Fast, Reliable Gate Motor & Opener Across Fairfax
Gate motor and opener repair in Fairfax typically runs $280–$650 for most residential jobs, with same-day or next-day response available throughout the 94930 and 94978 ZIP codes. We regularly dispatch to Fairfax from our San Francisco base, usually arriving within 90 minutes to two hours depending on Sir Francis Drake Boulevard traffic.

Fairfax isn’t like other Marin towns. The valley geography here channels Pacific storm systems against Bolinas Ridge, dumping 40–50+ inches of rain annually—far more than San Anselmo or San Rafael just minutes away. That saturation doesn’t just make for lush oak canopies; it rots gate posts at grade, heaves concrete footings, and shifts gate alignment in ways that destroy openers from the ground up. We’ve spent 11 years learning how Fairfax’s unique conditions kill gate motors differently than anywhere else in the Bay Area. When your Gate Motor & Opener quits on a rainy Tuesday morning, you need someone who understands that the problem might be six inches underground, not in the circuit board.
Call (866) 788-1265 for a free estimate—Kevin handles Fairfax calls personally.
Why Ironclad Gate Repair Service San Francisco Is Fairfax’s Preferred Gate Motor & Opener Company
We’re not a general handyman operation or a fencing company that “also does gates.” We’re gate-only specialists, and that focus shows in the work we do on Cascade Drive, Scenic Road, and the hillside lanes off Bolinas-Fairfax Road.
Over 1,000 neighbors trust us—1,072 verified reviews with a 4.8-star average, one of the largest feedback records in the gate repair trade. Fairfax customers specifically mention our ability to diagnose post-rot problems that other companies missed entirely. One recent review from a homeowner on Park Road noted we spotted “the Fairfax lean” in a gate that had been “repaired” three times by others who only swapped the opener motor.
Response time to Fairfax averages under two hours during business hours. Kevin Flores, our owner and lead technician, makes the run himself rather than dispatching anonymous subcontractors. That means the person quoting your job is the same person who’ll be under your gate with a wrench—and the same person you can call back if anything needs adjusting.
We stock parts and weld on-site. For Fairfax’s older hillside properties with custom-fit gates and non-standard openings, that capability matters. No waiting for fabricated brackets or special-order mounting plates. We measure, cut, and weld right there in your driveway.
Our Gate Motor & Opener Services in Fairfax
Motor Installation
New gate motor installation in Fairfax runs $850–$1,800 for most residential swing or slide systems, including mounting hardware and basic programming. The real work here isn’t the motor—it’s accounting for Fairfax’s sloped entries and odd-width openings. We regularly install linear actuators on craftsman cottages where the original 1940s gate was hand-built to non-standard dimensions. Every installation starts with a plumb check on the posts. If we find rot at grade—and we often do on shaded lots under coast live oak—we’ll tell you before the motor goes on, not after it fails six months later.
Motor Repair
Motor repair in Fairfax typically costs $280–$480 and resolves about 70% of the calls we get. The valley’s wet-dry cycles create a specific failure pattern: gate posts tilt imperceptibly over months, binding the operator until the gear train strips or the motor burns out. We see this constantly on older properties near the creek zones and on hillside lots where drainage concentrates. Our repair process includes checking post plumb and hinge alignment, not just swapping the motor. Otherwise you’re paying twice.
Linear Motor
Linear motors—screw-drive or articulated arm operators—are our most common installation in Fairfax for swing gates on sloped or tight sites. Prices run $950–$1,550 installed. These systems handle the irregular geometry of Fairfax’s hillside lots better than underground operators, and they’re easier to service when the inevitable post-shift occurs. We work on your brand: Ghost Controls, DoorKing, Elite, and Mighty Mule among them. For a 1950s bungalow on a narrow Cascade Drive lot, a linear actuator often fits where nothing else will.
Slide Motor
Slide gate motors in Fairfax cost $1,100–$2,000 installed, depending on track length and weight capacity. These systems are more vulnerable to debris and moisture than swing operators, and Fairfax’s oak canopy means leaves, acorns, and moss accumulate fast. We install sealed-chain or rack-and-pinion systems rated for wet environments, and we always check the track drainage. A slide motor on a Fairfax hillside without proper water management will fail before its warranty expires.

Battery Backup
Battery backup installation runs $180–$340 and is one of our most recommended add-ons for Fairfax properties. Pacific storms routinely knock out power along Sir Francis Drake Boulevard and the surrounding hillside circuits. Without backup, your automatic gate becomes a manual gate—often a heavy, sagging manual gate that won’t budge. We install lithium-ion backup systems compatible with most major brands, typically providing 10–15 full cycles during an outage. For Fairfax’s frequent winter power flickers, it’s not a luxury; it’s basic functionality.
Intercom Integration
Intercom and access control integration with existing gate motors runs $320–$680 in Fairfax. Many of the town’s multi-unit hillside properties and guest cottages need visitor screening without walking down a wet, leaf-slick driveway. We wire intercoms into existing operators or spec new systems that handle the moisture and temperature swings of Fairfax’s valley microclimate.
