Why Homeowners Are Focusing on the Garage Door

These unexpected exterior renovations have a surprisingly high return on investment—and can drastically increase the resale value of your home.

The garage is arguably one of the most overlooked spaces of the home, but in recent years, there’s been a change. Once catchalls for storage of all kinds (as well as being used for their intended purpose), the garage is experiencing a renaissance, and this sea change isn’t just limited to making them more functional.

According to a recent New York Times article, the garage has become the home’s newest "third space"—part mini living room, part workspace—but altogether a flexible extension of a house. Hence, more homeowners are asking designers and architects to pay more attention to their garages—and not just the inside, but the outside, too. 

Light stained wood works well on a more farmhouse or traditional style home, as seen in this project in Newport Beach, California.

Light stained wood works well on a more farmhouse or traditional-style home, as seen in this project in Newport Beach, California. 

Photo by David Tosti

Garage Living, a company focused on renovating garage interiors, completes several thousand full scope garage projects across North America and Australia each year. "And that number continues to rise as homeowners rethink what this space can be," says Aaron Cash, president of Garage Living. What used to be a general storage zone is now evolving into workshops, fitness areas, hobby rooms, bonus living rooms, and more, as homeowners seek to customize their garage interiors.

However, it’s hard to quantify just how much custom interior garage renovations actually increase the overall value of a home. The true merit of customization lies in the eye of a homeowner. For some, a private gym in the garage is worth its weight in dumbbells; for others, it’s one decked out in solar panels. Garage door replacements, on the other hand, are known to deliver significant value boosts with an impressive 194 percent ROI, according to the Journal of Light Construction’s 2024 Cost vs. Value Report. In 2025, Zillow ranked garage door renos as the best ROI home improvement project. A new garage door can cost on average $4,317, but the resale value can be worth upward of $15,081—a whole 349.3 percent return on investment. 

This Corona del Mar project, dubbed Serena Terrace by Brandon Architects, uses Azek TImberTech to make a garage door that's contemporary, durable, and modern.

This Corona del Mar project, dubbed Serena Terrace by Brandon Architects, featured Azek TimberTech for the garage door. 

Photo by Ryan Garvin

It’s this surprisingly high profitability that’s driving more homeowners to revamp their garage doors, integrating them into architectural design. "Of course, homeowners want to improve their property and make it fit their taste and offer curb appeal," says Ryan McDaniel, partner and director of design at Brandon Architects. "But also, in a competitive housing market, I’ve seen new, stylish garage doors make homes sell easier."

Over the last few years, the company has designed wood and faux wood garage doors in a wide range of styles, from ultramodern garage doors to those that fit a more transitional style. "For traditional looks, we try to draw from carriage doors—which were attached to old coach houses, the original standalone garage designed to store horse-drawn carriages—in terms of hinges, hardware, and decorative pulls we use," McDaniel says. With modern garage designs, the company might try to conceal the doors entirely. "Ultimately, it’s the style of the home that dictates what we do with the garage doors," he says.

Sure, purchasing simple aluminum garage doors online is the easy way out. But according to McDaniel, his clients don’t want a garage door that could fit just any home. "Clients realize that wood and faux wood garage doors are another way to make a design statement, especially for a higher end home." 

Is real wood or faux the way to go?

A lot of the wood garages McDaniel has helped design use real wood, usually hemlock or red cedar. A significant benefit to both is that they can be stained to suit personal preference and can even be made to match the rest of a house. Red cedar especially looks great in darker hues, McDaniel points out, and it’s known for its natural decay and insect resistance.

Other woods typically used include Douglas fir, an adaptable wood that is easy to paint, stain, and maintain; redwood, known for its durability and appearance; and pine, a more economical choice due to its price point but requires regular maintenance to prevent rotting and warping over time.

However, all these options require re-staining and upkeep, and, like all real wood, they naturally patina and weather. "The number one reason people choose fake wood is to avoid all this maintenance," McDaniel says. "With real wood, someone would have to come by and touch up the doors, re-staining the wood to maintain the look and keep the colors consistent. Which is why we’ve seen a rise in composite materials that can achieve the natural look of wood without the maintenance."

A recent example is the company’s Sabrina Terrace project, which is a modern design that implemented AZEK TimberTech as a primary wall material. "With the help of our build team, we mitered the product to create a vertical batten detail throughout the home which was also used in the garage to reduce the visual impact of the garage doors," he says. This added a rich texture to the home’s exterior while addressing the client’s concerns for maintenance.

