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Window Replacement Cost in Phoenix (2026)

Sunny Park founded WindowQuoteGuide and researches replacement-window pricing across U.S. markets, turning contractor quotes and public cost data into plain-English guides homeowners can actually use.

Quick answer: Phoenix homeowners pay $500–$1,000 per window installed; a 10-window home runs $5,000–$9,500. In the desert the glass coating matters more than the frame: look for a Solar Heat Gain Coefficient of 0.25 or lower. A quality Low-E coating can cut cooling bills 15–25% — real money where AC runs eight months a year.

Illustration of a Phoenix home with local landmarks
Cost per window across 6 US metros (2026)
Phoenix is highlighted (gold). Same standard vinyl double-hung, installed.
$0$500$1,000$1,500Dallas$550–$900Albuquerque$500–$950Phoenix$500–$1,000Seattle$650–$1,150Chicago$700–$1,100Miami$650–$1,300
Phoenix is among the cheapest — the Low-E coating, not the frame, is where the money goes.

115 degrees changes the rules

Phoenix isn't Dallas-hot, it's another category of hot. When the wall thermometer hits 115°F, ordinary double-pane glass lets the sun pour in like an open oven door. This is the one city where Low-E coating isn't an upgrade — it's the whole point. Cheap builder glass here is a decision you'll regret every single afternoon from May to October.

A southwestern adobe home in Phoenix under bright desert sun, with saguaro cacti and the Superstition Mountains behind it
A classic Phoenix adobe — sun-baked and beautiful, but decades of 115°F afternoons are brutal on older single-pane windows.

At 115°F, cheap glass is a decision you regret every single afternoon.

In the desert, the glass coating is the whole game. See your Phoenix number.

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What to actually ask for

Look for a low Solar Heat Gain Coefficient (SHGC) — 0.25 or lower is ideal for Phoenix. That number tells you how much of the sun's heat the glass blocks. A quality Low-E coating with argon fill is doing the heavy lifting in the desert; the frame material matters less here than almost anywhere else in the country (though vinyl still beats heat-conducting aluminum).

What the swap feels like

The blast of heat when you walk past the sliding door? Gone. The blinds you've kept shut since spring just to survive the afternoon? You can actually open them and see your yard again. And the west rooms stop being no-go zones from 3 to 7 p.m.

The cooling-bill math

Phoenix cooling bills are among the highest in the country, and windows are a major leak point. Upgrading old single-pane or worn double-pane glass to modern Low-E can cut cooling costs 15–25% — in a city where you run AC eight months a year, that adds up fast.

How Phoenix compares

MetroPer window10-window projectMain cost driver
Dallas$550–$900$5,000–$9,000Low Texas labor costs
Albuquerque$500–$950$5,000–$9,000High-desert sun; security
Phoenix$500–$1,000$5,000–$9,500Desert heat; Low-E coating
Seattle$650–$1,150$7,000–$11,000Damp climate; security
Chicago$700–$1,100$8,000–$11,000Labor + cold-climate glass
Miami$650–$1,300$7,000–$14,000Mandatory hurricane glass

Frequently asked questions

How much does window replacement cost in Phoenix?
Phoenix homeowners pay $500–$1,000 per window installed; a 10-window home runs $5,000–$9,500. In the desert, the glass coating matters more to cost and performance than the frame.
What SHGC should Phoenix windows have?
Look for a Solar Heat Gain Coefficient (SHGC) of 0.25 or lower. That number tells you how much of the sun's heat the glass blocks — the key spec in the desert.
Do new windows lower cooling bills in Phoenix?
Yes. Upgrading old single-pane or worn double-pane glass to modern Low-E can cut cooling costs 15–25% — significant where you run AC about eight months a year.
Does frame material matter in Phoenix?
Less than almost anywhere else — the Low-E coating and argon fill do the heavy lifting. That said, vinyl still outperforms heat-conducting aluminum frames.

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Averages are a starting line, not a quote. Our free calculator adjusts for your Phoenix ZIP, window count, and type in about 60 seconds — no email, no phone

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WindowQuoteGuide is an independent cost-information resource. Estimates are based on published regional installation averages and are for general guidance only. If you request quotes through our site, we may receive compensation from partner networks — this never affects the price you pay.

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Cost figures in this guide are compiled from publicly available 2026 U.S. pricing data — including ENERGY STAR, the U.S. Department of Energy, and national contractor cost guides (HomeAdvisor / Angi True Cost) — and are intended for planning only. Prices vary by region, brand, and installation method; always collect 2–3 local quotes.