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Window Resealing Services
Water finds every crack it can, and once it gets behind your window seal, the damage starts adding up fast.

Keep Water Where It Belongs
Window seals fail. The caulk cracks, the sealant shrinks, gaps open up between the frame and your wall. Then rain gets in, rot starts, and what began as a small maintenance issue turns into a structural repair.
Windows For Life handles window resealing throughout Nashville, Gallatin, Hendersonville, Mount Juliet, and across Tennessee. We remove old, failed sealant and apply fresh, weather-resistant materials that actually keep water out. Proper sealing protects your windows, your walls, and everything behind them from moisture damage.
Most homes need window resealing every 10-15 years. Sometimes sooner if the original installation was rushed or low-quality materials were used. Exterior sealant gets hit with sun, rain, temperature swings, and wind-driven debris. It deteriorates. The question isn’t if it’ll fail, but when.

Key Benefits
- Complete removal of old, failed sealant
- Protection against water infiltration
- High-quality exterior-grade caulk and sealants
- Prevention of rot and structural damage
- 5-year warranty
- Experience sealing all window types and materials
Signs Your Windows Need Resealing
- Caulk lines are cracked, shrunk, or missing entirely. Walk around your house and look at every window. If the caulk looks bad, it's not working.
- Paint is peeling or bubbling near windows. Water trapped behind paint causes this. The water is getting in through failed seals.
- Water stains appear on interior walls below or beside windows. By the time water shows inside, it's been leaking for a while.
- You feel drafts around closed windows even with good weatherstripping. Exterior seal failure lets air bypass the weatherstripping entirely.
- Daylight is visible around the window frames when looking from inside. If light gets through, water and air get through too.
- Wood trim feels soft or spongy when pressed. This is rot from prolonged water exposure. The seal has been failing for months or years.
Sealant Materials That Actually Last
Not all caulk is equal. Hardware store tubes of generic caulk might be fine for interior trim. They fail fast on exterior windows.
- Polyurethane Sealant
Flexible, durable, paintable, and handles UV exposure well. It adheres strongly to most materials and lasts 20+ years when properly applied. This is our default choice for most window sealing projects. - Silicone Sealant
Extremely flexible and waterproof with excellent longevity. It handles temperature extremes without cracking. The downside is it's not paintable and doesn't stick to some surfaces without primer. We use it where flexibility is critical and painting isn't required. - Acrylic Latex Caulk
Paintable and easy to work with but less durable than polyurethane or silicone. It's fine for interior use or protected exterior areas. Not our first choice for exposed window seals. - Butyl Rubber Sealant
Used mainly for metal-to-metal or metal-to-glass applications. It stays flexible indefinitely and adheres well to non-porous surfaces. Common on aluminum and vinyl windows. - Hybrid Polymer Sealants
Combines benefits of different chemistries. Flexible like silicone, paintable like acrylic, and durable like polyurethane. Premium option that costs more but performs excellently.
We match the sealant to your specific window material, climate exposure, and aesthetic requirements. Using the right material matters more than people realize.
Resealing Different Window Materials
| Window Material | Common Seal Points | Best Sealant Type | Special Considerations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vinyl | Frame to siding, trim joints | Polyurethane or hybrid | Vinyl expands/contracts significantly; requires high flexibility |
| Wood | All perimeter edges, trim joints | Polyurethane or acrylic | Paint compatibility important; sealant must protect porous edges |
| Aluminum | Frame to brick/siding, glass to frame | Butyl rubber or silicone | Metal conducts temperature extremes; requires strong adhesion |
| Fiberglass | Frame perimeter, trim joints | Polyurethane or hybrid | Similar to vinyl but very stable; handles UV exposure well |
| Brick Mold Trim | All joints and nail holes | Polyurethane | Must seal nail penetrations to prevent water tracking behind trim |
How Window Resealing Works
Step One: Removal and Prep
We cut out all old, failed sealant completely, clean surfaces thoroughly to bare material, and allow surfaces to dry if moisture is present.
Step Two: Application
We apply backer rod in deep gaps for proper joint depth, lay fresh sealant in continuous beads, and tool the sealant to proper profile for water shedding.
Step Three: Curing and Inspection
We verify complete coverage at all vulnerable points, allow proper cure time before painting if needed, and inspect for any missed areas or imperfections.
The Right Way to Remove Old Sealant
Old sealant removal takes more time than applying new sealant. It’s also more important than most people realize.
We use utility knives, scrapers, and specialized removal tools to cut and pry out old caulk. Everything has to come out. Leaving even small amounts of old material compromises the new seal.
Some old sealants come out easily. Others are bonded so well they fight every inch of the way. Silicone is particularly difficult to remove completely.
After mechanical removal, we clean surfaces with appropriate solvents to remove residue. Then we inspect closely for any remaining contamination that could prevent good adhesion.
This prep work isn’t glamorous but it determines whether the new seal lasts two years or twenty years.
See Our Work
10,000+ windows installed
10,000+ doors installed
13+ years in business






What Customers Say
Susan Morse
Nathan represented his company and Andersen Windows in a very professional courteous and friendly manner. His work on my installation project was awesome. I love my new windows and doors. Nathan treated me with respect and also respected my property.
I have been cheated before but this time I feel like I got my money’s worth. Punctuality is important but so is how an installer leaves the site for the night. Anything that was started on a particular day was sealed before he left. When my project was completed he showed me how to operate my windows and doors.
He addressed questions and concerns all during my project. Not everyone in his business calls back to see how things are going. Nathan did….Thank you Nathan for making this project a positive experience.
s
Sheila Baranowski
Our front window broke in the inside track. It was unusable. Our patio french doors was leaking air. The insulation was very poor and the door had to be slammed to shut correctly.
We called Windows for Life. Nathan came out and showed what he could do and showed us the quality of the product. I also wanted to keep the the job local and with a small business plus wantedgood communication between us and contractor.
Nathan fit all our needs. Our window and doors were ordered and came sooner then we expected. Nathan came and installed our doors and windows personally. Great service . Great product. 100% satisfaction !
Preventing Future Seal Failure
- Inspect window seals annually. Look for cracks, gaps, or areas where the sealant has pulled away from surfaces. Catching small failures early lets you spot-repair instead of resealing everything.
- Keep gutters clean and downspouts directing water away from your house. Excessive water flowing over windows accelerates sealant deterioration.
- Trim vegetation away from windows. Branches rubbing against trim abrade sealant. Leaves and debris holding moisture against seals promote failure.
- Paint wood trim regularly. Paint protects the wood and the sealant. Let paint fail and moisture attacks both.
- Address roof leaks immediately. Water from above gets behind window seals from the top. No amount of good sealing at the sides and bottom stops water cascading down from a roof leak.
Frequently Asked Questions

We provide window resealing services across Nashville, Gallatin, Hendersonville, Mount Juliet, and surrounding Tennessee communities. The climate here is tough on exterior sealants. Hot, humid summers and periodic winter freezes stress materials. Heavy rain tests seals repeatedly.
Whether you live near Percy Warner Park or enjoy the scenery around Old Hickory Lake, you know Tennessee weather doesn’t take it easy on your home. Your window seals need to handle everything nature throws at them.

Nathen Kemper
Protect Your Investment
Water damage from failed window seals costs thousands to repair. Resealing costs a fraction of that and prevents the damage entirely. Call us at (615) 861-2315 or contact us here to schedule an inspection.
Windows For Life has resealed windows on homes throughout Tennessee for years. We remove old material completely, we use sealants rated for this climate, and we apply them properly so they last. Read more about our window services and keep water where it belongs, outside your walls.