Impact Window and Door Pricing in South Florida: What It Really Costs and What Drives the Price
A plain-English pricing guide for homeowners in Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach County — from a licensed general contractor, roofing contractor, and glazing contractor who believes you deserve real numbers before you invite anyone into your home.
Quick Answer — Impact Window and Door Cost in South Florida
Most South Florida homeowners pay between $800 and $2,500 per impact window installed and between $1,500 and $6,000+ per impact door installed, depending on product type, size, frame material, glass package, design pressure rating, and installation conditions. A whole-home project with 10–20 windows and 2–4 doors typically falls in the $15,000 to $55,000+ range when installed by a licensed contractor with full permitting, code-compliant anchoring, and proper trim and finish. Pricing in Miami-Dade and Broward is often higher than other parts of the state because both counties fall within the High-Velocity Hurricane Zone (HVHZ), which requires products to carry a Miami-Dade County Notice of Acceptance (NOA) and pass more rigorous large-missile impact testing. Bigfoot Windows & Roofing is a licensed general contractor, licensed roofing contractor, and licensed glazing contractor serving Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties.
Why We Publish Pricing Guidance When Most Competitors Don’t
Most impact window and door companies in South Florida will not show you any pricing until a salesperson is sitting in your living room. There is a business reason for that: once you see a number in context, the in-home sales presentation has less leverage.
We take a different approach. We believe homeowners should have realistic pricing context before they schedule an appointment — not after. That does not mean we can quote your exact project online. Every home is different, and accurate pricing requires an in-home assessment of your openings, structural conditions, code zone, and product preferences. But we can give you honest ranges, explain what drives the number up or down, and help you understand what to expect so that no quote from any company catches you completely off guard.
If you are the kind of homeowner who values transparency and wants to understand what you are buying before you commit, this page was built for you.
What Drives Impact Window and Door Pricing Up
Impact windows and doors are not commodity products. Dozens of variables affect what your project will cost. Here are the most common factors that push pricing higher.
Opening Size and Count
Larger openings require larger products, more glass, heavier frames, and stronger anchoring. A 6-foot sliding glass door costs significantly more than a 3-foot single hung window — not just because of material, but because of the engineering, weight, and labor involved. More openings simply means more product, more installation time, more anchoring, and more permitting scope.
Custom Sizing vs. Standard Sizing
If your openings match common manufacturer sizes, products ship faster and cost less. Custom-sized units require special manufacturing runs, which increase both lead time and cost. Older South Florida homes, in particular, often have non-standard opening dimensions.
Frame Material
Impact windows and doors are available in aluminum, vinyl, and composite (or hybrid) frames. Aluminum remains the most common in South Florida due to its strength, narrow sightlines, and performance in coastal environments. Vinyl is generally less expensive but has limitations in extreme heat and in larger opening sizes. Composite or hybrid frames offer a middle ground but at a higher price point.
Glass Package
The glass itself is one of the most significant cost variables. All impact glass includes a laminated interlayer (typically PVB or SGP), but the rest of the package varies. Low-E coatings improve energy efficiency and UV protection. Tinted glass reduces glare. Insulated (dual-pane) configurations improve thermal and acoustic performance. Each upgrade adds cost but also adds long-term value.
Design Pressure and Performance Level
Design pressure (DP) ratings measure how much wind load a window or door can withstand. Higher DP ratings mean stronger products — and higher prices. Homes in the HVHZ and in coastal exposure zones generally require higher-rated products than inland homes. Your specific wind zone, building height, and exposure category determine the minimum DP your project must meet per the Florida Building Code.[1][8]
Coastal and HVHZ Exposure
Products installed in the High-Velocity Hurricane Zone must carry a Miami-Dade County Notice of Acceptance (NOA), which means they have been independently tested to withstand large-missile impact (a 9-pound 2×4 at 50 feet per second) followed by 9,000 cycles of positive and negative pressure. This level of testing and certification adds cost to the product itself.[2][5][9]
Installation Complexity
Not every installation is straightforward. Homes with masonry (CBS/concrete block) construction require different anchoring methods than wood-framed homes. Multi-story installations require scaffolding or lift equipment. Hard-to-reach openings increase labor time. Interior and exterior finishes may need repair or replacement after the old units are removed.
Structural Modifications
If your project requires changing opening sizes — enlarging a window, creating a new opening, closing an old one, or converting a window to a door — structural work is involved. This may include new headers, lintels, reinforced framing, and code-required tie-downs. As a licensed general contractor, Bigfoot can handle these structural modifications in-house without requiring a separate structural contractor.
