Locally Manufactured in Texas

Window Company in Princeton, TX

Transforming your home starts with the right partner. We proudly serve as the trusted window company in Princeton, TX

GET A FREE ESTIMATE

Our Window Manufactoring Factory in Dallas, Texas

Statewide Energy Solutions proudly operates its own manufacturing facility in Texas, making them one of the few companies to build windows and doors locally for superior quality and performance.

Expert Window & Door Services Princeton, TX

Princeton is one of the fastest-growing cities in the state, an east Collin County town that has gone from quiet rural roots near Beauchamp Boulevard to a major new-construction boom in just over a decade. Statewide Energy Solutions works across the full Princeton footprint, from the small inventory of older homes around the historic Princeton Town Center to newer subdivisions like Whitewing Trails, Princeton Heights, Hunters Glen, Lakewood Trails, and Brookside Estates that have appeared almost entirely since 2015.

What sets our model apart in Princeton is in-house manufacturing combined with direct-employee installation. Every window we install is built at our own DFW plant, which lets us deliver a four to seven week lead time rather than the three to four months Princeton families often hear from national-brand dealers. Our W-2 crews are direct employees, not rotating subcontractors, and that continuity matters when one company stays accountable from measure through warranty.

Energy efficiency is the practical reason most Princeton homeowners reach out, even on homes less than ten years old. The builder-grade dual-pane vinyl installed during the boom met code but used the lowest-cost Low-E coatings available at the time. Upgrading the west and south elevations to a properly tuned high-performance Low-E package cuts the afternoon solar load that hits unshaded lots near Lavon Lake without mature tree cover.

Window Replacement in Princeton, TX

For window replacement in Princeton, TX, Statewide Energy Solutions handles the largely new-construction housing stock that defines this rapidly growing city. The framing in Whitewing Trails, Princeton Heights, Hunters Glen, and Lakewood Trails is sound and the openings are square, which means pocket installation is appropriate for the vast majority of projects. That keeps the on-site work fast and minimizes interior trim disruption.

The process starts with a free in-home measurement where we walk every elevation, identify which rooms drive the comfort complaints, and confirm whether the project is a full-house upgrade or a phased approach focused on the west and south elevations first. Manufacturing runs four to seven weeks at our DFW facility, with custom shapes for Hunters Glen entry transoms adding about a week.

On install day, W-2 crews work room by room, dry in each opening the same day, and clean up at the end of every shift. HOA architectural review for the newer Princeton subdivisions runs one to two weeks at the front of the project, and we handle the paperwork through our office.

Two men in casual clothing and caps are installing or adjusting a window frame from both the inside and outside of a house. One man is inside, the other is outside, with greenery visible through the window.

The Best Warranty in the Industry

Our full lifetime transferable warranty covers all labor, materials, glass breakage, screens, and caulking (ask for details).

Energy Efficient Windows & Doors

Our windows are engineered to improve energy efficiency, reducing energy costs while making your home more eco-friendly.

Variety and Customization

In addition to our proprietary windows, we work with over 20 other trusted manufacturers, offering a wide variety of styles, materials, and features.

Transform Your Home Today!

With decades of experience, award-winning service, and the highest-quality windows on the market, we’re the top choice for window replacement and manufacturing in the metroplex.

special promo until dec. 31st

40% OFF on Selected Services

Take advantage of our limited-time offer and save 40% on selected services. Don’t miss out, this special deal is only available until December 31st, so upgrade your home and enjoy big savings today.

Window Sales in Princeton, TX

Princeton homeowners working with our sales team get a straightforward in-home walkthrough of the options that genuinely fit their newer construction home and family budget. Many Princeton buyers are first-time homeowners learning the window category for the first time, and we cover frame chamber design, Low-E coating choices, grid patterns, and color options in plain language without the high-pressure tactics common in this market.

Every quote is itemized opening by opening, with no national-brand markup layered on top. Because we manufacture the windows ourselves at our DFW facility, custom configurations for Brookside Estates and The Ranch homes stay affordable, and qualified Princeton buyers can spread payment through financing programs designed to fit a phased upgrade strategy.

A spacious living room with large windows, a beige sofa, a small side table, a modern chandelier, tall curtains, and a fireplace with a mounted TV. The room is bright with natural light.

