The Home Service Guide connects Orange County homeowners with licensed window replacement contractors in their area. Get up to 3 free quotes with no obligation.
Florida Building Code requires impact-rated windows or storm shutters in High-Velocity Hurricane Zones (HVHZ). Miami-Dade County has the strictest impact window standards in the country.
In Orange County, the average window replacement costs $400–$1,000 per window for standard replacement. Impact/hurricane windows run $600–$1,500+ per window installed. Whole-house impact windows: $8,000–$25,000.. Getting multiple quotes from licensed contractors is the best way to protect yourself from overpriced bids.
FPL, Duke Energy Florida, and TECO offer ENERGY STAR window rebates of $25–$75 per window. Low-E coatings and SHGC < 0.25 qualify for most FL utility programs.
Florida's intense solar heat gain makes low SHGC glass critical. Coastal regions require impact-rated windows (hurricane rated, Miami-Dade or Florida Building Code approved).
Energy Star ratings vary by climate zone, so a window that qualifies for Energy Star in Florida won't necessarily qualify everywhere. Federal tax credits and Florida/utility rebates often require specific Energy Star certification — and the dollars can be meaningful. Confirm with your installer which models qualify in Orange County before signing, and which paperwork they'll handle versus what you need to submit yourself.
U-factor and SHGC are the two ratings that matter most for Orange County energy performance. U-factor measures heat loss (lower is better, especially in cold months); SHGC measures how much solar heat the window admits (lower is better in hot Florida climates, higher can be beneficial in cold ones). The right combination depends on the orientation of the window. North-facing rooms have different needs than south-facing ones.
Egress requirements in Florida bedroom windows are non-negotiable. Code typically requires a minimum opening area, minimum clear opening width and height, and a maximum sill height above the floor. Orange County basement bedroom windows in particular often fail egress without homeowners realizing it. A replacement that meets code is a safety issue and a future-resale issue.
Lead paint testing is required by federal law (RRP rule) for homes built before 1978. A reputable Orange County window installer working in older homes will have an EPA Lead-Safe certified renovator on the crew and will follow lead-safe work practices: containment, HEPA vacuum, wet methods. A contractor who skips this in a pre-1978 Florida home is exposing your family to lead dust and violating federal law.
Comfort improvements are the most consistent gain Orange County homeowners report after window replacement. Drafts disappear. Window-side temperatures match room temperatures. Furniture can be placed closer to windows without being uncomfortable in winter. The window seat that no one sat in becomes usable. These are quality-of-life upgrades that don't show up in the energy bill but matter every day.
Air infiltration reduction is one of the under-marketed benefits of new windows. Orange County homes with original 1960s-1980s windows often have measurable cold air leaks visible on infrared imagery. Modern triple-seal weatherstripping and properly-installed flashing reduce infiltration measurably. In Florida climates with significant wind exposure, this comfort improvement is often the most-noticed result of window replacement.
UV protection is a real benefit for Orange County furniture, hardwood floors, and artwork. Low-E coatings block 75-95% of UV transmission, slowing fade dramatically. Over a 20-year hold in a Florida home with significant southern exposure, the avoided cost of refinishing floors, replacing rugs, and protecting fabric upholstery is meaningful. South- and west-facing rooms benefit most.
Long-term cost of ownership is where window replacement makes the most sense to most Orange County homeowners. Original wood windows in older homes are charming but expensive over a 20-year hold — paint and caulk every 5-7 years, sash cord and balance repairs, weatherstripping every 10 years, and eventual full replacement anyway. Modern vinyl or fiberglass replacement in Florida eliminates almost all of that recurring spend, and the upfront cost rarely exceeds 20 years of maintenance on the originals.
Orange County window decisions are driven by Florida's climate exposure — heating degree days, cooling degree days, wind load, and any storm/hail/seismic code overlays applicable to the local jurisdiction. Energy Star certification thresholds vary by climate zone, and the Florida rebate programs available right now are specific to particular U-factor and SHGC combinations. Local installers familiar with Orange County's housing stock — typical sizes, framing methods, common rough opening conditions — quote more accurately and run into fewer site surprises than out-of-area generalists. A typical Orange County full-home window replacement runs $12,000-$35,000 depending on home size, frame material, and glazing options.
Yes — window replacement is one of the less disruptive home improvement projects. Each window opening is typically open for one to two hours during change-out. Orange County crews work room by room and protect interior finishes with drop cloths. Plan to work from a different room or run errands during the rooms being actively replaced. Florida homeowners with babies, pets, or temperature-sensitive home offices should coordinate room timing with the crew.
Required impact rating depends on the Florida jurisdiction and specific code zone. Orange County homes in hurricane-prone or hail-prone areas may have impact-rated requirements for new construction and replacement. Even where not required, impact-rated glass can earn substantial insurance discounts — sometimes enough to offset the upcharge within a few years. Check with your Florida insurance carrier and local building department before specifying glass.
Quality Orange County window replacement is performed by certified installers from major manufacturers (Andersen, Pella, Marvin, Milgard) or by established local companies with manufacturer training. Verify Florida contractor license, current insurance, and EPA Lead-Safe certification (required for pre-1978 Orange County homes). Best practice is installer crews that handle the complete project — measure, order, install — rather than separate teams for each step.
Lead times from order to installation in Orange County typically run 6-10 weeks because manufacturers build to order. Custom sizes and specialty shapes extend further. The on-site installation itself is 1-2 days for most homes. Express orders are sometimes available for stock sizes at a premium. Florida winter installations are slower because of weather constraints; spring and fall are easiest to schedule.
Quality vinyl and fiberglass windows in Orange County last 25-40 years depending on Florida sun exposure, weather conditions, and installation quality. Wood-clad windows can last 30-50 years with proper maintenance. The insulating glass unit (IGU) seal typically warranties 10-20 years; failure shows as fogging between panes. Frame warranties run 20 years to lifetime. Installation quality often matters more than material choice for total lifespan in Orange County.
Yes. Florida requires state-level licensing through the Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) for many trades: certified roofing, mechanical, electrical, and others. Some categories allow county-level registration as an alternative. Florida solar requires electrical contractor licensing for the AC side. Pest control requires Florida Department of Agriculture certification. Orange County homeowners should verify license status with DBPR before signing — Florida has strict statutory penalties for unlicensed contractor work.
Florida's utility rebate landscape is more limited than northern states but does exist. Solar customers benefit from net metering through investor-owned utilities. Federal IRA tax credits apply to qualifying heat pump, solar, and window installations in Orange County. Florida property tax abatement on solar improvements reduces ongoing costs. Orange County homeowners should ask installers about specific utility programs (FPL, Duke Energy Florida, TECO depending on service territory) and current federal eligibility.
Florida investor-owned utilities (FPL, Duke Energy Florida, TECO) operate net metering programs with caps on system size and varying credit structures. The state's solar policy has been politically contested with periodic changes. Orange County solar projects should be modeled using current Florida net metering rules — value of exported energy and grandfathering provisions affect lifetime savings calculations. Solar rights laws prevent HOAs from prohibiting solar but allow aesthetic restrictions.