Superior Windows and Doors

How to Boost Curb Appeal with New Doors and Trim

You have about seven seconds. That’s roughly how long it takes someone pulling up to your house – a potential buyer, a neighbor, even you after a long day – to form an impression of it. Seven seconds before any thought about square footage, kitchen countertops, or the finished basement enters the picture. The exterior does all the talking.

Here in the Twin Cities, that exterior takes a beating. Minnesota winters are not subtle. Freeze-thaw cycles, ice dams, and UV exposure in summer: your front door and trim are on the front lines of it all. So when they start to look rough, it shows. Faded paint, cracked casing, a door that’s swollen or sticking, these things don’t just look tired. They signal to observers (and the market) that the house isn’t being looked after. The good news is that upgrading your entry door and exterior trim is one of the highest-return investments you can make in a home, and it doesn’t require gutting your budget to do it right.

Start With the Door – It’s Doing the Most Work

The front door is the focal point of your home’s facade. Everything else, including shutters, siding, and landscaping, exists in relationship to it. When the door is strong, the whole exterior reads as intentional. When it’s weak, not much else can compensate.

The first question is material. Steel doors are the workhorses of the entry door world. They’re durable, affordable, and offer excellent insulation, a real consideration in our climate where January temperatures can dip below zero for days at a stretch. A good steel door with a polyurethane foam core can deliver an insulation value (R-value) in the neighborhood of R-5 to R-6, compared to R-2 or so for a solid wood door. That’s a meaningful difference when you’re running your furnace hard.

Fiberglass doors are the step up that many discerning homeowners choose. They resist denting and warping, they don’t need painting every few years, and the better ones convincingly mimic the look of real wood grain, without any of the maintenance headaches that come with actual wood. If you’ve ever watched a wood door swell and stick in a wet spring, or crack and split after a brutal winter, the appeal of fiberglass becomes obvious fast.

Then there’s color. This is where many people underestimate the impact they can create. The data on this is pretty clear: bold, well-chosen front door colors consistently increase perceived home value and accelerate sales. Deep navy, rich forest green, charcoal, and classic black are shades that create contrast against lighter siding and give a home a strong, composed identity. A muted sage green on a cream or gray house can feel welcoming without being loud. A glossy black door on a white colonial says “we have our act together” in a way that’s hard to explain but easy to feel.

The hardware matters too. You don’t need to spend a fortune, but you do need to be intentional. A brushed nickel handle set looks completely different from an oil-rubbed bronze one, and neither looks right on every door. Think of hardware as punctuation that finishes the sentence. Mismatched or cheap-looking hardware undercuts an otherwise strong door the way a typo undercuts a well-written letter.

Sidelights and Transoms: More Than Just Glass

If your entry door is the statement, sidelights and transoms are the supporting architecture that make the statement land. Sidelights, the narrow glass panels flanking a door, instantly create a more formal, substantial entrance. They pull natural light into your foyer and make the whole assembly feel like it belongs on a house of consequence rather than an afterthought.

A transom window above the door takes this further. Even a simple rectangular transom with divided lites elevates a plain entry into something that looks custom and considered. And because transoms admit daylight high up on the wall, they brighten your entry without sacrificing privacy, unlike a full glass sidelight.

If privacy is a concern, say, if your front door faces the street with little setback, there are decorative glass options that diffuse light beautifully without turning your foyer into a fishbowl. Frosted, rain, or obscure glass can be incorporated into sidelights and transoms in ways that look intentional rather than defensive.

Trim: The Detail That Defines Everything

Trim is where most curb appeal conversations stall out. And that’s a shame, because getting trim right is the difference between a house that looks sharp and one that just looks patched up. Think of exterior trim as the picture frame around every window, door, and corner of your home. When the frame is good, everything inside it looks better. When it’s rotted, painted over a dozen times, or simply the wrong profile, it drags the whole composition down.