Frequently Asked Questions About Window Replacement in Princeton, TX

Princeton pricing is unusually consistent compared to most of the cities we serve, and the reason is that the housing stock is almost entirely brand new. The explosive growth that turned Princeton from a small town east of McKinney into one of the fastest-growing cities in the state has produced subdivisions like Whitewing Trails, Princeton Heights, Hunters Glen, Lakewood Trails, and Brookside Estates almost entirely within the last decade. For most Princeton homeowners we work with, the all-in cost lands somewhere between $475 and $1,200 per opening installed. A Whitewing Trails or Princeton Heights two-story with twenty-five openings typically sits in the middle of that range. The framing is sound, the openings are square, and we can pocket-install our double-pane Low-E windows efficiently. There are rarely complications behind the wall because the homes are still new enough that nothing has had time to fail or settle. Hunters Glen and Lakewood Trails homes with a few specialty shapes in the front elevation, like an arched transom over the entry or a small bay window in the breakfast room, will land slightly higher per opening because those custom units cost more to manufacture. Those projects still come in well under what comparable scope would run in Frisco or Prosper because the homes are typically smaller and have fewer total openings. The Ranch and Brookside Estates homes vary more depending on lot and elevation, but most fall in the same general range. The small inventory of older homes around the historic Princeton Town Center near Beauchamp Boulevard is a different conversation entirely, with smaller openings and lower total scope. We give written, itemized quotes in the home so you know exactly what is driving the price.

The on-site install time in Princeton typically runs one to three days for the vast majority of homes. A Whitewing Trails single-story with twenty openings is usually a one-day project. A Princeton Heights two-story with twenty-five openings and a couple of specialty shapes can stretch to two or three days, especially if scaffolding is needed for second-story work on the rear elevation. Manufacturing lead time is the bigger part of the timeline. Because we build our windows in-house in DFW rather than ordering from a national plant, we typically deliver custom units four to seven weeks after final measurement. That is meaningfully faster than the three to four months homeowners often hear from national brands that ship from the Midwest or East Coast. Custom shapes like the arched transoms common in Hunters Glen entries add about a week to fabrication but still move through our shop faster than a national supply chain. Brookside Estates and The Ranch homes deserve a note. Many of these neighborhoods are still under active construction with new sections going up, and we coordinate staging carefully to avoid blocking access for other trades or builder traffic. That coordination adds nothing to the timeline but it matters for how the project feels in a neighborhood that still has dump trucks and lumber deliveries moving through. Our W-2 employee crews work room by room, dry in each opening the same day, and clean up at the end of every shift. HOA architectural review for the newer Princeton subdivisions is usually a one to two week step at the front of the project, and we handle the paperwork as part of the scope. Homes near the historic Princeton Town Center have no HOA constraint, which simplifies scheduling for those projects.

The honest answer for most Princeton homes is a high-performance solar Low-E double-pane unit with argon gas fill and a warm-edge spacer, tuned specifically for the heavy summer solar load on the east side of US 75. Because virtually every Princeton subdivision is less than a decade old, the lots have essentially no mature tree canopy. Afternoon sun hits west-facing elevations in Whitewing Trails, Princeton Heights, and Hunters Glen directly with no shade buffer, and the right Low-E coating cuts that solar gain dramatically without darkening the glass. Many Princeton homeowners are first-time buyers attracted by lower prices than McKinney, which means budget conversations matter. The good news is that the upgrade from builder-grade dual-pane to our properly built Low-E spec is one of the highest-impact dollar-for-dollar comfort improvements available, and it does not require triple-pane to deliver meaningful change. Most of our Princeton customers go with double-pane on the bulk of openings and reserve any upgrade budget for the west and south elevations specifically. Triple-pane is available and makes sense in two specific Princeton scenarios. The first is bedrooms backing onto Princeton High School or the Princeton Sports Complex where Friday night Panthers events generate noise. The second is homes near US 380 where through-traffic carries. For most other Princeton openings, well-built double-pane is the right call, and the cost saved on glass can fund full-frame installation where it is warranted. Frame quality matters as much as glass. Our multi-chambered vinyl frames raise the whole-window U-factor in ways national brands often gloss over in their marketing. The spec sheet comparison usually surprises Princeton homeowners who have shopped national brands at a higher price point and assumed the cost difference meant a better product.

