Step-by-step fix
Step 1: Confirm this is the right repair
- Open the door partway and watch the loose hinge while you lift gently on the handle side of the door.
- Look for one screw that spins without tightening, backs out, or leaves the hinge leaf loose against the wood.
- Check whether the wood around the screw hole is only worn out, not split apart or crumbling away.
- If needed, snug the other hinge screws first so you know which hole is actually stripped.
If it works: You found a hinge screw hole that will not hold because the wood threads are stripped.
If it doesn’t: If the screw tightens normally, the problem may be hinge alignment, a bent hinge leaf, or loose screws somewhere else on the door.
Stop if:- The wood around the hinge is cracked through, soft from rot, or broken away enough that the hinge has no solid base.
- The door is so heavy or out of alignment that the hinge is pulling loose from multiple locations.
Step 2: Support the door and remove the loose screw
- Place a wedge, shim, or folded cardboard under the door if the hinge is carrying weight or the door is sagging.
- Remove the stripped screw from the loose hinge hole.
- If the hinge leaf springs away from the wood, hold it flat by hand so you can work on the hole cleanly.
- Clear out loose sawdust, broken wood fibers, and old filler from the hole with the screw tip, a small bit, or the knife point.
If it works: The stripped hole is exposed, clean, and ready to be rebuilt.
If it doesn’t: If the screw head is stripped and you cannot remove it, back up and deal with the damaged screw first before repairing the hole.
Stop if:- The hinge leaf is bent, cracked, or pulling out because the mortise area itself is broken.
- Removing the screw causes the door to shift suddenly and you cannot support it safely by yourself.
Step 3: Pack the hole with glued wood
- Apply a small amount of wood glue into the stripped hole.
- Push in wooden toothpicks, wood slivers, a golf tee, or a snug dowel until the hole is tightly packed.
- Tap the filler in gently with a hammer so it reaches the back of the hole and feels solid.
- Wipe away excess glue from the hinge area.
- Trim the filler flush with the surface so the hinge leaf can sit flat again.
If it works: The old screw hole is filled with solid wood and the hinge can lie flat over it.
If it doesn’t: If the filler stays loose, remove it and repack the hole more tightly with additional wood before moving on.
Stop if:- The hole has become oversized enough that the hinge screw location is too close to a split edge or broken-out section of wood.
- The surrounding jamb or door stile flexes or crumbles when you pack the hole.
Step 4: Let the repair set, then make a pilot hole
- Give the glue time to grab so the filler does not twist out with the screw. A longer wait gives a stronger repair.
- Hold the hinge leaf in place over the repaired spot.
- Drill a small pilot hole centered where the screw belongs, especially if the hole is packed tightly or you used a solid dowel.
- Keep the pilot hole smaller than the screw threads so the screw can still bite firmly.
If it works: The repaired area is set up and ready for the screw without splitting the new wood filler.
If it doesn’t: If you do not have a drill, you can carefully start the screw by hand, but stop if it begins to wander or split the repair.
Stop if:- The hinge no longer lines up with its original screw location because the door or jamb has shifted significantly.
- The repaired area splits while making the pilot hole.
Step 5: Reinstall the screw and tighten the hinge
- Drive the screw back into the repaired hole until the hinge leaf pulls snug to the wood.
- Tighten the other screws on that hinge so the load is shared across the whole leaf.
- If the original screw is short and the hinge is on the jamb side, you can often improve holding power with a longer screw that reaches solid framing, as long as it fits the hinge and clears everything behind it.
- Do not overtighten. Stop when the hinge is firm and the screw head seats cleanly.
If it works: The screw tightens firmly and the hinge leaf sits flat without wobble.
If it doesn’t: If the screw still spins, remove it and rebuild the hole again with a tighter wood fill or step up to a properly fitting longer screw where appropriate.
Stop if:- The screw will not tighten because the wood behind the hinge is stripped deeper than a simple surface repair can fix.
- The hinge leaf will not sit flat because the mortise is damaged or the hinge is bent.
Step 6: Test the door in real use
- Open and close the door several times at normal speed.
- Watch for sagging, rubbing at the top corner, or a latch that no longer lines up.
- Check the repaired screw again after a few cycles to make sure it stayed tight.
- If the door was badly sagging before, recheck all hinge screws, not just the repaired one.
If it works: The door swings smoothly, the hinge stays tight, and the repair holds during normal use.
If it doesn’t: If the door still rubs or drops, the root problem may be additional loose hinges, worn hinge mortises, or frame movement that needs a larger repair.
Stop if:- The repaired screw loosens again almost immediately.
- The door frame or hinge area moves enough to suggest hidden structural damage rather than a simple stripped hole.
FAQ
What can I use to fill a stripped hinge screw hole?
Wood toothpicks, wood slivers, a golf tee, or a small wood dowel with wood glue all work. The key is packing the hole tightly with real wood so the screw has something solid to bite into.
Can I just use a longer screw instead?
Sometimes, especially on the jamb side, a longer screw can reach solid wood behind the hinge. It still needs to match the hinge hole well, and it should not be so long that it causes damage behind the frame.
Do I need to remove the whole hinge?
Usually no. For one stripped hole, you can often remove just the loose screw, support the door, and repair that hole with the hinge leaf still nearby. If access is tight, removing the hinge leaf screws may make the job easier.
How long should I wait before reinstalling the screw?
Long enough for the glue to grab so the filler does not spin with the screw. A short wait may work for a light repair, but a fuller cure usually gives a stronger hold.
Why does the screw keep stripping again?
Usually because the hole was not packed tightly enough, the screw was overtightened, or the door is putting extra stress on that hinge from sagging or frame movement. Fixing the stripped hole helps, but the repair lasts longer when the door is aligned and the other hinge screws are tight.