The biggest practical question in trim is material. Traditional wood trim looks beautiful but demands maintenance in a climate like Minnesota’s. If you’re not committed to repainting every five to seven years, wood will start to show its age through cracking, peeling, and eventually rot around the joints where water intrudes. PVC trim eliminates that problem entirely. It doesn’t absorb moisture, it won’t rot, and it holds paint far longer than wood. It machines and installs much like wood, so a skilled crew can replicate traditional profiles without compromise.

LP SmartSide trim products are worth knowing about, too. Made from engineered wood with a strand-based composite construction and a factory-applied primer, LP trim combines the workability and authentic look of wood with dramatically improved resistance to moisture, impact, and fungal decay. For homeowners who want the warmth of a wood aesthetic without the maintenance contract, it’s a strong option.

When it comes to profiles and details, the wider, the more impactful. Standard 3.5-inch casing around windows and doors reads as minimal. Stepping up to five or six inches, or adding a back band to create a built-up look, introduces shadow lines and depth that make the house look more substantial from the street. If your home has any traditional or craftsman character at all, this kind of detail pays visual dividends that cost very little relative to the overall trim budget.

Color Coordination: Don’t Skip This Step

The color relationship between your siding, trim, and door is the single most important factor in how the exterior reads as a whole. Get it right, and even a modest home looks intentional and well-designed. Get it wrong, and expensive new doors and trim can still leave the house looking muddled.

The classic approach is a three-color scheme: a body color for the siding, a trim color (typically lighter or white), and an accent color for the door. This creates a clear visual hierarchy and lets each element do its job. A soft gray body with bright white trim and a deep red or navy door is a combination that has worked for a century because the logic behind it is sound; as contrast creates definition, and definition creates curb appeal.

More contemporary homes sometimes go tonal, varying shades of the same color family across siding, trim, and door, for a more sophisticated, monochromatic look. A charcoal body with dark gray trim and a near-black door can feel very sharp on a modern or transitional house. The risk is that if the tones are too similar, the exterior loses definition and appears flat from the street.

One practical note: color rendition varies significantly between manufacturers and sheen levels. What looks like a warm white in the paint store can appear almost yellow on a north-facing exterior in afternoon light. If you’re repainting trim to coordinate with a new door, test your samples on the actual surface before committing.

Don’t Forget the Garage Door

In some Twin Cities homes, the garage door accounts for 30-40% of the visible front facade. That’s not a detail; that’s a dominant design element, and if it’s a flat, builder-grade panel door painted to match the siding and hoping nobody notices, it’s costing you. A garage door upgrade, whether carriage-style panels, window inserts, or simply a color that coordinates intentionally with the entry door and trim, is one of the best-documented curb appeal investments available. It’s hard to spend money on a beautiful new entry door and then have a garage door that undercuts everything it’s trying to say.

The Whole Is Greater Than the Sum of the Parts

The biggest mistake homeowners make with exterior upgrades is treating them as isolated projects. A beautiful new door in a frame of rotted trim doesn’t look like an upgrade; it looks like a new door stuck in a rotted frame. New trim on a house with a worn-out entry door creates a similar mismatch. These elements work as a system, and planning them together produces results that look intentional rather than incremental.

At Superior Windows & Doors, we install Andersen entry doors and patio doors across the Twin Cities, and we know what works in this climate and in these neighborhoods, from classic colonials in Lakeville to craftsman bungalows in the south metro. Are you thinking about what a new door, updated trim, and a fresh exterior palette could do for your home’s curb appeal? Contact Superior Windows & Doors today to schedule your complimentary window consultation. We’re happy to take a look and tell you what we think.

A-frame home featuring dramatic floor-to-ceiling windows, a bold red entry door, and blue trim accents that maximize curb appeal.

Request a Quote Today!

Apply Now!

If you are looking for a professional Twin Cities door and window contractor, please call us today at 952-758-7507 (Metro Area)507-810-4170 (Mankato Area), or complete our online request form below.