Lights check sheet
Garage Door Opener Light Blinking
Blinking opener lights often mean a sensor, obstruction, or programming state needs attention.
Do not loosen, wind, unwind, or adjust torsion springs, extension springs, lift cables, drums, or bottom brackets. Use these checks for opener controls, sensors, remotes, lights, and simple observations.
Diagrams and printables
Most likely causes
| Likely cause | First safe check | Stop point |
|---|---|---|
| Blocked safety sensors | Check this before replacing parts or changing force settings. | Stop if the door is heavy, crooked, or the spring/cable system is involved. |
| Misaligned eyes | Check this before replacing parts or changing force settings. | Stop if the door is heavy, crooked, or the spring/cable system is involved. |
| Travel programming mode | Check this before replacing parts or changing force settings. | Stop if the door is heavy, crooked, or the spring/cable system is involved. |
| Door path obstruction | Check this before replacing parts or changing force settings. | Stop if the door is heavy, crooked, or the spring/cable system is involved. |
Step-by-step checks
Count blinks if the manual lists codes
Result: continue only if the door and opener respond normally.
Clear the doorway
Result: continue only if the door and opener respond normally.
Check both sensor LEDs
Result: continue only if the door and opener respond normally.
Look for loose sensor brackets
Result: continue only if the door and opener respond normally.
Exit programming mode before testing again
Result: continue only if the door and opener respond normally.
On the bench
Fresh remote battery, flashlight, soft cloth, step ladder, phone camera for blink patterns.
Stop and call
The door is heavy by hand, crooked, off track, has broken spring parts, or the opener strains without moving the door.
Reset note
Unplug the opener for 30 seconds only after noting lights or codes. Do not erase remote memory unless pairing is the actual problem.
Common questions
Should I bypass the safety sensors?
No. Sensors are a required safety system. Fix alignment, wiring, or obstruction instead.
Can I increase force to make the opener close?
Only after the door moves freely by hand and the sensor path is clear. Force changes should not hide a binding door.
Why does the wall button work but the remote does not?
That usually points to lock mode, remote battery, signal range, or lost programming rather than a failed motor.