TimberTech’s intended use is for residential decks, says Patrick Barnds, senior vice president and general manager of TimberTech Deck and Accessories. Still, one of the most enjoyable things about Barnds’s role, he says, is watching creative designers, architects, and talented fabricators use the products in ways that they never imagined.

"I have seen some amazing benches, planters, privacy walls, fences, and other architectural elements fabricated from our materials," he says. Initially, TimberTech’s product was never marketed as anything other than decking. But Barnds noticed that homeowners and the like were using it in different and exciting ways. "After a few years, we ultimately did the work to test our products for cladding applications. We then developed proper installation guidelines, fasteners, and fastener schedules and now warranty the product in this application," he says.

The benefit of synthetic materials is durability. But longevity often comes with aesthetic sacrifices. "The drawback is that the materials won’t have that natural grain to them, and the closer you stand next to them, the more the material shows itself," McDaniel says. With the aforementioned Sabrina Terrace project, the architects played with the material’s shadow lines and created depth out of the material as opposed to allowing the wood to speak for itself through its graining. Yet, despite whatever they may lack in beauty, these composite or synthetic materials can still achieve a more natural wood look without the upkeep challenges of wood: staining, sanding, rot, or decay.

Faux wood also isn’t as heavy. Wood doors weigh more than aluminum ones, so homeowners need to upgrade their garage door motor. "All the extra weight may mean the motor could be serviced every two years or so," says McDaniel, instead of the usual five to six years that comes with the average garage door motor.

The future of garage renovations 

Modern, sleek wood garage doors are an enduring trend. "On the exterior, garage doors are becoming an architectural statement," Cash says. "We’re seeing interest in minimalist door styles, upgraded materials, and smart technology that pairs with the overall design [of the home]." Inside a garage, homeowners are gravitating toward cleaner lines, integrated lighting, and cabinetry that feels more in line with the house’s interior design. "We expect to see strong demand for flexible storage systems that adapt to changing needs," Cash says.

Still, the garage door is the largest visual element facing the street, so homeowners are going to continue investing in doors that elevate their home’s overall curb appeal. For many, houses are also their greatest financial investment, and so, boosting a house’s perceived monetary worth will always take precedence. This is especially true looking ahead to 2026, as housing market analysts have already predicted a 50 percent price drop in the real estate market as it shifts into a more "buyer-friendly" one. 

And the future of garage aesthetics might soon change even further. As homeowners attempt to keep up with the proverbial Joneses, embracing the use of smarter technology—greater security systems, new EV charging stations, energy-efficient insulation systems, and solar panels becoming standard practice in the garage—they’re further enabling a once neglected area of the home to become not only functional but valuable, too. 

Top photo by Chad Mellon

Related Reading:

15 Modern Garage Doors That Demand a Second Look

How to Upgrade the Curb Appeal of Your Home for Less Than $500

The Staircase in This Small Spanish Apartment Hides a Secret Toilet

The stair is a hack for the renovation, connecting two uneven levels and carving out a bathroom and storage areas.

Houses We Love: Every day we feature a remarkable space submitted by our community of architects, designers, builders, and homeowners. Have one to share? Post it here.

Project Details:

Location: Madrid, Spain

Architect: Burr / @burr.studio

Footprint: 720 square feet

Permits and Legal Architecture: García de los Muros

Photography: Maru Serrano

From the Architect: "The layout of this former furrier’s shop posed the main constraint for accommodating the new program: a dwelling for two people. The floor plan is split into two bands of roughly equal width: one at street level, with a generous ceiling height; the other raised above it, forming a mezzanine that allows cars to pass beneath in route to a garage in the basement of the building. These narrow, unevenly tall strips create an L-shaped section, making a staircase necessary to connect the two levels. This stair becomes a central feature of the project, combining its connective role with a storage function made possible by the void beneath its treads. These concealed spaces house appliances, food, cleaning supplies, and a compact bathroom, similar in scale to those found on trains or planes. Everything is hidden behind a series of stepped doors that follow the profile of the stair, making the compartments almost invisible.

"The split level also helps to organize the program along a gradient of public to private uses. The circulation forms a U-shape, beginning at the entrance from the street and looping back toward the main facade at the upper level, after passing through the entirety of the home.

