
Ada County, Idaho
Storm Doors in Meridian, ID
Idaho's fastest-growing city, from Ten Mile to the Linder corridor
A storm door is the extra layer in front of your entry door, and it does more than people expect. It adds a buffer of dead air that improves the entry's energy performance, it shields the front door from wind-driven rain and harsh sun so your main door's finish lasts longer, and with interchangeable glass and screen panels it lets you bring in a breeze in spring and seal up tight in winter. For an exposed entry it's a small upgrade that pays off year-round.
We install storm doors in full-view models that show off the entry door behind them and in ventilating models with built-in screens and operable glass for airflow. Many lines let you swap a full glass panel for a screen seasonally, so the same door gives you a clear weather buffer in winter and ventilation in summer — a genuinely useful feature in Idaho's swing from cold to hot.
The protective benefit is real here. A west- or south-facing front door takes a beating from summer UV and the occasional driving storm; a storm door takes that hit instead, extending the life of the finish on an expensive entry door — especially worthwhile in front of a wood or stained-fiberglass door. The dead-air buffer also cuts drafts on a cold morning.
We hang storm doors square so they close and latch cleanly, fit the closer and weatherstrip so they don't slam or rattle in the wind, and set a secure latch — so the door protects the entry without becoming a nuisance.
What's included
- Full-view & ventilating models
- Interchangeable glass & screen
- Protects the entry door
- Added energy buffer
- Secure latching
In Meridian, we handle storm doors across Ten Mile, the Linder corridor, south Meridian, and the rest of Ada County — matched to the age, style, and exposure of each home.
Our process
How storm doors works in Meridian
- 01
Measure & assess
We measure the entry opening and confirm the storm door model, glass-and-screen configuration, and swing before quoting.
- 02
Model selection
We lay out full-view versus ventilating models and interchangeable glass-and-screen options so the door suits how you use the entry.
- 03
Fit & mount
We fit the door to the opening and mount it square so it closes and latches cleanly without binding or gapping.
- 04
Closer & wind detailing
We set the closer and any wind chain so the door doesn't slam or get caught and damaged by Idaho wind gusts.
- 05
Weatherstrip, latch & seal
We fit the weatherstrip and sweep and set a secure latch so the door seals against the buffer it's meant to create.
- 06
Walkthrough
We test the close, latch, and panel swap, clean up, and walk the operation with you.
Every Meridian job includes pulling any permit Ada County requires and a full clean-up — we leave your home tight, weather-sealed, and looking sharp.
Working in Meridian
Idaho's fastest-growing city, from Ten Mile to the Linder corridor
Meridian sits on the flat valley floor between Boise and Nampa and has grown from farm ground into one of Idaho's most populous cities. The overwhelming majority of its housing is 1990s–2010s tract construction in master-planned subdivisions, which means the original builder vinyl siding, contractor-grade windows, and basic entry doors on tens of thousands of homes are all aging on roughly the same timeline.
Meridian's huge stock of late-1990s and 2000s tract homes drives a steady market for full re-sides and whole-house window replacements — the original materials were typically minimum-spec and are now fading, cracking, or leaking air around the frames. On the open valley floor there is little tree cover, so south and west elevations sun-fade noticeably and HOA-area homes often want a refreshed, uniform exterior color.
Areas we serve
- Ten Mile
- the Linder corridor
- south Meridian
- Lochsa Falls
- downtown Meridian
- Paramount
Around Meridian
- The Village at Meridian
- Settlers Park
- the Ten Mile interchange
- Kleiner Park
Storm Doors in Meridian — FAQs
Do you offer storm doors throughout Meridian?
Yes — we cover all of Meridian and Ada County, from Ten Mile and the Linder corridor to south Meridian and Lochsa Falls. Reach out for a free on-site estimate.
Do you work outside Meridian, too?
We do — along with Meridian, we regularly handle storm doors in nearby Boise, Nampa, Eagle, Star, Kuna and across the wider Treasure Valley. If you're near The Village at Meridian, you're well inside our service area.
Will you clean up after storm doors in Meridian?
Always. Every Meridian job ends with a full clean-up — we haul away the old materials and packaging and leave your Ada County home tidy and protected.
Does a storm door actually save energy?
It creates a buffer of trapped air in front of your entry door that reduces drafts and modestly improves the entry's energy performance, and it shields the main door from weather. It's not a substitute for a well-sealed entry door, but as an added layer it helps, especially on an exposed entry.
What's the difference between full-view and ventilating models?
A full-view storm door is mostly glass and shows off the entry door behind it; a ventilating model has built-in screen and operable glass sections for airflow. Many doors let you swap a full glass panel for a screen seasonally, giving you both. We'll match the model to how you use the entry.
Will it protect my front door?
Yes — that's one of its best uses. A storm door takes the summer UV and wind-driven rain that would otherwise hit your entry door, extending the life of the finish. It's particularly worthwhile in front of a wood or stained-fiberglass door on a sunny elevation.
Storm Doors in nearby cities
We work across the Treasure Valley near Meridian.
Related siding options in Meridian
Exterior projects often pair up — here's what goes well with storm doors.
Need storm doors in Meridian?
Tell us about your Meridian home and the project you have in mind — we'll come look and give you a straight, free estimate.