Finish, Color, Hardware, and Customization
Standard white or bronze frames are typically the least expensive. Custom colors, premium hardware, decorative grids, and specialty finishes add cost. On doors especially, hardware selection can range from basic to architectural-grade, and the price difference is meaningful.
Interior and Exterior Trim and Finish
When old windows and doors come out, the surrounding trim, stucco, drywall, and paint often need attention. Some contractors exclude this from their quotes entirely, leaving homeowners to coordinate a separate finish contractor. Bigfoot includes trim and finish work as part of the scope to deliver a complete, code-compliant, and clean result.
Permitting and Inspection
Every impact window and door installation in Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties requires a building permit and at least one inspection. Permit fees vary by municipality and project value. A reputable contractor includes permitting in the scope and manages the process on the homeowner’s behalf.
| Factor | Impact on Cost | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Larger or custom-sized openings | Moderate to High | More material, heavier products, custom manufacturing |
| Higher design pressure (DP) rating | Moderate | Stronger products cost more to engineer and manufacture |
| HVHZ / Miami-Dade NOA requirement | Moderate | Additional testing and certification required |
| Insulated or Low-E glass package | Moderate | Better energy and UV performance, but higher material cost |
| Structural modifications | High | Headers, lintels, reinforcement, engineering, and inspection |
| Multi-story or hard-to-reach access | Moderate | Equipment, scaffolding, and additional labor time |
| Custom color, hardware, or grids | Low to Moderate | Non-standard finishes require special-order manufacturing |
| Trim, stucco, and finish restoration | Low to Moderate | Ensures a clean, complete result but adds labor and material |
| Permitting and multiple inspections | Low to Moderate | Required by code; fees vary by municipality and project scope |
What Drives Impact Window and Door Pricing Down
Not every factor pushes cost higher. Several conditions can reduce your project price without sacrificing quality or code compliance.
Standard Sizes and Common Configurations
If your openings align with standard manufacturer dimensions, you avoid custom manufacturing charges and often benefit from shorter lead times. Standard single hung windows and two-panel sliding glass doors tend to be the most competitively priced configurations.
Fewer Openings and Simpler Layouts
A home with 10 standard openings and no structural modifications is a simpler project than one with 25 mixed-size openings across two stories. Simpler projects require less labor, less permitting complexity, and less material coordination.
Wood-Frame Construction Without Structural Issues
In homes where the existing framing is sound and the openings are not being modified, installation moves faster. Masonry (CBS) installations are not necessarily more expensive, but they do require different anchoring methods that can add labor time.
Entry-Level Product Lines
Most major manufacturers offer a tiered product lineup. Entry-level impact windows still meet Florida Building Code requirements and carry NOA approval where required, but they use simpler glass packages and fewer finish options. Choosing a solid entry-level product is a smart way to stay within budget while still getting code-compliant, hurricane-rated protection.
Whole-Home Volume
Replacing all windows and doors at once is almost always more cost-effective per unit than replacing them one or two at a time. Mobilization, permitting, and inspection costs are spread across more units, and material pricing often improves at volume.
Why Some Impact Window and Door Companies Charge More
A higher price is not automatically a sign of overcharging. In many cases, it reflects a more complete, compliant, and accountable scope of work.
Proper Licensing and Insurance
A licensed general contractor (CGC), licensed roofing contractor, and licensed glazing contractor carries significantly more overhead than an unlicensed handyman or a company operating under a single limited license. That licensing means the contractor is qualified to handle the full scope — including structural issues, multi-trade coordination, and code compliance — under one roof.
Full Permitting and Inspection
Pulling a permit is not just a fee — it triggers an obligation to meet code, pass inspection, and document the work. Contractors who include permitting in their price are committing to a higher standard of accountability.
Structural Capability
If structural issues are discovered during your project — deteriorated framing, undersized headers water damage behind walls — a general contractor can address them in-house. A window-only installer typically cannot, which means the homeowner is left coordinating a second contractor mid-project.
Code-Aware Project Design
A knowledgeable contractor designs the project with the Florida Building Code in mind from the start. That means specifying the correct DP rating, confirming NOA compliance in the HVHZ, ensuring proper anchoring, and planning for inspection requirements.
Complete Trim, Finish, and Cleanup
The best contractors leave your home looking better than they found it. That means interior and exterior trim, caulking, stucco patching or repair, paint touch-up, and full site cleanup. These are real costs that some lower-priced competitors simply exclude.
