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How to Repair a Wooden Window Frame – DIY Guide

Timber & Joinery Windows

How to Repair a Wooden Window Frame

DIY Guide

Stop rot and draughts for good with a solid, long-lasting timber repair.

Quick Answer

To repair a wooden window frame, cut out all rotten timber, treat the bare wood with a hardener, fill voids with a two-part wood filler, sand flush, prime, and repaint. The repair restores structural integrity, stops draughts, and protects against further decay.

Before: Repair a Wooden Window Frame
Before
VS
After: Repair a Wooden Window Frame
After
Difficulty Intermediate Time 3–5 Hours Cost £25–£60 Tools Needed Chisel Orbital sander Scraper Paintbrush Putty knife Sanding block Utility knife Dust mask Materials Epoxy wood hardener Two-part epoxy wood filler Exterior wood primer Exterior gloss or satinwood paint Coarse and fine abrasive paper Exterior decorators’ caulk Low-tack masking tape Lint-free cloths How To Step-by-Step Guide 1 Assess the Damage Thoroughly Press a bradawl or sharp screwdriver firmly into all areas of the frame — if it sinks more than a few millimetres, the timber is rotten and must be treated. Map the full extent of the decay before you do anything else; soft spots hidden under paint are easy to miss and leaving even a small patch of rot behind will cause the repair to fail within a season. Fix a Rotting Window Sill covers the same diagnostic process for the sill below.

2

Remove All Rotten and Loose Timber

Use a chisel and scraper to cut back every trace of softened or discoloured wood until you reach firm, sound timber all the way round. Do not be tempted to leave marginally soft wood in place — rot is caused by a fungal organism and any infected timber left behind will continue to spread under the new filler. Vacuum out all dust and debris, then wipe the area down with a lint-free cloth dampened with water and allow it to dry fully before moving on.

3

Apply Epoxy Wood Hardener

Brush two generous coats of epoxy wood hardener onto all exposed bare timber, including the back edges of any sound wood around the repair area, following the manufacturer’s open-time guidance between coats. The hardener penetrates the fibres, consolidates any residual weakness, and creates a chemically bonded key for the filler to grip. This step is the most commonly skipped — and the reason most DIY window frame repairs fail within two or three years. Allow the hardener to cure until it is no longer tacky before proceeding. For guidance on prepping and priming timber more broadly, see our Timber & Joinery Guide.

4

Fill the Void with Two-Part Epoxy Wood Filler

Mix the two-part epoxy filler on a scrap board according to the pack ratio — most products work at roughly 10:1 resin to hardener — and apply it firmly into the void with a putty knife, slightly overfilling to allow for sanding back. Work quickly: most two-part fillers have a pot life of five to fifteen minutes depending on ambient temperature, and you cannot remix a batch that has begun to cure. Shape the filler as close to the final profile as possible while it is still workable; the closer you get now, the less sanding you need later. Fill Gaps in Skirting Boards uses similar filler techniques if you want a primer on working with two-part products.

5

Sand, Prime, and Caulk

Once fully cured — typically 30 to 60 minutes — use coarse abrasive paper on a sanding block to rough-shape the repair, then switch to fine paper to blend it flush with the surrounding frame profile. Remove all dust, apply a coat of exterior wood primer to the bare filler and any surrounding bare timber, and allow it to dry fully. Run a thin bead of exterior decorators’ caulk along any joint between the frame and the surrounding masonry, tool it smooth with a wetted finger, and allow it to skin before painting. Caulking this junction is critical — water ingress at the frame-to-wall joint is the primary cause of rot in the first place.

6

Apply Topcoats and Inspect the Finish

Apply a minimum of two topcoats of exterior gloss or satinwood paint, allowing full drying time between coats as stated on the tin. Feather each coat slightly beyond the repair area so the new paint blends into the existing finish rather than leaving a visible edge. Once dry, inspect the frame from outside — look for any areas where the paint has not fully covered, any pin-holes in the filler that need a light touch of primer and a further topcoat, and check that all joints are sealed. For guidance on applying a clean, even finish to timber, see our guide on how to paint a front door, which covers exterior topcoat technique in detail.

Watch Out

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Skipping the Wood HardenerWithout hardener, filler bonds only to the surface of soft, compromised timber. Movement in the frame and residual moisture cause the filler to crack and lift within one to two winters, reopening the repair and accelerating the rot underneath.
Filling Before the Timber Is Fully DryEpoxy filler applied over damp timber traps moisture inside the repair. That moisture has nowhere to go, so it migrates outward, blistering the paint film and breaking the bond between filler and wood — often within a single season.
Leaving the Frame-to-Wall Joint UnsealedThe gap where the window frame meets the surrounding masonry is the main entry point for rainwater. Without exterior caulk in this joint, water tracks behind the frame, saturates the timber from the back, and triggers new rot regardless of how well the visible repair was done.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I repair a wooden window frame without replacing the whole unit?

Yes — provided the structural members (the main cill, head, and jambs) are still largely sound. Epoxy-based repairs on frames where the rot is localised are durable, paintable, and will outlast the surrounding timber if done correctly. Replacement is only necessary when the frame is rotten through its full depth or has structurally failed.

How do I know if the rot is too bad to repair?

If the frame has lost more than roughly a third of its cross-section to rot, or if rot has spread into the joints where two members meet, the frame should be replaced rather than repaired. A frame that flexes noticeably when you push it, or where a screwdriver sinks to its full depth in multiple places, is beyond a filler repair.

What is the difference between wood filler and epoxy wood filler for this job?

Standard cellulose-based wood fillers are water-based and relatively flexible — fine for interior repairs and small surface blemishes, but they absorb moisture outdoors and will crack and crumble within a year on an exterior frame. Two-part epoxy fillers are waterproof, extremely hard when cured, and bond chemically to primed timber, making them the correct choice for any external window repair. See our guide on how to prep and undercoat wood for more on choosing the right products.

How long will an epoxy window frame repair last?

A correctly executed repair — sound timber, hardener applied, filler fully cured, primed, and painted with at least two topcoats — should last ten years or more. The repair material itself is effectively inert; longevity depends on maintaining the paint film, which should be inspected and touched up every three to five years.

Do I need to tell my landlord or freeholder before repairing a wooden window frame?

In a leasehold flat, windows are commonly defined as part of the building structure in the lease, meaning repair responsibility may rest with the freeholder or managing agent — check your lease before doing any work. In a rented property, the landlord has a legal obligation to maintain the structure and exterior of the property under the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, so report the defect in writing rather than carrying out the repair yourself.

Pro Tip

When mixing two-part epoxy filler in cold weather (below 10°C), warm the resin component slightly in a pocket or indoors for ten minutes before mixing — cold resin dramatically extends cure time and produces a weaker, more porous repair. In summer, do the opposite: work in shade and mix smaller batches to stay ahead of the accelerated pot life.

Sources

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