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Hurricane Shutter Maintenance Guide
Maintenance Guide · 2026

Hurricane Shutter Maintenance Guide The Annual Checklist That Keeps Your Shutters Ready

Hurricane shutters are a significant investment — and like any mechanical system in a salt-air coastal environment, they require regular maintenance to perform when you need them most. A shutter that binds, sticks, or fails during a storm evacuation is worse than no shutter at all. Here is the complete annual checklist.

Quick summary

Hurricane shutters are a significant investment — and like any mechanical system in a salt-air coastal environment, they require regular maintenance to perform when you need them most. A shutter that binds, sticks, or fails during a storm evacuation is worse than no shutter at all. Here is the complete annual checklist.

When to Do Your Maintenance

When to Do Your Maintenance

The best time to maintain hurricane shutters is April — one month before hurricane season begins on June 1. This gives you time to identify problems, order parts, and schedule any professional repairs before the season starts.

A minimum annual maintenance schedule:

  • April — full operational test, lubrication, visual inspection
  • October — post-season inspection, clean and re-lubricate after storm season use
  • After any storm deployment — inspect tracks and hardware, clean salt deposits, test operation
Accordion Shutter Maintenance Checklist

Accordion Shutter Maintenance Checklist

  • Test full operation — pull each accordion panel fully across its opening and latch it. It should move smoothly without binding. Open fully and verify it folds back cleanly into its stacked position.
  • Lubricate the track — use dry silicone spray (not WD-40, which attracts dirt and corrodes aluminum) in the top and bottom tracks. Run the shutter through full travel after lubricating to distribute.
  • Inspect the blades — look for bent, cracked, or corroded blades. A single damaged blade can prevent the shutter from latching properly.
  • Check the latches — every latch should engage and disengage cleanly. A latch that is stiff, corroded, or difficult to operate under calm conditions will be impossible to operate in wind.
  • Inspect track mounting — check that top and bottom track screws are tight and that the track has not pulled away from the wall or frame. Salt air corrodes fasteners over time.
  • Clean salt deposits — wipe down all aluminum surfaces with a damp cloth to remove salt buildup. Salt accelerates corrosion significantly in coastal environments.
  • Check bottom sweep — the rubber sweep at the bottom of the stacked accordion should seal against the sill. Replace if cracked or compressed.
Roll-Down Shutter Maintenance Checklist

Roll-Down Shutter Maintenance Checklist

  • Test full operation — run each shutter fully down and fully up. It should travel smoothly without hesitation, noise, or binding at any point in travel.
  • Lubricate side channels — dry silicone spray in both side guide channels. Run the shutter through several cycles to distribute.
  • Test manual override — locate the crank or pull cord for each shutter and test it annually. Do not wait until a power outage during a storm to discover the override is seized.
  • For motorized shutters — test remote and wall switch — replace remote batteries annually. Test both the remote and the wall switch independently.
  • Check motor limit switches — the shutter should stop automatically at the fully open and fully closed positions without running past them. If it overshoots or stops short, the limit switches need adjustment.
  • Inspect bottom bar and end caps — the bottom bar should make even contact with the sill when fully closed. End caps should be intact and seated.
  • Clean housing box — remove the housing access panel and clear any debris, bird nests, or wasp nests from the coil housing annually.
  • Check electrical connections — for motorized shutters, visually inspect the wiring at the motor head for corrosion or rodent damage.
Storm Panel Maintenance Checklist

Storm Panel Maintenance Checklist

  • Inventory all panels — count every panel and match to your opening list. A missing panel before storm season is a problem you want to know about in April, not August.
  • Inspect for damage — check each panel for bends, cracks (polycarbonate), or corrosion (aluminum). A damaged panel that fails to seal properly provides false security.
  • Test the tracks — install one panel in each track and verify it slides in and out smoothly. Clean and lubricate tracks with dry silicone spray.
  • Check fasteners — wing nuts, bolts, and clips should be present and functional. Replace any missing or stripped fasteners before season.
  • Check track mounting — verify all track screws are tight and tracks are not pulling away from the wall.
  • Storage inspection — panels should be stored flat or vertically on dedicated racks to prevent warping. Stacked panels stored improperly develop curves that prevent proper installation.
  • Practice a full deployment — once per year, install all panels on one full opening and time yourself. Pre-season is when you discover the panels are harder to mount than you remembered.
Impact Window Maintenance Checklist

Impact Window Maintenance Checklist

  • Inspect the glazing compound — look for cracking, peeling, or separation of the glazing compound around the glass perimeter. Compromised glazing allows water infiltration and reduces impact resistance over time.
  • Inspect the frame welds and corners — aluminum frame corners should be solid with no cracks or separation. A cracked frame weld can compromise the window's structural rating.
  • Check all hardware — locks, handles, and hinges on impact windows and doors should operate smoothly. Lubricate with silicone spray annually.
  • Look for delamination — impact glass is a laminated product. Look for bubbling, clouding, or separation between the glass layers — these indicate delamination and loss of impact resistance.
  • Test seals and weatherstripping — close each window and check for air or water infiltration at the edges. Deteriorated seals reduce energy efficiency and may allow water intrusion during storms.
  • Clean with appropriate products — use only non-abrasive, non-ammonia cleaners on impact glass. Ammonia-based cleaners can deteriorate the interlayer film over time.
When to Call a Professional

When to Call a Professional

Call a licensed shutter contractor for:

  • Any shutter that binds, sticks, or will not complete full travel after lubrication
  • Track that has pulled away from the wall or shows significant corrosion
  • Motor that runs but shutter does not move, or makes grinding sounds
  • Limit switches that are misaligned or stop the shutter at the wrong position
  • Any blade, slat, or panel that is bent, cracked, or structurally compromised
  • Impact glass that shows delamination or cracking

A full professional service call — cleaning, lubrication, operational adjustment, hardware tightening — typically runs $150–$300 per property. Annual professional service is recommended for motorized systems and any system over 7 years old.

