What Orange County Homeowners Pay for Window and Door Replacement
Window replacement in Orange County costs $400 to $1,500 per window installed, depending on the frame material, glass package, and whether you need a full-frame replacement or a simpler insert (pocket) installation. For a whole-house project on a typical 15 to 20-window home, expect $8,000 to $25,000 total. Entry doors run $2,000 to $6,000 installed, and sliding patio doors cost $2,500 to $7,500.
The insert vs. full-frame question is the biggest cost driver on any window job, and Orange County's housing stock makes it come up constantly. An insert replacement fits the new window inside the existing frame. It is faster, cheaper, and less disruptive, costing $350 to $800 per window. But it only works if the existing frame is in good condition with no rot, no water damage, and a reasonably square opening. A full-frame replacement tears out everything down to the rough opening, installs new framing, flashing, and trim. It costs $650 to $1,500 per window. In Newburgh, where many homes are 80 to 120 years old, full-frame is often the only real option because the original frames have decades of moisture damage. In Monroe's 1990s subdivisions, inserts work just fine.
Orange County winters drive the energy efficiency conversation. January lows regularly drop to single digits, and older single-pane windows in Newburgh and Middletown leak so much air that homeowners sometimes feel a breeze with the windows closed. Central Hudson serves most of the county for electricity and gas, and their rates are high enough that window upgrades can make a measurable difference on heating bills. Replacing 15 single-pane windows with double-pane low-E argon windows typically saves $300 to $800 per year in heating costs, depending on the home's insulation and heating system.
New York State adopted the 2024 IECC energy code, which requires U-factor of 0.27 or lower and SHGC of 0.40 or lower for replacement windows in Climate Zone 5 (which covers all of Orange County). Every window sold through legitimate channels meets or exceeds this standard. If a contractor is offering windows that do not meet these specs, they are either outdated stock or something is wrong.
2026 Window and Door Costs in Orange County
These prices reflect what Orange County window and door contractors are quoting in early 2026. Costs vary based on window size, frame material, glass options, and installation type.
| Job Type | Typical Range | What Affects Price |
|---|---|---|
| Vinyl window (insert/pocket, per window) | $350 – $700 | Window size, double-hung vs casement, grid pattern, hardware |
| Vinyl window (full-frame, per window) | $650 – $1,100 | Frame condition, exterior trim, flashing, interior casing |
| Wood window (per window) | $800 – $1,500 | Species, clad vs unclad exterior, custom sizing, hardware grade |
| Composite/fiberglass window (per window) | $700 – $1,300 | Brand (Marvin, Pella, Andersen), frame profile, glass package |
| Whole-house project (15 to 20 windows, vinyl insert) | $8,000 – $14,000 | Total window count, access (scaffolding for 2nd/3rd floor), trim scope |
| Whole-house project (15 to 20 windows, full-frame) | $14,000 – $25,000 | Frame rot repair, exterior capping, interior trim replacement, lead paint |
| Entry door (fiberglass, installed) | $2,000 – $4,500 | Sidelights, transom, hardware grade, frame replacement vs slab swap |
| Entry door (steel, installed) | $1,500 – $3,000 | Insulation core, glass inserts, deadbolt, weatherstripping |
| Entry door (solid wood, installed) | $3,500 – $6,000 | Species, finish, custom vs stock sizing, sidelights, threshold |
| Sliding patio door (installed) | $2,500 – $5,500 | Panel width, frame material, low-E glass, screen, threshold type |
| French patio door (installed) | $3,500 – $7,500 | Inswing vs outswing, sidelights, multi-point lock, astragal |
| Storm door (installed) | $300 – $700 | Full-view vs ventilating, retractable screen, self-storing glass |
Window Materials: Vinyl, Wood, Composite, and What the Rebates Cover
Vinyl windows make up about 70 to 75% of the replacement window market in Orange County. They cost $350 to $1,100 per window depending on insert vs. full-frame, and the better brands (Andersen 100 Series, Harvey, Marvin Essential) deliver solid performance in the county's cold winters. The main complaints about vinyl are aesthetic: the frames are thicker than wood, and the color options are limited to white, almond, and a few earth tones. For most homeowners, that trade-off is worth the price difference and the zero-maintenance factor.
Wood windows remain the choice for historic homes and homeowners who want the thinnest sightlines and warmest appearance. Marvin Ultimate, Andersen E-Series, and Pella Reserve are the brands you will see quoted. At $800 to $1,500 per window, they cost roughly double vinyl. Exterior cladding (aluminum or fiberglass over the wood) protects the outside from weather while keeping the wood visible inside. In Newburgh's historic districts, wood windows or wood-clad windows may be required for contributing structures. Check with the city's Historic Preservation Commission before ordering.