Yes, even in homes that are less than ten years old, and the reason is that builder-grade dual-pane windows installed during the Princeton construction boom were almost universally the lowest-cost option that met code. The dual-pane label is technically accurate but the glass coating, gas fill, and spacer technology in those builder units are not what a homeowner would choose if they were paying for it directly. The difference between that spec and a properly built solar Low-E unit shows up clearly on a Princeton summer electric bill. Homeowners in Whitewing Trails and Princeton Heights regularly report summer electric bill reductions of 10 to 20 percent after upgrading their west and south elevations to a higher-performance glass package. The savings are usually concentrated in the rooms that were already uncomfortable, which is also where the comfort change is most noticeable. A west-facing dining room near Lakewood Trails that was unusable at 4 p.m. in July becomes livable again, and the HVAC stops short-cycling trying to overcome the solar load. For the small inventory of older homes near the historic Princeton Town Center on Beauchamp Boulevard, the savings story is bigger because the starting point is worse. Those homes often have single-pane or early aluminum-frame dual-pane windows that leak conditioned air year round. A full replacement on those homes can change winter heating bills as dramatically as summer cooling bills. The comfort change is often the bigger story for Princeton homeowners. Indoor humidity stabilizes because the new seals actually seal. UV-driven fading on flooring and furniture slows down significantly. The HVAC stops short-cycling, which extends its service life. We do not promise specific dollar figures because every home is different, but we walk your home and tell you honestly what to expect from the upgrade.

They can qualify for a federal tax credit, which is more valuable than a deduction because a credit reduces your tax bill dollar for dollar rather than reducing taxable income. The relevant program for Princeton homeowners is the Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit, which gives you 30 percent of the cost of qualifying ENERGY STAR-certified windows, capped at $600 per year. To qualify, the windows must meet the ENERGY STAR Most Efficient or applicable regional criteria in effect for the year of installation, and the home must be your primary residence. Most of our standard Low-E double-pane packages qualify out of the box, and we provide the manufacturer certification statement and itemized invoice you need at tax time. For first-time buyers in Whitewing Trails or Hunters Glen who may be new to itemizing tax credits, we walk through what documentation to keep and when. For larger Princeton projects, especially a full replacement on one of the bigger Brookside Estates or The Ranch homes that might total twenty-five or more openings, the $600 annual cap matters. Some homeowners phase the project across two tax years, completing the front and west elevations in December and the back and east in January, to claim the credit in both years. We can sequence the install to support that strategy if it fits your situation. This is not tax advice and we are not your CPA. The rules and dollar caps have been adjusted multiple times since the credit was first introduced and could change again. Confirm current eligibility with your tax preparer before counting on a specific dollar figure, and keep our documentation with your tax records. Texas has no state income tax, so the federal credit is the primary financial incentive available to Princeton homeowners. We do not handle the filing itself.

We manufacture our own windows in our DFW facility. That puts us in a small minority of window companies serving Princeton. Most of the names you see on yard signs around Whitewing Trails or Princeton Heights are dealers reselling national brands like Pella, Andersen, or Milgard, which means they add a layer of markup, depend on a factory hundreds of miles away for lead times, and have to route warranty issues through a corporate parent. Manufacturing in-house means we control the spec, the lead time, and the warranty. When a Hunters Glen homeowner needs an arched transom matched to an existing entry profile, we build it. When a Lakewood Trails homeowner needs a bay window with a specific seat depth to clear interior trim, we build that too. We are not waiting on a national plant to slot the order into their production schedule. The cost story matters as well, and it matters more in Princeton than in higher-income markets because so many of our Princeton customers are first-time buyers managing a tight budget. By cutting out the dealer markup, we deliver an equal or better spec at a meaningfully lower price than most national brand bids Princeton homeowners receive. The savings are real and show up clearly on the itemized quote. That price difference often determines whether a project goes forward at all. The warranty story is the part most homeowners care about over the long term. If something fails on a window in a Brookside Estates home five years from now, you call us. We made it, we installed it, and we stand behind both. There is no finger-pointing between manufacturer and installer because they are the same company. That single point of contact is unusual in this market and drives most of our Princeton referrals as new families move into the rapidly expanding subdivisions.

We back our windows with a lifetime limited warranty on the product itself and a workmanship warranty on the installation. Because we manufacture the windows and install them with our own W-2 employee crews, both warranties trace back to a single company, which is the part that matters when something goes wrong years down the road. The product warranty covers seal failure, frame integrity, hardware function, and the glass package over the life of the window in the home. If a sealed insulating unit in a Whitewing Trails home develops fogging between the panes seven years from now, that is covered. If a balance system on a double-hung in a Princeton Heights home wears out, that is covered. The warranty is transferable to a future owner within defined terms, which matters in a market where many Princeton homeowners are first-time buyers who may move up in five to ten years. The workmanship warranty covers the install itself. Caulking, flashing, perimeter sealing, interior trim, and the integrity of the rough opening prep are all on us. If water shows up at an interior sill three winters after the install on a Hunters Glen home, we own the diagnosis and the fix. That is the part national-brand dealers struggle with because they did not do the install and the subcontractor crew that did is often long gone. Filing a claim is straightforward. You call our office, we send a service tech, we diagnose, and we fix. There is no escalation to a corporate parent in Iowa or Pennsylvania. For Princeton homeowners, especially those who plan to be in their home through the next twenty years of growth around Princeton High School and the expanding subdivisions east toward Lavon Lake, that single point of accountability is the most valuable line item on the paperwork. We also keep service records on file so future questions are easy to answer quickly.