Use our installer directory to find licensed shutter service contractors in your area.

The scenarios below are illustrative composites based on documented market patterns, FEMA post-storm data, and OIR wind mitigation discount schedules. They represent realistic outcomes, not specific individuals.

Collier County — The Accordion That Jammed on June 1

Robert had accordion shutters on his Naples home — installed in 2015, never serviced. In June 2020, with Tropical Storm Cristobal in the Gulf, he went to close his shutters for the first time in three years. Six of the eight shutters closed smoothly. The seventh bound halfway across the opening, then stuck. The eighth's bottom latch was corroded beyond operation.

Robert called three shutter service companies. None could come out within 48 hours — it was early June and service calls had spiked as storm season opened. He found a contractor who could come in four days. By then, Cristobal had tracked west and threatened Mississippi, not Naples.

The service call found: salt corrosion on four latch mechanisms, grit buildup in two bottom tracks, and a bent blade on the shutter that had stuck. Remediation cost $480. 'Five years, no service, and I found out on June 1,' Robert said. 'I was lucky the storm went west. I'm on a maintenance schedule now.'

What this means for your home: Shutter maintenance calls spike in May and June as storm season opens and homeowners discover problems for the first time. Schedule your annual service call in March or April — when contractors have availability and you have lead time to address any problems found. A shutter that jams during a storm watch is not discoverable at a convenient time. Discover it in the off-season.

Pinellas County — The Roll-Down That Corroded From the Inside

Sandra's motorized roll-down shutters had been operating flawlessly since installation in 2017 — until May 2022, when a routine operation test revealed one shutter descending unevenly, with the left side leading the right by several inches before the motor struggled to equalize. She called a service technician.

The technician opened the housing box and found significant corrosion on the coil assembly — the aluminum slats had oxidized where they contacted the steel coil spring mechanism inside the housing. Salt air had entered the housing through gaps in the end caps and condensed on the interior steel components over several years. The corrosion had created uneven friction between the coil layers.

Remediation: full coil disassembly, corrosion treatment, and reassembly — $840. The technician noted that applying a dry silicone spray to the interior coil surfaces annually — accessible through the housing access panel — would have significantly slowed the corrosion process. 'Five years, the outside looked fine,' Sandra said. 'Nobody ever opened the housing. That's where the problem was developing.'

What this means for your home: Roll-down shutter housings should be opened and inspected annually — not just operated from outside. Remove the access panel, inspect the coil assembly for corrosion, clear any debris or pest intrusion, and apply dry silicone spray to the coil surfaces and side guide channels. This 20-minute annual task prevents the internal corrosion that develops invisibly and produces the dramatic failures that occur at the worst possible moments.

Lee County — The Manual Override Test That Revealed the Problem

When Michelle began doing annual maintenance on her Fort Myers rental properties in spring 2022, she added a new step: testing the manual override on every motorized shutter at every property. At one property, the crank for the living room roll-down hadn't been used in four years.

The crank was in a drawer in the garage — she found it. But when she inserted it into the motor shaft and attempted to turn it, it wouldn't move. The motor's brake mechanism — which disengages to allow manual operation — had seized from corrosion. The shutter could not be operated manually.

A technician freed the brake mechanism and serviced it for $220. When Hurricane Ian made landfall five months later in September 2022, that property was in Lee County's impact zone. The tenants had evacuated. Michelle had property managers close the motorized shutters remotely. The power went out before all shutters were confirmed closed — but because the manual override was now functional, her property manager was able to manually close the one shutter that hadn't received the remote signal. Interior damage: zero.

What this means for your home: Testing the manual override is not optional maintenance — it is the test that tells you whether your backup plan works. Test every motorized shutter's manual override annually. Insert the crank, disengage the brake, and lower the shutter manually to full closure. If the mechanism won't engage or is difficult to operate, have it serviced immediately. The override exists for exactly the moment when you need it most — when the power is out and the storm is coming.

Sources: NHC Tropical Storm Cristobal 2020; Florida shutter contractor service call volume data; Lee County post-Ian property damage assessments; Florida manufactured home manufacturer maintenance bulletins.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What lubricant should I use on hurricane shutters?

Use dry silicone spray — available at any hardware store under brands like WD-40 Specialist Silicone, 3-In-One Silicone, or similar. Do NOT use standard WD-40, motor oil, or petroleum-based lubricants on aluminum shutter tracks — they attract and hold dirt, creating a gritty paste that accelerates wear and causes binding. Silicone spray leaves a dry film that lubricates without attracting contaminants.

How often do hurricane shutters need professional service?

For accordion shutters in good condition — every 2–3 years professionally, plus annual DIY lubrication and testing. For motorized roll-downs — annually professional service is recommended due to motor and electrical components. For storm panels — primarily homeowner-maintained, professional service when tracks or hardware need repair. For impact windows — every 3–5 years for professional inspection of glazing compound and seals.

My shutters passed inspection 5 years ago. Do I need to do anything now?

Yes — building code compliance at installation time does not guarantee current operational fitness. Five years of coastal salt air, thermal cycling, and potential storm use can significantly degrade hardware, tracks, and mechanical components. Perform the maintenance checklist for your product type and schedule a professional inspection if any issues are found.

☣️ Public Health Warning — After Any Hurricane

Waste bags at the curb spread E. coli, Leptospirosis, and Norovirus across entire neighborhoods through rainwater runoff, animal vectors, and children near debris piles. Double-bag all waste. Label it BIOHAZARD. Keep all children and pets away from every curb pile on your street — not just your own.

Full disease prevention guide — all 13 states →