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Commercial Glass Guide

Storefront glass: cleaning, inspection & when to replace

Storefront glass typically lasts 20–30 years with proper care. Here's how to extend that lifespan, what problems to look for, how to tell repair from replacement — and when to bring in a commercial glass crew.

Guide · 8 min read · Updated May 2026

Quick answer: Storefront glass typically lasts 20–30 years with proper cleaning and routine inspection. Insulated glass units (IGUs) generally hold their seal for 15–25 years before the inner cavity begins to fog. The two failures that end a piece of storefront glass early are impact damage (chips that grow into cracks) and seal failure on IGUs. Catch both early and you'll get the full lifespan.

This guide walks through everything a business owner or property manager needs to keep storefront glass looking right and lasting longer — the cleaning routine, what to inspect monthly, the common failures and what to do about them, when something repairable becomes a replacement, and when it's time to call us in.

What kind of glass is in your storefront

Before you can care for it, it helps to know what's actually in the frame. Three configurations cover the vast majority of commercial storefronts in NJ:

  • Tempered single-pane. The standard for most retail storefronts. Typically 1/4″ tempered safety glass set into aluminum framing. Strong, code-compliant for entry doors and side panels, and crumbles into small blunt pieces if it ever breaks.
  • Laminated. Two layers of glass bonded with a clear PVB interlayer. Used in high-traffic doorways, vestibules and anywhere a security or safety upgrade is wanted. If it breaks, the glass stays held together by the interlayer rather than falling out of the frame.
  • Insulated glass units (IGUs). Two panes of glass separated by a sealed spacer with dry air or argon between them. Common in mall storefronts, climate-controlled retail and modern commercial buildings. Big energy benefit — but the seal eventually fails and the unit fogs.

Many storefronts mix all three: tempered in the entry doors, laminated in the vestibule, IGUs in the larger fixed display panels. If you're not sure what you have, look at the manufacturer's etched stamp in a lower corner of each panel — it'll tell you the type.

Daily & weekly cleaning

Storefront glass is the first thing customers see. The cleaning routine doesn't need to be complicated, but it should be consistent.

  • Use pH-neutral cleaner. A diluted dish-soap solution or any commercial pH-neutral glass cleaner is ideal. Strongly acidic or alkaline cleaners can degrade tints and Low-E coatings over time.
  • Microfiber and a squeegee, not paper towels. Paper leaves lint behind and can scratch glass over the course of years. A microfiber cloth picks up smears; a quality squeegee finishes streak-free in seconds.
  • Top to bottom. Gravity is on your side — drips run down across glass you haven't cleaned yet.
  • Avoid: ammonia-based cleaners on tinted or coated glass. Window cleaners with ammonia (the blue stuff) can damage tints and Low-E coatings over time, which is the easiest way to ruin an expensive IGU. If you have any tinted or insulated glass, switch the whole front to a pH-neutral cleaner — it's simpler than trying to track which panel is which.
  • Avoid: abrasive pads and razor blades. Steel wool, scouring pads and razor blades on coated glass will scratch the coating permanently. If you must scrape a sticker, use a brand-new plastic blade and plenty of soapy water.
  • Avoid: harsh degreasers near the aluminum frame. Strong solvents can dull the anodized or painted finish on the frame. A pH-neutral wash and a wipe-dry is all the frame needs.

Weekly is enough for most storefronts. High-traffic doors, food businesses and ground-floor restaurants generally need a daily wipe at the door pulls and lower panels where hands and shoes leave marks.

Monthly inspection

Once a month, walk the storefront and look closely. Three minutes catches most problems early enough to deal with them cheaply.

  • Seals and gaskets. Run a finger along the perimeter of each panel. If the rubber gasket has shrunk back from the corners or feels dry and brittle, water and air are getting past it. Replace gaskets before they let water reach the IGU seal or the frame interior.
  • Corners and edges. Look for small chips, "spider crack" patterns, or any star-shaped impact mark — especially at the bottom corners where a key, a stroller wheel or a sign post tends to clip the glass. These start small and grow.
  • Aluminum frame. Check for white powdery oxidation (especially common on older anodized frames near the threshold), loose screws, or any visible separation between the frame and the building. Loose frames let water in.
  • The seal line on IGUs. If you see a faint dark band creeping in from the edges, or condensation inside the panel that doesn't wipe off, the seal has failed. Schedule an IGU replacement.
  • Door operation. A door that has started to drag or close inconsistently is usually a sign of a hinge or pivot wearing out. Address it before the door starts torquing the glass it's mounted to.

Pro tip: Put the monthly inspection on a recurring calendar event. Most storefront glass failures are obvious once you actually look — the issue is that nobody is looking.

Common storefront glass problems & fixes

Hazy or cloudy IGU

The cavity between the two panes of an insulated unit has gone milky or fogged. Cause: The edge seal has failed and moist outside air is now sitting between the panes. Fix: Replace the IGU. There is no way to dry out the cavity from the outside — the seal is bonded to both panes and the spacer.

Small chip near an edge

A nick, ding or tiny crater near the perimeter of a panel. Cause: Impact — a key, a piece of equipment, a sign. Fix: Don't ignore it. Glass under thermal stress (sun heating one half while the other half is in shade) routinely converts edge chips into propagating cracks. Small chips can sometimes be stabilized with resin if they're caught early. If the chip is anywhere near a mounting screw, the panel should be replaced.

Foggy condensation

Moisture inside an IGU that comes and goes with temperature swings. Cause: Same as hazy — failed seal. Fix: Replace the IGU. The seal failure is what's letting the moisture cycle in and out.