Composite and fiberglass windows occupy the middle ground. Marvin Elevate, Andersen A-Series, and Pella Impervia use fiberglass or composite frames that are stronger than vinyl, thinner in profile, and nearly maintenance-free. They cost $700 to $1,300 per window. For homeowners who dislike the look of vinyl but do not want the maintenance of wood, composite is a strong option.
On the rebate side, there are two programs worth knowing about. The federal Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit (25C) covers 30% of the cost of qualifying windows and doors, up to $600 per year for windows and $500 for doors. The windows must meet ENERGY STAR Most Efficient criteria or the specific U-factor and SHGC requirements on the tax form. Central Hudson also runs periodic rebates for energy-efficient upgrades through NYSERDA's Home Performance program. The rebate amounts change, so check centralhudson.com/rebates before committing. These programs stack, and on a $15,000 window project, the combined savings can run $2,000 to $4,500.
Window and Door Costs by Town in Orange County
The cost of window replacement varies quite a bit across Orange County, mostly driven by housing age and the type of installation required.
Newburgh has the highest window replacement costs in the county because of its older housing stock. Many homes in the city were built between 1850 and 1930 with custom-sized window openings that do not match standard modern dimensions. That means full-frame replacement is often the only option, and custom-sized windows cost 20 to 40% more than stock sizes. A 15-window full-frame project in Newburgh runs $15,000 to $25,000. Lead paint on window frames and sills adds $100 to $300 per window for proper abatement. Multi-story Victorian homes require scaffolding for upper-floor windows, adding $500 to $1,500 to the project. The upside is that window replacement in Newburgh delivers some of the best energy savings in the county because the homes being upgraded often have original single-pane glass.
Middletown has a more affordable window market. The housing stock is younger than Newburgh's, with most homes dating from the 1950s through 1980s. Window openings are closer to standard sizing, and insert replacements work on a higher percentage of homes. A 15-window project in Middletown runs $8,500 to $16,000. The Route 17/I-84 location makes Middletown accessible to window companies from across the region, including several that operate their own showrooms in the area.
Monroe has the newest housing stock of the five towns and the most predictable window replacement costs. Homes from the 1990s and 2000s have standard-sized openings, vinyl or aluminum frames in decent condition, and easy access. Insert replacements are typical, running $8,000 to $13,000 for a full house. Monroe homeowners are increasingly choosing composite frames when upgrading from builder-grade vinyl, pushing average project costs up slightly. The Thruway access means contractors from Rockland and the lower Hudson Valley also compete for work here.
Warwick window costs run 5 to 10% above the county average. Contractors have to drive further to reach Warwick, which adds to labor costs, and the housing stock is varied enough that each job requires individual assessment. A full-house project in Warwick runs $9,500 to $18,000. Some of the larger rural properties have oversized windows and custom shapes that require special ordering. The village center has older homes where full-frame replacement is more common.
Goshen falls in the mid-range. A full-house project here costs $8,500 to $16,000. The mix of village-center historic homes and newer peripheral development means some projects need full-frame and others are simple inserts. Being in the middle of the county gives Goshen homeowners good access to the full range of window companies working in the area.
The Bottom Line on Orange County Window and Door Costs
Budget $400 to $1,100 per window for vinyl replacement, or $700 to $1,500 for wood or composite. A full-house project with 15 to 20 windows runs $8,000 to $25,000 depending on material and whether you need inserts or full-frame installations. Entry doors run $1,500 to $6,000, and patio doors cost $2,500 to $7,500.
Do not overlook the federal tax credit. The 25C credit covers 30% of qualifying windows (up to $600/year) and doors (up to $500). Combined with NYSERDA rebates through Central Hudson, you can reduce your out-of-pocket cost by $2,000 to $4,500 on a typical project.
Get three quotes and make sure each one specifies insert vs. full-frame, the exact window brand and series, glass package (U-factor and SHGC numbers), trim scope, and who handles the permit. Avoid any quote that just says "vinyl double-hung" without a brand. The difference between a $250 builder-grade window and a $500 quality window matters over 20 years.
Spring and fall are the best installation windows. Winter installations are possible but take longer, and expanding foam and caulk do not perform well below 40F.
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Alex runs Trusted Local Contractors, connecting homeowners with vetted service professionals across the tri-state area. He compiled this guide after reviewing contractors and researching what this type of work actually costs in the area.