Common symptoms
- One failed part on an otherwise sound product
- Repeated breakdowns
- Discontinued cords, motors, or fabric
- Sun-faded or brittle materials
- A room no longer meets privacy or blackout needs
Safe checks before ordering parts
- Compare repair cost with the remaining useful life.
- Check warranty and original dealer support.
- Consider current child-safety and control options.
- Evaluate whether a replacement solves additional room problems.
Repair or replacement considerations
Ask for separate repair and replacement options where practical. A transparent comparison should include parts, labor, warranty, expected life, and whether future parts are likely to remain available.
Common questions
Is repairing always cheaper?
Not if diagnosis, discontinued parts, repeated service, and limited remaining life are considered.
Should motorized shades be repaired?
Often, especially when fabric and hardware are valuable, but compatibility and support matter.
What if only one product in a room fails?
A repair may preserve matching; replacement may require considering the entire room.