Why Some Impact Window and Door Quotes Look Dramatically Cheaper
When a quote comes in significantly lower than others, it is worth understanding why. In some cases, the lower price reflects genuine efficiency. In many others, it reflects missing scope.
Permitting not included. Some contractors quote without permits. The homeowner either pulls the permit themselves (and takes on liability), or the work is done without one — which creates code violations, insurance risk, and problems at resale.
Non-NOA-approved products in the HVHZ. Products that lack a current Miami-Dade County Notice of Acceptance should not be installed in Miami-Dade or Broward counties.
Subcontracted to unverified crews. Some companies act as sales organizations and subcontract the installation to the lowest-bidding crew available. Quality, accountability, and warranty support suffer.
Structural issues ignored. If rotted framing, missing straps, or undersized headers are discovered during removal, an underpriced installer may simply install over the problem rather than address it.
Trim, finish, and cleanup excluded. If the quote only covers the window swap and nothing else, the homeowner is left with exposed framing, cracked stucco, and unfinished interior trim.
Minimal warranty or post-install support. A warranty is only as strong as the company standing behind it.
Where Bigfoot Generally Falls in the Market
Bigfoot Windows & Roofing typically falls in the mid-to-upper range of the South Florida market for impact window and door installation. That positioning is intentional and reflects what is included in every project.
| Scope Element | Budget Installer | Bigfoot Windows & Roofing | Premium Boutique |
|---|---|---|---|
| Licensed general contractor | Rarely | Yes | Sometimes |
| Permits pulled and managed | Sometimes | Always | Yes |
| Structural modifications in-house | No | Yes | Sometimes (subcontracted) |
| Code-required anchoring / straps | Often excluded | Included | Included |
| Interior and exterior trim/finish | Often excluded | Included | Included (often premium) |
| NOA-approved products (HVHZ) | Not always | Always | Yes |
| In-house crews (not subcontracted) | Rarely | Yes | Varies |
| Post-installation inspection support | Homeowner’s problem | Managed by Bigfoot | Yes |
| Typical price positioning | Lowest | Mid-to-Upper | Highest |
If you are comparing quotes, make sure you are comparing the same scope. A $12,000 quote that excludes permits, structural work, and trim is not cheaper than a $18,000 quote that includes everything.
Impact Window and Door Pricing by Type — South Florida Installed Ranges
The following table shows general installed price ranges for common impact window and door types in South Florida. These ranges include product, standard installation labor, permitting, and basic trim and finish. They do not include structural modifications, which are project-specific.
| Product Type | Typical Installed Range | Key Variables |
|---|---|---|
| Single Hung Window | $800 – $1,800 | Size, frame material, glass package |
| Horizontal Roller / Sliding Window | $900 – $2,000 | Width, glass package, hardware |
| Casement Window | $1,000 – $2,200 | Size, operating hardware, finish |
| Picture / Fixed Window | $700 – $2,000 | Size (can be very large), glass performance |
| Awning Window | $900 – $2,000 | Size, hardware, placement |
| Impact Sliding Glass Door (2-panel) | $2,200 – $5,000 | Width, height, glass, track system, DP rating |
| Impact Sliding Glass Door (3- or 4-panel) | $4,000 – $8,500+ | Configuration, width, weight, structural support |
| Impact Entry Door (single) | $1,500 – $3,500 | Material, sidelites, transom, hardware |
| Impact Entry Door (double) | $2,800 – $5,500 | Width, material, hardware, glass inserts |
| Impact French Door | $3,500 – $6,500+ | Width, glass area, hardware, finish, grids |
Note: These are general market ranges for South Florida based on 2025–2026 market conditions. Your actual cost depends on your specific openings, structural conditions, product selections, and code requirements. Bigfoot provides exact pricing after a free in-home assessment.
