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Stained solid wood entry door on a home — Wood Entry Doors in New Plymouth, Payette County, Idaho

Payette County, Idaho

Wood Entry Doors in New Plymouth, ID

New Plymouth, quiet Payette County town on the valley's western edge

A solid wood entry door is still the benchmark for high-end curb appeal. Nothing quite matches the depth, weight, and warmth of real stain-grade wood — the way a mahogany or knotty alder slab reads up close, the heft when it swings, the ability to refinish it to a different stain years later. For a craftsman bungalow, a custom build, or any home where the entry is meant to be the showpiece, wood is the material that delivers.

We install solid and stain-grade wood doors in custom sizes and styles, with sidelights and transoms to match. Because wood is workable, it offers the widest range of true custom shapes, panel layouts, and glass treatments — if you have a specific architectural look in mind, wood is usually the way to achieve it exactly.

Honesty matters most on this product: wood is the highest-maintenance entry door, and our Idaho climate is demanding on it. All-day summer sun breaks down finish, and the freeze-thaw and dry-to-wet swings make wood move, so a wood door must be properly sealed on all six edges and kept on a refinishing schedule, ideally with some overhang protection. We give you straight guidance on sealing and upkeep so the investment lasts.

If you love the look of real wood and are willing to maintain it — or want it under a covered, shaded entry where it's protected — we'll hang and seal it so it performs as well as it looks. If you want the wood look without the upkeep, we'll point you to wood-grain fiberglass instead.

What's included

  • Solid & stain-grade wood
  • Custom sizes & styles
  • Sidelights & transoms
  • Proper sealing & finishing guidance
  • Weather-tight installation

In New Plymouth, we handle wood entry doors across downtown New Plymouth, the Horseshoe Bend Road area, rural Payette County farmland, and the rest of Payette County — matched to the age, style, and exposure of each home.

Our process

How wood entry doors works in New Plymouth

  1. 01

    Measure & design

    We measure the opening, check the frame and threshold, and confirm the wood species, style, glass, and sidelight layout before quoting.

  2. 02

    Species & style selection

    We lay out species, stain, panel, and glass options and discuss the realistic maintenance for each so you choose with eyes open.

  3. 03

    Removal & opening prep

    The old door and frame come out and we repair any rot or out-of-square framing so the wood unit sits true on sound framing.

  4. 04

    Seal all edges & set

    We make sure the door is sealed on all edges — including top and bottom — then set it plumb and square, shimmed, and flashed at the sill and jambs.

  5. 05

    Hardware & weather seal

    Lockset, deadbolt, hinges, threshold, and weatherstrip go in and get adjusted for a solid latch and a tight perimeter seal.

  6. 06

    Finish guidance & walkthrough

    We finish the trim, give you a clear sealing-and-refinishing plan for our climate, clean up, and walk the result with you.

Every New Plymouth job includes pulling any permit Payette County requires and a full clean-up — we leave your home tight, weather-sealed, and looking sharp.

Working in New Plymouth

New Plymouth, quiet Payette County town on the valley's western edge

New Plymouth is a small Payette County community in farm and orchard country between Fruitland and Emmett, at the western edge of the Treasure Valley, with its distinctive horseshoe-shaped main thoroughfare. Its modest older homes and rural character are typical of the area's agricultural communities, with housing that spans early ranch-style builds to mid-century bungalows.

New Plymouth's older housing stock and rural setting mean siding and windows on many homes haven't been replaced since original construction. The region's mix of summer heat, cold winters, and agricultural irrigation humidity makes durable, well-sealed exteriors especially important, and open ag exposure adds wind and dust to the wear on aging siding.

Areas we serve

  • downtown New Plymouth
  • the Horseshoe Bend Road area
  • rural Payette County farmland
  • the orchard corridor

Around New Plymouth

  • the Payette River corridor
  • the New Plymouth horseshoe
  • the orchard country
  • the Highway 30 corridor

Wood Entry Doors in New Plymouth — FAQs

Do you offer wood entry doors throughout New Plymouth?

Yes — we cover all of New Plymouth and Payette County, from downtown New Plymouth and the Horseshoe Bend Road area to rural Payette County farmland and the orchard corridor. Reach out for a free on-site estimate.

Do you work outside New Plymouth, too?

We do — along with New Plymouth, we regularly handle wood entry doors in nearby Fruitland, Payette, Emmett, Parma and across the wider Treasure Valley. If you're near the Payette River corridor, you're well inside our service area.

Will you clean up after wood entry doors in New Plymouth?

Always. Every New Plymouth job ends with a full clean-up — we haul away the old materials and packaging and leave your Payette County home tidy and protected.

Is a wood door practical in Idaho's climate?

It can be, with the right protection. Wood needs all-edge sealing, ideally an overhang or covered entry, and a refinishing schedule because our UV and freeze-thaw are hard on it. Under a shaded, covered entry and maintained, a wood door lasts beautifully; fully exposed and neglected, it won't. We'll tell you honestly which your entry is.

How much maintenance does a wood door need?

More than fiberglass or steel. Expect to refinish or re-seal on a regular cycle — sooner on a sun-exposed elevation — to keep UV and moisture from breaking down the finish. If that upkeep isn't appealing, wood-grain fiberglass gives a similar look with far less maintenance.

Can you build a custom size or style?

Yes — wood offers the widest custom range of any door material, including custom sizes, panel layouts, glass, sidelights, and transoms. If you have a specific architectural look in mind, wood is usually how we achieve it exactly.

Wood Entry Doors in nearby cities

We work across the Treasure Valley near New Plymouth.

Related siding options in New Plymouth

Exterior projects often pair up — here's what goes well with wood entry doors.

All services in New Plymouth

Need wood entry doors in New Plymouth?

Tell us about your New Plymouth home and the project you have in mind — we'll come look and give you a straight, free estimate.

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