"Both levels open onto internal courtyards. The lower and more public space connects to a communal patio, while the upper (more private) area opens onto a terrace directly linked to the dwelling. Openings on both facades enable cross ventilation, which is enhanced by the absence of partition walls—except in the case of the bathroom.

"As the unit sits beneath a large residential block, part of its ceiling was traversed by shared building services running at different heights. To acoustically and visually isolate these, a half-barrel vault was introduced in the public-facing portion of the home, lending an ironic sense of monumentality to this modest corner of Madrid’s southern district."

Photo by Maru Serrano

Photo by Maru Serrano

Photo by Maru Serrano

See the full story on Dwell.com: The Staircase in This Small Spanish Apartment Hides a Secret Toilet
Related stories:

This $3M Kendrick Bangs Kellogg Home Comes With an Entire Grove of Avocado Trees

Listed for the first time, the Southern California property has organic curves, 360-degree views, and a lifetime supply of alligator pears.

Location: 10650 Old Castle Road, Valley Center, California

Price: $2,995,000

Year Built: 1991

Architect: Kendrick Bangs Kellogg

Footprint: 4,133 square feet (5 bedrooms, 4 baths)

Lot Size: 40 Acres

From the Agent: "This masterwork by San Diego architect Kendrick Bangs Kellogg resides high atop its 40-acre Valley Center parcel, offering 360-degree views through expansive walls of glass. The handcrafted organic architecture and landscape meld together in an array of intimate spaces scaled for everyday living. Inspired to return to their agrarian roots, in 1972 the family purchased a 40-acre plot and planted avocado trees. Designed by the architect in 1984, the home of glass and wood with rock walls sourced from the surrounding property took six years to build. Nestled amongst the avocado grove, the home’s high perch lends itself to breathtaking views of the area through the floor-to-ceiling windows. With five bedrooms and three bathrooms, this home captures some of Kellogg’s most inspired work, blurring the line between nature and home, architecture and sculpture."

The home is currently on the market for the first time in its history.

The home is currently on the market for the first time in its history.

Photo by Ollie Patterson

Photo by Ollie Patterson

The residence is set in Valley Center, 40 miles north of downtown San Diego.

The residence is set in Valley Center, 40 miles north of downtown San Diego.

Photo by Ollie Patterson

See the full story on Dwell.com: This $3M Kendrick Bangs Kellogg Home Comes With an Entire Grove of Avocado Trees
Related stories:

Modernist Masters Inspired This Australian Home—Which a Father and Son Built by Hand

They referenced postwar designers like Richard Neutra, Robin Boyd, and Craig Ellwood, emphasizing an "honest expression of structure and materiality, clarity, and connection to nature."

Houses We Love: Every day we feature a remarkable space submitted by our community of architects, designers, builders, and homeowners. Have one to share? Post it here.

Project Details:

Location: Lorne, Australia

Designer: Keep Studio / @keep___studio

Footprint: 1,700 square feet

Structural Engineer: Grain Structural

Photographer: Alexander William

From the Designer: "Designed for Keep Studio’s codirector, Will, this home presented a rare opportunity: to be designed by Keep Studio, and be built entirely by hand with his father, Tim. This personal process shaped a home that is both cost-conscious and full of character.

"The brief called for a long-term home tailored to a couple who love to cook, entertain, and work from home. The design responds with warm, flexible spaces, dedicated work zones, and strong connections to the outdoors. Influenced by postwar modernists like Robin Boyd, Craig Ellwood, and Richard Neutra, the home prioritizes honest expression of structure and materiality, clarity, and connection to nature. Elevated on steel posts, the structure avoided a costly excavation and ensures the home touches the earth lightly. Exposed beams, columns, and cross-bracing met with glazing give a clear structural logic and lightness to the project.

"The project deviates from the rectilinear postwar language with the introduction of a series of functional curves, which in the living spaces strategically smooth junction, conceal storage and other messy items. In the kitchen curves soften what would otherwise have been sharp harsh edges, giving the house an overall organic vibe.

"Materials throughout the project were selected with a strong focus on resource efficiency. The cladding was designed to align with standard cement sheet dimensions, eliminating waste from off-cuts. This logic extended across the build, with spaces planned around standard material modules to reduce excess."