Good / Better / Best — Impact Window and Door Tiers Explained
Most homeowners think of impact windows as a single category, but there are meaningful differences between product tiers.
| Feature | Good | Better | Best |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hurricane protection | Meets FBC / NOA requirements | Meets FBC / NOA requirements | Exceeds minimum requirements |
| Glass package | Standard laminated | Laminated + Low-E | Insulated + Low-E + tint options |
| Energy efficiency | Moderate improvement | Meaningful improvement | Maximum improvement, may qualify for ENERGY STAR |
| Noise reduction | Good | Better | Best (insulated glass excels here) |
| UV protection | Moderate | High (Low-E adds significant UV blocking) | Highest (blocks 99%+ UV) |
| Frame options | Standard aluminum or vinyl | Aluminum or upgraded vinyl | Premium aluminum, composite, or specialty |
| Color and finish | Standard (white, bronze, black) | Expanded palette | Full custom, dual-color, specialty finishes |
| Warranty | Standard manufacturer warranty | Enhanced manufacturer warranty | Premium warranty + extended coverage |
| Per-window installed range (approx.) | $800 – $1,200 | $1,200 – $1,800 | $1,800 – $2,500+ |
| Best for | Budget-conscious, code compliance focus | Best balance of value, comfort, and protection | Maximum performance, aesthetics, and long-term value |
All three tiers meet Florida Building Code requirements and provide genuine hurricane protection. The difference is in long-term comfort, energy savings, noise reduction, UV protection, and aesthetics. Bigfoot helps homeowners find the right tier for their budget, goals, and home.
Lifetime Cost vs. Initial Cost: Why the Cheapest Quote Is Rarely the Cheapest Decision
Impact windows and doors are a long-term investment. A homeowner who only compares initial quotes misses the bigger financial picture.
Insurance Premium Reduction
Florida law requires insurance companies to offer premium discounts for homes with hurricane mitigation features, including impact windows and doors. Many South Florida homeowners report meaningful annual savings — often hundreds to thousands of dollars per year depending on coverage level, location, and insurer. A wind mitigation inspection (Form OIR-B1-1802) documents the upgrades for your insurer.[4][6]
Energy Savings
The U.S. Department of Energy reports that ENERGY STAR-qualified windows can reduce annual energy costs by 7% to 15%. In South Florida’s cooling-dominated climate, impact windows with Low-E coatings and insulated glass can meaningfully reduce air conditioning load by reducing solar heat gain.[3]
Maintenance and Replacement Cost Avoidance
Unlike hurricane shutters, impact windows and doors require no deployment, no seasonal storage, and no separate maintenance. They also eliminate the cost and hassle of maintaining a shutter system over decades.
Property Value
Impact windows are consistently cited as one of the most value-retaining exterior improvements in Florida. Real estate professionals in South Florida frequently note that buyers in Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach actively seek homes that already have impact-rated products installed.
| Cost / Savings Category | No Upgrade (Shutters Only) | Impact Windows Installed |
|---|---|---|
| Initial investment | $0 | $25,000 (example whole-home) |
| Insurance savings over 10 years (est.) | $0 | $5,000 – $5%�007 |
| Energy savings over 10 years (est.) | $0 | $2,000 – $5,000 |
| Shutter maintenance, storage, deployment cost | $1,500 – $4,000 | $0 |
| Estimated property value increase | $0 | $15,000 – $25,000 (varies) |
| Net effective cost over 10 years | $1,500 – $4,000 | Potentially $0 – $10,000 net after savings and value |
Note: These figures are illustrative and directional. Actual insurance savings depend on your policy, coverage level, insurer, and mitigation inspection results. Energy savings depend on your home’s size, orientation, glass package, and HVAC system. Bigfoot does not guarantee specific financial outcomes.
Hidden Costs Homeowners Should Watch For
Some of the most frustrating pricing surprises in impact window and door projects come not from the products themselves, but from scope items that were excluded from the original quote.
Structural Surprises
When old windows and doors come out, what is behind the wall is sometimes worse than expected. Rotted framing, termite damage, corroded lintels, or can turn a straightforward installation into a structural repair project. Bigfoot, as a licensed general contractor, can handle structural issues in-house when they are discovered.
Permit and Re-Inspection Costs
Permit fees are based on the project value and vary by municipality across Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties. Ask your contractor whether permitting is included in the quoted price.
Trim, Stucco, and Drywall Repair
Removing old windows almost always affects the surrounding surfaces. Interior drywall, exterior stucco, trim boards, caulking, and paint all need attention. If your quote does not explicitly include these items, you are likely looking at additional cost after installation.
Disposal and Haul-Away
Old windows, doors, frames, and construction debris need to be removed from the site. Some contractors include disposal; others charge separately or leave it for the homeowner to manage.
Change Orders
If the scope of work changes after the contract is signed — due to discovered conditions, homeowner requests, or unforeseen code requirements — change orders add cost. A clear, detailed contract and a thorough pre-installation assessment reduce the likelihood of surprises.
