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Power window components — motors, regulators, assemblies, relays, switches, and control modules — work together every time you raise or lower a window. The regulator converts the motor's rotation into the up-down travel of the glass, and when either part fails, the window stops moving or drops into the door. Most window motors and regulators last 8–12 years or 100,000–150,000 miles, though frequent short trips, extreme cold, and worn weatherstripping that increases glass drag accelerate wear. When shopping, motor-and-regulator assemblies are the most practical choice for most repairs — replacing both at once avoids a second labor job when the companion part fails shortly after. OEM units match factory torque specs and cable routing exactly; quality aftermarket options from brands like Dorman and A1 Cardone are a reasonable alternative at lower cost, but verify the connector type and regulator style (cable-drive vs. scissor-arm) matches your application, since both designs are common across different platforms.
Signs you need replacement
- Window moves slowly or strains in one direction. A weakening motor losing torque is often the cause — it may still work going down (gravity-assisted) but struggle or stall going up.
- Grinding, clicking, or popping noise during operation. Worn motor gears or a bent regulator track create mechanical noise as the window travels; a stripped plastic gear inside the motor is a common failure point, especially on high-mileage GM and Ford platforms.
- Window drops into the door or won't hold position. A snapped regulator cable or broken plastic carrier clip lets the glass slide freely — the motor may run, but nothing moves the glass.
- Window is completely dead with no motor sound. If you hear nothing when pressing the switch, check the power window relay first — a failed relay is a cheap fix before condemning the motor or module.
- Window works from the master switch but not the door switch. A failed window switch connector or broken door switch is usually the culprit, not the motor — confirm by testing at the master control before ordering mechanical components.
- Intermittent operation that improves in warm weather. Brushes inside the motor wear and lose contact; cold temperatures shrink clearances and make intermittent failures more pronounced, signaling the motor is near end of life.
Frequently asked questions
- Should I replace the motor and regulator together, or just the failed part? On most vehicles, replacing the full assembly makes more sense. If one component has failed at 100,000+ miles, the other is equally worn. Assembly replacement costs only marginally more than a motor alone, and most assemblies arrive pre-riveted and aligned, cutting labor time significantly.
- Are aftermarket window regulators and motors as reliable as OEM? Quality varies significantly. Brands like Dorman, WAI, and A1 Cardone use comparable materials to OEM on most applications and carry warranties of 1–3 years. Avoid unbranded units on high-cycle windows (driver's side especially) — the gear and cable quality differences show up quickly under real-world use.
- What does a window motor and regulator replacement typically cost, and is it a DIY job? Parts run $40–$180 for aftermarket assemblies; OEM can reach $200–$400. Labor adds $75–$200 at a shop. Most door panels come off with basic trim tools, making this a manageable DIY job rated 2–3 out of 5 in difficulty — just support the glass before disconnecting the regulator.













