Photo by Alexander William

Photo by Alexander William

Photo by Alexander William

See the full story on Dwell.com: Modernist Masters Inspired This Australian Home—Which a Father and Son Built by Hand

Your Challenge for Pantone’s 2026 Color of the Year, Should You Choose to Accept It

Cloud Dancer might miss the mark, but makes space for the kind of creativity the next 25 years could really use.

Since 1999, every year in December, Pantone has elevated a color meant as more than just a swatch for your design library. The institute’s pick aspires to be a resolution for the new year, but its messaging is sometimes splotchy. Last year, Mocha Mousse, a quite-luxury-coded brown, was "underpinned by our desires for everyday pleasures," read the press release, and asked us to lean into the aspirational and luxe. But this bid for indulgence felt askew with what followed in the official materials, that brown also comes from nature, a not very not luxe place. In 2024, the pinky-orange Peach Fuzz emphasized a desire for a year full of sharing, community, and togetherness before mentioning we might also consider using it to "find peace from within."

The messaging around Pantone’s 2026 pick, Cloud Dancer, is similarly pulling us in different directions. The stark white shade promises to turn a space into a "refuge of visual cleanliness that inspires well-being and lightness," says the marketing materials. But Laurie Pressman, the institute’s vice president, also equates it to a "blank canvas," which can be a formidable prospect, as any creative who’s suffered the weight of making their first mark on a metaphorical page knows.

This year, the institute’s face-value messaging isn’t the issue so much as the choice in color, with a salvo of criticism coming largely from outside the house of home design. Some of it is gentle ribbing—my hair stylist wanted to know, were we really going to bring back frosted tips?—while others on the internet are throwing elbows, decrying the elevation of whiteness as an alignment with the perceived eugenics messaging of Sydney Sweeney’s maligned American Eagle ad. Others are going so far as to say it undergirds white supremacy. (Donald Trump, for one, could use truckloads of Cloud Dancer, having recently mentioned he wanted to freshen up the Eisenhower building in Washington, D.C., by washing the granite building completely white.)

"Pantonedeaf" is at least one phrase being thrown around to describe the pick. Dwell’s audience editor, Nicole Nimri, called it a recession indicator—up in the clouds, the markets can only go one way. Senior guides editor Megan Reynolds said Cloud Dancer sounds like a really bad weed strain—nobody should be that high. The Instagram account for the tabloid Weekly World News called the hue the "The Landlord Special," poking at the nation’s painfully high housing costs and puncturing any airs of sophistication Pantone may have hoped to put on. To me, the name alone is jazz hands, the stuff of cloying theater kids. It’s difficult not to read it as Cloud Daaaaaancer, in the voice of Brandon Flowers, a white Mormon man whose cultural relevance peaked in 2007, which only puts the choice further out of touch with the moment. (And that’s coming from a forever fan of the Killers.)

Pantone chose Cloud Dancer, a stark white, as its 2026 Color of the Year.

Pantone chose Cloud Dancer, a stark white, as its 2026 Color of the Year.

Courtesy of Pantone

Brands and designers are faring no better at what to do with it. At Dwell, an avalanche of pitches is burying our inboxes with icy-white bouclé throw pillows, snoozy subway tile, and even a Cloud Dancer edition of Play-Doh, which should be banished along with 2022’s "sad beige" trend as one of the more soulless and uninspiring things I can imagine my toddler playing with. Some are offering advice on how to incorporate white into our homes—about as useful as a tutorial on drinking water. The whiteout it all amounts to recalls Kim and the artist formerly known as Kanye’s Axel Vervoordt–designed Hidden Hills, California, manse: heaven for some, a psychiatric ward for the rest of us.

When I asked Sami Reiss, who covers covetable furniture for Dwell and with his newsletter, Snake, for a good example of white furniture (I had to ask, as there was none in my inbox, and especially not from Joybird, the millennial-coded home decor brand owned by La-Z-Boy that announced three milquetoast pieces in the official Cloud Dancer colorway), he said "it all comes back to the Royère Polar Bear, no?" This, of course, is Jean Royère’s 1947 sofa, a plush, swooping settee that might be as close as one can get to luxuriating in the ether. "These things are cloud-shaped, puffy, soft," he continued, adding that, actually, the return of Royère’s wispy white furniture can be traced back to Kim K. "I think about [her] having one a decade ago or so, and how it brought everything in that style to the forefront." Ye once actually tweeted it was his favorite piece of furniture, at a time when anyone still cared about what he had to say.