Window Replacement in Princeton, TX

Princeton is one of the youngest housing markets we serve in Collin County. The city was a small rural town east of McKinney until about 2015, and the construction boom that has unfolded since then has turned it into one of the fastest-growing cities in the state. Subdivisions like Whitewing Trails, Princeton Heights, Hunters Glen, Lakewood Trails, The Ranch, and Brookside Estates have appeared almost entirely within the last decade, and the vast majority of homes we work on are 2018 or newer. The original Princeton Town Center near Beauchamp Boulevard retains a small inventory of older homes, but the bulk of the city is brand-new construction.

That housing profile shapes every window conversation we have in Princeton. The original builder windows are not failed yet for most homeowners, but the dual-pane spec was almost universally the lowest-cost option that met code. The glass coatings, gas fill, and spacer technology in those builder units are not what a homeowner would choose if they were paying for it directly. The upgrade conversation in Princeton is rarely about replacing failed windows and almost always about stepping up to a higher-performance Low-E for the elevations that need it most.

Many Princeton homeowners are first-time buyers attracted by lower prices than McKinney, Frisco, or Prosper. That demographic shapes how we approach projects. Budget matters more than in higher-income markets, and we are direct about which upgrades deliver the most comfort change per dollar and which are nice-to-have rather than need-to-have. A targeted upgrade of west and south elevations is often the right call, with a longer-term plan to address the rest later if needed.

Whitewing Trails is the largest single subdivision in our Princeton work, and the projects there follow a predictable pattern: twenty to thirty openings, standard sizes, sound framing, and a clear conversation about glass package upgrades. Princeton Heights and Hunters Glen are similar in scope but with more variety in front elevation design, including arched transoms and occasional bay windows.

Lakewood Trails and Brookside Estates are newer still, and some of those homes are within the original builder warranty period. We have done several projects there where homeowners chose to replace front elevation windows with a higher-grade spec while leaving the rest under warranty for the time being. From the historic Princeton Town Center to the newest subdivisions east toward Lavon Lake, we have installed windows across every part of the city.

What to Know Before Replacing Windows in Princeton, TX

The first thing to know about a Princeton window project is that the housing stock is unusually consistent. Almost everything is 2018 or newer, which means the openings are square, the framing is sound, and pocket installation is appropriate for the vast majority of projects. That keeps the on-site work fast and minimizes interior trim disruption. The flip side is that the original windows are still relatively young, so the conversation is almost always about upgrade rather than replacement of failed units.

The second thing to know is that the solar load in Princeton is heavy. The newer subdivisions have essentially no mature tree cover, and west-facing elevations on Whitewing Trails or Princeton Heights homes take direct afternoon sun with no buffer. That makes glass coating selection one of the most consequential choices in the project. A higher-performance solar Low-E package on the west and south elevations often delivers more comfort change than a uniform upgrade across the whole home, and it is often the right way to manage a budget-conscious project.

The third thing to know is that HOA architectural review applies in almost every subdivision. Whitewing Trails, Princeton Heights, Hunters Glen, Lakewood Trails, and Brookside Estates all have active architectural committees with rules about frame color, grid patterns, and exterior trim profiles. The approval process usually takes one to three weeks, and we handle the paperwork as part of the scope. Homes near the historic Princeton Town Center have no HOA constraint, which simplifies scheduling.

The fourth thing to know is that not all replacement windows are built equally. The marketing language used by national brands obscures real differences in frame chamber design, weld quality, glass spacer technology, and hardware durability. Because we manufacture our own windows here in DFW, we can walk you through exactly how our units are built and where the engineering choices were made. That transparency matters more in a market where many homeowners are first-time buyers learning the category for the first time.

The fifth thing to know is that lead time is shorter than you probably expect. Most Princeton homeowners shopping national brands hear three to four month lead times. Because we manufacture in-house, our standard lead time is four to seven weeks from final measurement to install. Custom shapes for entry transoms or bay windows add a week or two but still move faster than a national supply chain.

Finally, plan for the federal tax credit. The Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit gives 30 percent back up to $600 per year on ENERGY STAR-certified windows, and we provide the documentation you need at tax time. Phasing across two tax years is worth discussing with your CPA before you sign the contract.

Fill the Form to Get a Free Estimate

Contact us Today for a Free Estimate

Contact us today to learn more about our services or to schedule a consultation. Together, we’ll transform your home with windows that are as beautiful as they are functional.