear Out
Screen mesh is the sacrificial part of the enclosure by design. UV cooks the fibers a little every day, which is why a cage’s panels all start failing in the same era — they share a birthday and a sun exposure. Afternoon storms work the panels like a drum; oak debris abrades roof sections; pets and chair backs take the lower walls. None of this is poor quality — it is the service life arriving, and the repair-or-rescreen question is just asking where in that life your cage is.
Repair vs Rescreening: When One Panel May Be Enough
One torn or blown-out panel can often be handled as a panel replacement, especially when the surrounding mesh still feels firm and the aluminum frame is straight. After storms, a blown-out panel can even mean the screen did its job by releasing pressure before the cage frame took the load. The storm damage FAQ explains what is urgent, what can wait, and when several failed panels start pointing toward a larger rescreen.
What Affects Pool Screen Repair Cost
Cost and scope depend on how many panels are damaged, whether the torn areas are roof panels or wall panels, the mesh type, door hardware issues, access around the cage, and whether spline, screws, anchors, or cables need attention while the screen work is being done. A single panel is different from a brittle whole cage, and the quote should make that difference clear before work is approved.
Screen repair is separate from routine pool service or broader pool service maintenance. If the issue is torn mesh, sagging panels, a dragging screen door, or a tired cage, the screen-repair request can stay focused on that enclosure problem.




What Happens After You Call or Request a Quote
Both small panel repairs and full-cage rescreens are normal calls. Share your city and what you are seeing in plain language — "one torn roof panel," "the door will not latch," or "the cage looks rough" is enough to start. The follow-up can sort out panel count, mesh type, access, and whether repair or rescreening makes more sense.
Pool Screen Repair FAQs
Can you replace just one torn panel?
Yes — single-panel replacement is a normal, welcome job. The visit also checks the neighbors, because panels share age and sun exposure, but one panel is quoted as one panel.
How do I know if I need a rescreen instead of repairs?
When failures cluster — multiple panels going brittle in the same season, mesh that tears at a press — per-panel repair becomes the expensive path. The visit shows both numbers so the math makes the call.
What screen types are available?
Standard 18/14 fiberglass mesh covers most cages; finer 20/20 weave keeps out no-see-ums; heavier polyester screens resist pets and debris; and vinyl-laminated privacy panels suit lower wall sections. The right answer depends on what the panel has to survive.
A storm blew out several panels. Is my cage ruined?
Usually the opposite — panels are designed to give way so the frame survives. Blown panels with a straight frame is the good outcome; the storm damage FAQ covers what to check before anyone climbs.
Do you fix screen doors too?
Constantly — dragging, misaligned, and non-latching doors are the most common rider on every job, and often the repair that changes daily life most.