Large crack

A crack longer than about two inches, or a crack that's reached an edge. Cause: Impact, thermal stress on a pre-existing chip, building movement, or rarely a manufacturing defect surfacing. Fix: Immediate replacement. A large crack in storefront glass is a security issue (someone can complete the break with a fist) and a safety issue (tempered glass can shatter without warning once compromised). If we can't replace same-day, we'll board it up immediately.

Scratches

Surface scratches from a razor blade, a ladder edge, or abrasive cleaning. Cause: Usually maintenance damage. Fix: Light scratches on uncoated glass can sometimes be polished out by a glass shop. Anything on a coated panel (Low-E, mirrored, tinted) cannot be polished without damaging the coating; the panel should be replaced if the scratch is in a customer sightline.

When to repair vs. replace

The rule of thumb is shorter than most people expect.

  • Repairable: Small surface chips (penny-sized or smaller) more than a few inches from any edge or mounting screw — stabilized with resin.
  • Replace: Any crack longer than ~2 inches. Any chip near a screw or hardware mounting point. Any IGU haze, fog or condensation between panes. Any spider-crack impact pattern. Any panel that's been hit hard enough to leave a visible mark even if it looks "fine" — tempered glass can fail later from latent damage.

If you're not sure, call us. We'll come look and tell you straight — if it's repairable we'll say so, and if it isn't we'll explain why.

Storm and impact damage

North Jersey storefronts deal with a real storm season: winter ice storms with high wind that throws debris, summer thunderstorms with the occasional hail event, and the leftover wind from coastal nor'easters and tropical systems pushing inland from the shore. Two things tend to take out commercial glass:

  • Wind-driven debris. A branch, a sign, even a trash-can lid hitting an entry panel at speed will chip or crack tempered glass. Once it's chipped, the failure clock starts.
  • Thermal shock. Heavy snow piled against a south-facing panel that then gets bright winter sun creates a big temperature differential across the glass. Any pre-existing edge chip becomes a stress concentrator and can crack through.

Most commercial property insurance policies cover glass damage from storms and impact, often with a low deductible (commercial glass coverage is generally inexpensive to add). For storm-damaged storefronts we'll do a same-day site visit, board up the opening to keep your business secure, and turn around a tempered replacement in roughly a week from the day a quote is approved.

Code & safety reminders

A few specifics worth knowing for any NJ storefront:

  • Door panels require tempered safety glass. Any glazing in or adjacent to a door must be safety glass — either tempered or laminated. This is non-negotiable for both code and insurance.
  • High-traffic and security applications often spec laminated. Vestibule doors, schools, after-hours-visible storefronts in higher-crime corridors all benefit from laminated glass, which holds together when broken.
  • Full-height glass walls need visibility markings. Floor-to-ceiling glass partitions and storefronts require visual markers (decals, frit pattern, etched lines) at adult and child eye height per ADA and life-safety guidelines, to prevent walk-into accidents.
  • Replacement should match the original spec. If a panel was originally tempered, the replacement must be tempered. Laminated for laminated. The original glazing was specified by the building's permit drawings for a reason.

When to call AGM

If you see any of the following, give us a call — same day if it's a security or safety issue.

  • A chip, crack or impact mark on any storefront panel
  • Haze, fog or visible condensation inside an IGU
  • A door that's binding, dragging or no longer closing flush
  • Visible damage to gaskets, seals or the aluminum frame
  • Storm or vehicle impact damage — we'll come the same day, board up if needed, and turn around replacement glass typically within a week

We service commercial storefronts across Bergen County and North Jersey from our Lodi shop. See our commercial glass services page for the full scope, or jump straight to the contact form below for an estimate.

Need a storefront glass crew you can count on?

Emergency service, scheduled replacement, IGU swaps, gasket and frame work — we handle commercial glass across North Jersey.

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Good to Know

Frequently asked questions

Commercial storefront glass typically lasts 20–30 years with proper cleaning and routine inspection. Insulated glass units (IGUs) generally hold their seal for 15–25 years before the inner cavity begins to fog. Tempered and laminated single-pane glass can last much longer if it's not impacted or chipped along an edge.

A small chip near a corner or edge should not be ignored. Storefront glass goes through daily thermal stress as the sun moves across it, and a chip is a stress concentrator that can grow into a full crack under the right conditions — sometimes overnight. Small edge chips can often be stabilized with resin if caught early. Any crack longer than about two inches, or any chip near a screw, mandates replacement on safety grounds.

A true crack in storefront glass is not repairable — it requires replacement. Small chips and surface scratches can sometimes be stabilized or polished, but a propagating crack is a safety and security issue, especially in tempered glass, which can shatter without warning once compromised. Plan for replacement and, if needed, an emergency board-up to keep the storefront secure in the meantime.

Haze or fog inside an insulated glass unit means the edge seal has failed and moist outside air is now reaching the cavity between the two panes. Once that happens, the haze is permanent — there's no way to dry the cavity from inside the sealed unit. The fix is to replace the IGU. Causes include age (typical 15–25 year seal life), prolonged water sitting at the bottom of the frame, repeated thermal cycling, and impact damage to the spacer.

Yes. Accurate Glass & Mirror offers emergency commercial glass service across Bergen County and North Jersey. We can typically schedule a same-day site visit for board-up and assessment, with tempered storefront replacement usually completed within about a week from the day a quote is approved. Call (201) 460-1313 to start an emergency service request.

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