2026 local cost data for Fort Worth, Texas. $330-$735/windows, impact-resistant for hail insurance discounts, Low-E for heat.
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Get 3 Free Quotes →Fort Worth window replacement is a high-ROI Texas energy improvement. Fort Worth shares the Dallas climate profile: humid subtropical with hot summers (95-105 °F) and active spring storm season including hail and tornados. The 9-month cooling season means Low-E glass dramatically reduces cooling bills - typically 15-20% on a typical 1,800 sq ft home.
A typical Fort Worth window replacement runs $4,900-$11,000 for 15 windows in 2026. $330-$735/windows, impact-resistant for hail insurance discounts, Low-E for heat. Vinyl Low-E is the workhorse for most Fort Worth homes; impact-resistant adds 50-80% cost but earns hail insurance discounts where applicable.
Fort Worth Development Services Department permits average 4-6 weeks for typical residential work Window replacement permits run $50-$150. Texas does NOT require a state license for window installers, which means quality varies widely. Look for FGIA (Fenestration & Glazing Industry Alliance) installer certification, manufacturer-direct partnerships (Pella Certified, Andersen Certified Contractor), and 5+ years in Fort Worth.
Fort Worth metro shares the broader DFW labor pool (~22,000 contractors); slightly faster permitting than Dallas. Fort Worth labor runs 2% below national average. Avoid lowest-bid contractors with subcontracted installation crews - window installation quality matters more than the window itself for long-term performance. Bad installation causes 80% of warranty claims.
Federal Section 25C credit covers 30% of qualifying Low-E windows up to $600/year ($200 per window cap). Texas has no state window credit. ENERGY STAR certified products with U-factor 0.30 or lower and SHGC 0.25 or lower typically qualify. For Hail Alley areas, specify Class 4 impact-resistant glass to earn 5-25% homeowner insurance discounts.
Choosing a Fort Worth contractor: Texas trade licensing varies sharply by trade - no state license (verify liability insurance) is the standard for this work. Verify licensing at tdlr.texas.gov or tsbpe.texas.gov as applicable. Fort Worth metro shares the broader DFW labor pool (~22,000 contractors); slightly faster permitting than Dallas, so competitive bidding is realistic. Three written bids, references from recent Fort Worth clients, and a clear written scope of work prevent the most common project disputes. Humid subtropical with hail risk conditions and Texas code requirements both reward contractors with deep local experience over lowest-bid generalists.
| Factor | Fort Worth | National Avg |
|---|---|---|
| Avg Cost | $4,900-$11,000 | See national avg |
| Labor Index | 0.98 (2% below national average) | 1.00 baseline |
| Climate | Humid subtropical with hail risk | Varies |
| Permit Range | $50-$5,000 (by scope) | $50-$5,000 |
| State License Required | No state licensing | State varies |
Estimates based on RSMeans 2026 construction cost data, Angi True Cost Guide 2026, and US Bureau of Labor Statistics regional wage data for the Fort Worth MSA. Results are for informational purposes only.
Last updated: April 2026 · Fort Worth labor index: 0.98 (RSMeans)
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Fort Worth window replacement averages $4,900-$11,000 for a typical 15-window home in 2026. $330-$735/windows, impact-resistant for hail insurance discounts, Low-E for heat. Vinyl Low-E (the Fort Worth workhorse) is the price-performance leader. Impact-resistant vinyl is $750-$1,100 per window. Premium wood or composite runs $900-$1,400 per window.
Yes, essentially required for Fort Worth's 9-month cooling season. Low-E (low-emissivity) glass reflects infrared heat while transmitting visible light, reducing cooling bills 15-20%. For a typical $2,000 annual cooling bill, that's $300-$400 saved per year - payback on the Low-E upgrade premium in 7-12 years.
Same Hail Alley exposure as Dallas; Class 4 impact-resistant roofing increasingly required by insurers Impact-resistant glass costs 50-80% more than standard Low-E but earns 5-25% homeowner insurance discounts. For a typical $2,400 annual premium, that's $120-$600 saved per year - payback in 4-8 years through insurance savings alone, before considering avoided storm damage deductibles.
Yes. The federal Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit (IRS Section 25C) provides up to $600 per year in tax credits for qualifying Low-E windows, calculated as $200 per window. Energy Star certified products with U-factor 0.30 or lower typically qualify. Verify at energystar.gov before purchase.
Quality vinyl Low-E windows last 20-30 years in Fort Worth. Wood lasts 25-40 years with proper paint maintenance every 5-7 years. Fort Worth's UV exposure is hard on darker frames - lighter colors hold up longer. Specify warm-edge spacers and triple-seal weatherstripping for longest life.
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