Drafty windows · College Area, San Diego

Drafty windows in College Area, San Diego

Typical fix range $500-$950 per window installed

A window that lets air through when closed is usually a sign of worn weatherstripping, a warped frame, or single-pane glass with no insulating air gap at all. Drafts show up as a noticeable temperature difference near the window and higher heating or cooling bills.

Strong west sun, Low-E glass pays off fastest here.
How this shows up in College Area

East of the coastal buffer, summer afternoon temperatures run several degrees hotter than the beaches, and west-facing rooms take direct sun for hours. Original 1960s-70s aluminum single-pane windows here show more thermal-cycling damage, frame warping, and stressed glazing compound than the same-age stock closer to the coast.

The tract blocks around Montezuma Road and the streets east of SDSU hold original 1950s-60s aluminum windows that have gone through decades of hard use, and full-house dual-pane retrofits are common once an owner-occupant takes over from a rental history. Sitting east of the coastal buffer, the area carries real summer heat load that makes Low-E glass a worthwhile upgrade on west-facing rooms.

What causes it

  • Worn or missing weatherstripping at the sash perimeter
  • A frame that has warped, racked, or pulled slightly out of square over decades
  • Single-pane glass with no insulating gap, common on original 1950s-1970s aluminum windows
  • Gaps between the frame and the rough opening where the original flashing and insulation have failed

How it gets fixed

  • New weatherstripping if the frame itself is still sound
  • Retrofit insert replacement if the frame is sound but the glass and sash are the problem
  • Full-frame replacement when the frame itself is warped or the rough-opening seal has failed

What it costs to fix in College Area

In College Area$500-$950 per window installed

Pricing is the same across San Diego County with no upcharge for College Area. We confirm a written quote before any work starts.

Drafty windows questions in College Area

Why does this happen in College Area?

A window that lets air through when closed is usually a sign of worn weatherstripping, a warped frame, or single-pane glass with no insulating air gap at all. Drafts show up as a noticeable temperature difference near the window and higher heating or cooling bills.. In College Area, the owner-occupied tract homes carry aging 1960s single-pane aluminum windows due for a dual-pane retrofit, while student rentals and small complexes generate steady repair calls for broken glass, failed screens, and stuck hardware., which shapes how this shows up.

Can weatherstripping alone fix a drafty window?

Sometimes, if the frame is straight, sound, and the glass is not the problem. If the frame has warped or the glass is single-pane, new weatherstripping will help marginally but will not solve the underlying issue.

How can I tell if a draft is coming from the window or somewhere else?

Run a hand around the sash perimeter on a windy day, or hold a lit candle or incense stick near the frame edges (carefully) and watch for flicker. A draft concentrated right at the sash-to-frame line points to the window; drafts elsewhere may point to the rough opening or exterior wall.

Do drafty windows raise utility bills significantly?

Yes, particularly in East County and North County Inland where cooling loads are already high. Air infiltration around a poorly sealed window makes the HVAC system work harder to maintain a set temperature.

Serving College Area

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