Incomplete Quotes
The single most common hidden cost is an incomplete quote. If a quote only lists product and basic labor, the homeowner is likely responsible for everything else. Always ask for a written, itemized scope of work before signing.
Wood Buck Installation
A wood buck is a pressure-treated wood frame installed around a rough opening before an impact window or door is set. It provides a solid nailing surface, helps square the opening, and is often required by the Florida Building Code for certain construction types. Without a properly installed wood buck, a window or door may not pass inspection — and in some cases simply cannot be installed correctly.
Wood bucks are a legitimate, code-required component of many window and door installations. They take labor, material, and time. Some contractors intentionally omit wood bucks from their initial quote to keep the number low, then issue a change order once the project is underway — charging a per-opening premium after the homeowner has already committed. Because the homeowner is mid-project by then, they have little choice but to pay.
If you are collecting quotes, ask specifically: Does your price include wood bucks where required? A contractor who cannot answer that question directly, or who says they’ll “assess on-site,” is likely planning to charge you for them later. At Bigfoot, wood bucks are scoped into the estimate upfront wherever the opening requires them.
When Bigfoot May Not Be the Right Fit
If Your Only Priority Is the Lowest Possible Number
If you are strictly looking for the cheapest quote regardless of scope, licensing, or installation quality, Bigfoot will probably not be your lowest number. Our pricing reflects complete, permitted, code-aware, structurally sound work.
If You Want to Skip Permitting
We pull permits on every project. There is no scenario where we install impact windows or doors without a building permit.
If Code Compliance Is Not a Priority
Every Bigfoot project is designed and executed to meet or exceed the Florida Building Code, including HVHZ requirements where applicable.
If You Only Need a Single Window With No Installation
We are a full-service installation contractor, not a product-only supplier. If you only need one window unit shipped to your home with no installation, a building supply distributor may be a better fit.
Who Is a Good Fit for Bigfoot?
Homeowners who want guidance through the process, quality installation, code compliance, hurricane-conscious product selection, honest communication, and a contractor who can handle windows, doors, structural modifications, and related scope under one roof.
Are We a Good Fit? A Quick Comparison
| Bigfoot Is Likely a Great Fit If You… | Bigfoot May Not Be the Best Fit If You… |
|---|---|
| Want a licensed general contractor managing your project | Only care about finding the absolute lowest quote |
| Expect permits to be pulled and inspections to pass | Want to skip permitting to save money or time |
| Value code-compliant, hurricane-rated installation | Are not concerned about code compliance |
| Want structural issues handled in-house if discovered | Prefer to coordinate multiple specialty contractors yourself |
| Appreciate honest guidance over high-pressure sales | Just want a quick number with no consultation |
| Want complete scope: product, installation, trim, finish, cleanup | Only need product delivery with no installation |
| Are making a long-term investment in your home | Are looking for the cheapest temporary fix |
Financing Impact Windows and Doors
Financing can make a high-quality installation accessible while allowing you to start benefiting from insurance savings, energy efficiency, and hurricane protection immediately.
| Project Cost | 60-Month Term | 120-Month Term | 180-Month Term |
|---|---|---|---|
| $15,000 | ~$290/mo | ~$170/mo | ~$135/mo |
| $25,000 | ~$485/mo | ~$280/mo | ~$225/mo |
| $40,000 | ~$775/mo | ~$450/mo | ~$360/mo |
| $55,000 | ~$1,065/mo | ~$620/mo | ~$495/mo |
These monthly estimates assume a mid-range interest rate and are for illustration only. Actual terms depend on your credit profile and the financing product selected.
Florida PACE Financing
Florida’s Property Assessed Clean Energy (PACE) program allows homeowners to finance qualifying energy-efficient and hurricane-resistant improvements — including impact windows and doors — through a voluntary assessment on their property tax bill. PACE financing typically offers longer terms (up to 20–30 years) and does not require a minimum credit score. Bigfoot can help you understand whether PACE is an option for your project.[7]
What Different Impact Window and Door Projects Typically Cost — South Florida Examples
| Scenario | Scope | Approximate Range |
|---|---|---|
| Small condo (5–8 windows, 1 sliding door) | Standard sizes, no structural work, basic glass | $8,000 – $18,000 |
| Mid-size 3/2 home (10–15 windows, 2 doors) | Mix of standard and some custom, mid-tier glass | $18,000 – $35,000 |
| Larger 4/3 home (15–20 windows, 3–4 doors) | Upgraded glass, some structural modifications | $30,000 – $55,000 |
| Custom or waterfront home (20+ windows, 4+ doors) | Premium products, structural work, large sliders, custom sizing | $50,000 – $100,000+ |
| Partial project — entry door + 2 sliding doors only | 3 door openings, standard installation | $6,000 – $14,000 |
These are directional ranges based on South Florida market conditions. Actual pricing requires an in-home assessment of your specific openings, structural conditions, code zone, and product preferences.
