
Motorized Screens: The Rise of Unqualified Motorized Screen Installers in Central Florida
Motorized Screens: Why Your Installer Might Be the Butcher, the Baker… or the Candlestick Maker
Motorized screens are everywhere right now. From luxury lanais in Central Florida to breezy beachfront patios, homeowners love the idea of bug-free evenings, shade from the Florida sun, and hurricane-rated protection. And truthfully, when they’re installed the right way, a motorized screen system can completely transform your outdoor living space.
The problem? In today’s gold-rush market, manufacturers will sell to just about anything with a pulse. That’s not an exaggeration. The person installing your expensive motorized screen could be the butcher, the baker… or the candlestick maker. The truth is, many manufacturers are more focused on moving product than making sure the people installing it have the skills to do it right. All it takes is a business license, a credit card, and a shipping address, and they’ll ship to anyone. No vetting. No technical test. No requirement for actual installation experience.
That should make every homeowner pause. Motorized screens aren’t simple plug-and-play gadgets. They demand precise measurements — even being a quarter-inch off can jam or tear the screen. They require proper anchoring to withstand Central Florida’s hurricane-force winds, careful surface preparation so the tracks run straight, and proper motor programming so the screen stops exactly where it should every time. Skip any of those steps, and you’ve got a $10,000 piece of hardware that fails the first time you use it — or worse, the first time the wind picks up.
The reality is that many “installers” aren’t in the screen business at all. They might be landscapers, pool service companies, fence crews, or general handymen who spotted a trending product on Instagram or Pinterest and saw dollar signs. Do they have the right tools? Sometimes. Do they understand the engineering and limitations of a hurricane-rated motorized screen? Rarely.
And here’s where the knife really twists: when a bad install fails, the manufacturer can — and often will — deny warranty coverage because of “improper installation.” So you end up caught between the guy who messed it up and the company that sold it to him in the first place. Neither one wants to take responsibility, and you’re the one left paying for the repairs or a full replacement.
Sponsor by Fenetex Motorized Screens:

The fix is obvious but unpopular. Manufacturers need to raise their standards. That means selling only to verified, trained installers with proven technical skills. It means requiring job audits for quality control. It means protecting the homeowner from bad installs instead of looking the other way. Until that happens, the responsibility falls on you to vet your installer like you’d vet a surgeon. Ask about their training, how they anchor their housings, how they prepare surfaces, and how they program motor limits. Demand to see photos of past jobs. If they can’t answer confidently, walk away.
Bottom line: Motorized screens are incredible when they’re installed by people who know what they’re doing. But when manufacturers will sell to anyone with a pulse, you might as well be hiring the butcher, the baker, or the candlestick maker to protect your patio.