What happens when you call
- 1
A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in Fairfax
We service equipment from nine major manufacturers—LiftMaster, FAAC, BFT, Linear, Viking, Ghost Controls, DoorKing, Elite, and Mighty Mule. For Fairfax customers, that breadth matters because hillside properties often inherit whatever brand the original installer preferred, and parts availability can be spotty in Marin County. We carry common drive gears, circuit boards, limit switches, and remote receivers for Ghost Controls, DoorKing, and Elite systems in our service vehicle, which means most Fairfax repairs don’t wait for shipping. When we encounter a legacy FAAC 400 or an early Mighty Mule that’s been discontinued, we can usually source rebuilt or cross-reference parts through our supplier network—or recommend a retrofit path if repair doesn’t make financial sense.
Common Gate Motor & Opener Problems We See in Fairfax Homes
- Post rot shifts gate alignment, binding the operator motor. Beneath the dense oak and bay canopy that shades most Fairfax lots, wooden posts hollow out underground while the gate above looks fine. The “Fairfax lean” appears suddenly after the first heavy November rain, but the damage took years. The tilted gate overloads the opener’s gear train until it strips or the thermal cutoff trips repeatedly.
- Moisture corrosion of electrical contacts and circuit boards. The valley’s persistent humidity—often 80%+ for weeks during winter—condenses inside outdoor operator housings, especially on north-facing or heavily shaded installations. We see failed limit switches and corroded terminal blocks that would be rare in drier Bay Area cities.
- Concrete footing heave cracks mounting plates. Fairfax’s wet-dry soil cycles expand and contract differently than freeze-thaw regions, but the effect is similar: poured footings shift, stress-fracturing the steel plate that anchors the operator. A mounting plate that flexes eventually wallows out its bolt holes, letting the motor oscillate until the drive mechanism fails.
- Legacy gates with non-standard dimensions strain modern operators. Fairfax’s craftsman cottages and 1960s bungalows often have gates built to odd widths or hung with non-standard hinge geometry. A motor sized for a standard gate runs at the edge of its torque curve, overheating and shortening its service life.
Pricing for Gate Motor & Opener in Fairfax, CA
| Service | Typical Range in Fairfax |
|---|---|
| Diagnostic/service call | $120–$180 |
| Motor repair (gear, limit switch, board) | $280–$480 |
| Linear motor installation | $950–$1,550 |
| Slide motor installation | $1,100–$2,000 |
| Battery backup add-on | $180–$340 |
| Post replacement with concrete-encased steel | $450–$780 |
| Intercom/access control integration | $320–$680 |
What moves you within these ranges? Gate weight and width, whether the posts need replacement or just adjustment, and whether your existing wiring can handle a modern operator’s current draw. Fairfax’s older homes often need upgraded low-voltage runs or dedicated circuits for heavier motors. We quote everything upfront after inspection—no open-ended billing. Call (866) 788-1265 for a free estimate; Kevin handles Fairfax pricing personally.
We Also Serve Cities Near Fairfax
Our service radius covers all of central and southern Marin. We regularly run to San Anselmo for downtown commercial gate repairs, San Rafael for larger estate installations, Kentfield for hillside slide-gate service, and Lucas Valley-Marinwood for ranch-style property automation. Same owner-technician accountability, same stocked parts vehicle, same gate-only focus.
Serving Fairfax, CA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Fairfax area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Gate Motor & Opener in Fairfax
It could be direct water intrusion into the operator housing, but in Fairfax it’s more often indirect damage from post rot or footing shift caused by that rain. The valley’s saturated soil lets wooden posts tilt, binding the gate and overloading the motor until the thermal cutoff trips or the gear train strips. Call (866) 788-1265—we’ll check the operator electronics and the post plumb, because fixing only the motor means you’ll be calling again next storm.
Yes—linear actuators are actually our preferred solution for exactly this Fairfax scenario. Their articulated arm design accommodates uneven grades and odd widths better than underground or sliding operators, and we can fabricate custom mounting brackets in-house if your post spacing doesn’t match standard templates. Kevin measures on-site and welds any needed hardware rather than ordering and waiting.
We recommend it for most Fairfax properties because Pacific storm outages along Sir Francis Drake Boulevard and the surrounding hillside circuits are frequent from November through March. Without backup, a power loss turns your automatic gate into a heavy manual barrier—often one that’s already sagging from post tilt. A $180–$340 battery backup provides 10–15 cycles during an outage, enough to get vehicles in and out until PG&E restores service.
No—the opener isn’t causing the lean, but the lean will destroy the opener if not addressed first. This is the classic “Fairfax lean”: post rot at grade hollows the wood underground while the gate looks fine from above. The tilt increases hinge friction and gate binding, forcing the motor to work harder until it fails. We always check post condition before quoting motor work; replacing an opener on a rotted post is wasted money.
Some FAAC 400 components are still available through specialty suppliers, though availability has tightened as the series ages. We carry cross-reference parts for common failures—control boards, limit switches, and gear sets—and can usually source or fabricate alternatives for discontinued items. If parts costs approach 60% of replacement, we’ll recommend a modern operator with better Fairfax-appropriate sealing and local parts support. Call (866) 788-1265 for a specific assessment.
Written by Kevin Flores, Owner at Ironclad Gate Repair Service San Francisco, serving Fairfax and Marin County since 2013.