Frequently Asked Questions About Impact Window and Door Pricing
Why does Bigfoot show impact window and door pricing when many competitors do not?
We believe homeowners deserve pricing context before inviting a contractor into their home. Publishing honest ranges helps you set realistic expectations, compare quotes more effectively, and understand what is — and is not — included in a given price.
Are the prices on this page exact or just estimated ranges?
They are estimated ranges based on general South Florida market conditions. Exact pricing depends on your specific openings, structural conditions, product selections, code zone, and project scope. Bigfoot provides accurate, project-specific pricing after a free in-home assessment.
Why can two homes with similar square footage have very different impact window prices?
Square footage alone does not determine window and door cost. Two 2,000-square-foot homes can have dramatically different numbers and sizes of openings, different structural conditions, different code zones, and different product needs. The scope drives the price, not the square footage.
Why do some impact window and door quotes look dramatically cheaper than others?
The most common reason is missing scope. A quote that excludes permitting, structural work, trim and finish, code-required anchoring, disposal, and inspection coordination can appear much lower — but the homeowner ends up paying for those items separately, often at a higher cost and with less accountability.
Can Bigfoot help if structural issues are discovered during the project?
Yes. As a licensed general contractor, Bigfoot can address structural issues — rotted framing undersized headers, water damage, and other conditions — in-house. You do not need to stop work and coordinate a separate contractor.
What hidden costs should I watch out for when comparing impact window quotes?
The most common hidden costs are: permit fees not included in the quote, trim and stucco repair excluded from scope, disposal and haul-away charges, structural work billed as a change order after the project starts, and re-inspection fees if the initial inspection fails. Always ask for a written, itemized scope of work.
Does pricing include permits and code-related requirements?
At Bigfoot, yes. Permitting, code-required anchoring, inspection coordination, and related scope are included in our project pricing. Not all contractors include these items, so always ask before signing a contract.
Do you offer financing for impact windows and doors?
Yes. Bigfoot works with third-party financing partners to offer a range of payment options. Terms depend on your credit profile and the financing product selected. Florida’s PACE program may also be an option depending on your county.
Does impact window and door pricing vary across Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach?
Yes. Miami-Dade and Broward counties are within the High-Velocity Hurricane Zone (HVHZ), which requires products to carry a Miami-Dade County Notice of Acceptance (NOA) and meet more rigorous testing standards. Permit fees, inspection requirements, and municipal processes also vary across the three counties. Palm Beach County is not in the HVHZ, though coastal areas still face higher wind load requirements under the Florida Building Code.
Get Your Custom Pricing — Free In-Home Estimate
The ranges on this page are a starting point. Your home is unique, and the only way to get an accurate price is for us to see your openings, assess your structural conditions, understand your goals, and recommend the right products for your situation.
Bigfoot’s in-home estimates are free, no-pressure, and educational. We will walk through your options, explain what drives your specific price, discuss financing if it is relevant, and give you a clear, written scope of work so you know exactly what you are getting.
Serving Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties.
Certified General Contractor (CGC1531370) · Certified Residential Contractor (CRC1331693) · Certified Roofing Contractor (CCC1333168) · Certified Specialty Contractor — Glass & Glazing (SCC131153098)
Or call us directly to schedule: (786) 886-2088
Sources
- Florida Building Commission — Florida Building Code, 8th Edition (2023)
- Miami-Dade County — Product Control / Notice of Acceptance (NOA) System
- U.S. Department of Energy — Windows, Doors, and Skylights: Energy Efficiency Information
- Florida Office of Insurance Regulation — Premium Discounts for Hurricane Loss Mitigation
- FEMA — Hurricane: Protect Your Property — Mitigation and Retrofitting
- Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety (IBHS) — FORTIFIED Home Program
- Florida PACE — Affordable Window & Door Replacements
- ASCE 7-22: Minimum Design Loads and Associated Criteria for Buildings and Other Structures
- ASTM E1886/E1996: Standard Test Methods for Performance of Exterior Windows, Curtain Walls, Doors, and Impact Protective Systems