Joybird, a home decor brand owned by La-Z-Boy, released a three-piece furniture set in Cloud Dancer, including this sofa and ottoman.

Joybird, a home decor brand owned by La-Z-Boy, released a three-piece furniture set in Cloud Dancer, including this Carin sectional.

Courtesy Joybird

The Polar Bear sofa by Jean Royère in 1947 did Cloud Dancer before Cloud Dancer did.

The Polar Bear sofa by Jean Royère in 1947 did Cloud Dancer before Cloud Dancer did.

Courtesy of Royère

See the full story on Dwell.com: Your Challenge for Pantone’s 2026 Color of the Year, Should You Choose to Accept It
Related stories:

Mamdani Is Leaving His Small Brooklyn Apartment—and Everything Else You Need to Know About This Week

Trump finds a new architect for the White House ballroom, Shigeru Ban wins the AIA Gold Medal, and more.

  • Zohran Mamdani is trading his small, rent-stabilized Astoria apartment for the 11,000-square-foot Gracie Mansion, a move he says is about safety and keeping all his focus on his affordability agenda. (The New York Times)
  • San Francisco is rolling out the Homecoming Project, a "spare-room" housing program started in Alameda in 2018 that pays residents $50 a day to host people recently released from prison for six-month stays. Here’s how it works. (KQED)

  • Trump has swapped out his handpicked boutique architect for a veteran D.C. firm after the $300 million White House ballroom supposedly proved too big a project for a small team to handle. The switch follows reports last week that Trump and his architect were sparring over the size of the addition. (The Washington Post)

  • A Dallas couple is doubling down on their viral holiday decorations, trading last year’s over-the-top light show for a full-blown "Grinch grotto" packed with inflatable grinches aimed at their haters. The spectacle is drawing plenty of attention, good and bad, from neighbors, gawkers, and city officials. (Chron)

Shigeru Ban is honored for his belief that architecture and humanitarian action are intertwined.

Shigeru Ban has been honored by the AIA for his belief that architecture and humanitarian action are intertwined.

Photo by Samuel de Roman/Getty Images

  • Shigeru Ban has won the 2026 AIA Gold Medal in recognition of his work with simple materials used in service of people. Here’s how his disaster relief architecture has reshaped the field’s understanding of sustainability, and the moral obligations of design. (Architect Magazine)

Top photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Once a Mattress Factory, Now a Minimalist Home Seeking $900K

The current owner reimagined the former Melbourne warehouse with a toned-down palette and metal accents that nod to the building’s industrial past.

The current owner reimagined the former Melbourne warehouse with a toned-down palette and metal accents that nod to the building’s industrial past.

Location: 8 Brown Street, Collingwood, Victoria, Australia

Auction Price: $1,350,000 - $1,450,000 AUS (approximately $900,000 - $967,000 USD)

Renovation Date: 1995

Renovation Designer: Magenta Burgin

Footprint: 2153 square feet (2 bedrooms, 2 baths)

From the Agent: "In the heart of Collingwood, an industrial warehouse has been transformed into an elegant, light-filled home. For owner Magenta Burgin, the building’s raw, industrial character offered exactly the kind of creative foundation she was looking for. The building at 8 Brown Street sits within Collingwood’s industrial heartland, which was once lined with small factories and textile workshops that anchored the area’s bustling rag trade. The home retains the honest bones of its past, while embracing the refinement that defines the suburb’s new design identity. Working for design-led developer Neometro, Magenta understood the value of good bones and letting materials speak for themselves. As a result, her approach to interiors was instinctive rather than decorative. She stripped the palette back, allowing the building’s structure to set the tone."

The minimalist residence was converted from a mattress factory about 30 years ago.

The minimalist residence was converted from a mattress factory about 30 years ago. 

Photo by Pier Carthew

A former mattress factory, the home and surrounding are has undergone massive revitalization in recent years.

The neighborhood was formerly full of small factories and textile workshops, although it has undergone a major revitalization in recent years.

Photo by Pier Carthew

Photo by Pier Carthew

See the full story on Dwell.com: Once a Mattress Factory, Now a Minimalist Home Seeking $900K
Related stories: