Hale vs PawPort
These solve two different jobs. Hale builds the pet door itself, custom-fit, mechanical, and made to last, with nothing to power, charge, or pair. PawPort adds an app and a motor to an opening you already have. Here is exactly when the door beats the gadget.
A real Hale Door Model install
The short answer
Which one is right for you?
Hale and PawPort aren't really rivals on the same axis. We build the door; PawPort adds control to a door you already have. Pick the one that matches the actual job.
Choose Hale if…
You are buying or replacing the pet door itself, and fit and reliability come first.
- A door that just works in a blackout, a dead router, or a missed firmware update, because there is nothing to power
- A precise custom fit for a large breed, a senior pet, or a multi-pet home, sized by width and shoulder height
- A wall, screen, in-glass, or kennel install, built for weather from the start
- A quiet mechanical flap, a lifetime frame warranty, and no tag your pet has to wear and charge
Choose PawPort if…
You want app control and per-pet access layered onto an opening you already like.
- You already have a pet door, like where it is, and mainly want to add control over it
- Per-pet access by collar tag, schedules, and a phone alert when something tries to get in
- Remote lock and unlock, activity tracking, and Alexa, Google, or Siri integration
- A pet that refuses to push any flap, and you want the door to open for it instead
It comes down to one question: are you buying the pet door, or a smart lock for one you already own? The rest of this page answers it.
The real difference
A built-in door vs an add-on system
This is the whole decision. A smart cover controls who gets through an existing hole. Hale is the hole, done right, built to your pet and your home and engineered for the weather.
Our philosophy: “build the right opening”
A custom mechanical pet door
A flexible clear PVC flap with magnetic closure in an extruded aluminum frame, built to order across door, wall, screen, in-glass, and kennel installs. Nothing to power, no tag to pair, no firmware to update. A trained pet just walks through it.
PawPort's philosophy: “add control to a door”
A powered smart cover
A motorized access system that mounts over an existing opening and stays locked behind two steel deadbolts until it senses a Bluetooth collar tag. App control, schedules, tracking, and smart-home integration are the point, and for the right buyer they are genuinely useful.
A note on weather. PawPort's own help docs say the smart door is designed for indoor use and is not waterproof on its own; it has to be protected by an outdoor door, a covered porch, or the flap of the door it was mounted over. Hale's exterior models are purpose-built mechanical doors, weather-sealed from the first day.
Why Hale wins
Five places Hale comes out ahead
For most people buying a pet door rather than a smart lock for one, the decision turns on these five, starting with the one that matters most.
Nothing to power. Nothing to pair. Nothing to brick.
A smart door turns a hole in your wall into a software-dependent access system. When it works, it feels like magic. When it doesn't, the failures are new ones, and early PawPort owners describe them plainly: tags that wouldn't pair, sensors that opened for the wrong dog, a firmware update that left a pet stuck.
A Hale door has no motor, no board, no Wi-Fi, no app account, no battery, and no collar tag. Its worst day is a worn flap you can see and swap. Your pet uses it in a storm or a blackout exactly like any other day.
One owner said software updates could break the door, leaving the dog stuck inside or out, and regretted it after about a week and a half. Another went through four sets of tags that wouldn't pair, so they never saw how the door worked. , owner threads on Reddit
Mechanical, by design
11 standard sizes + custom
Custom sizing for real pets, not three brackets
PawPort comes in three smart-door sizes, and for a retrofit the largest opening it covers is 13.25" wide. The height range is generous; the width is the ceiling.
Hale builds 11 standard sizes plus custom, up to a Giant 15.5" × 27.5" passage, and we size by width and shoulder height, the only way to fit a greyhound and a bulldog that weigh the same. Our 2,247-breed sizing guide exists so you don't have to guess.
Large or giant breed, a senior dog that needs a low step-over, or a multi-pet household with mismatched sizes? Fit geometry is where Hale pulls away.
Five install families, including two PawPort doesn't serve
PawPort can retrofit, build into a door or wall with its tunnel and frame, or mount to professionally cut glass. That is real coverage. But Hale's native catalog is wider, and two categories barely overlap with PawPort at all.
A porch screen, a screened enclosure, a commercial kennel run, vet, or daycare? We build for those directly. If that is your install, it isn't really a comparison, it's just Hale.
Door · Wall · Screen · In-glass · Kennel
Quiet flap · low push-force
Boring, in the good way
A motor and a bolt make noise. PawPort's own owners report it: the whirring and bolt clank scared an 11-month-old dog badly enough to undo house training, and another pair of dogs took time to accept the sound.
Some pets adapt to a motorized door. Some never do. For a nervous, senior, or sound-sensitive pet, a quiet mechanical flap that opens with a gentle push is the safer bet from day one. Boring is a feature.
The whirring motion and bolt clank scared an 11-month-old dog badly enough to undo house training, a “great idea,” but a bet the owner regretted. , owner review on Reddit
A 20-year door, with consumables you can predict
Every Hale door is built to order in Cañon City, Colorado, with a lifetime frame warranty and a 10-year prorated flap warranty. When something wears, the part is on the shelf: replacement flaps ($36 to $204), flap kits, weatherstripping, lock parts, and more. PawPort's expensive wear risk is an electromechanical assembly under a 1-year limited warranty, with no public price list for motors, boards, or sensors.
The pricing reality most pages skip
$699 is the start, not the number
PawPort's cheapest story is "$699 to smart-up an existing door." Its ownership story is bigger, because the smart door isn't a weatherproof exterior door on its own. Here is how the hardware stacks up, before tax and before an installer touches it.
Premium build, a lower floor on the installs people buy
On the two installs most people actually buy, door and wall, Hale's direct ranges start well below PawPort's complete-system hardware, with custom sizing built into the price. The further PawPort goes toward a real exterior door, the wider the gap grows.
Mechanical lock, no power
What a fully equipped PawPort costs by their own prices
For an exposed exterior install, the weather-facing pieces aren't luxuries. This is PawPort's own hardware math, not a knock on the product.
Smart door + $349 tunnel and frame + the $499 outdoor pet door that does the weather job, since the smart door is indoor-rated on its own.
Add a $99–$249 battery for outage operation, plus an ~$80 charging dock or solar panel. The concealed power kit is $30, but the junction box must be installed to code.
Each pet that needs automatic access needs its own smart tag, with a CR2050 battery good for about 12 to 18 months. Then firmware, sensors, and app upkeep.
Lower up front, with one cost you can see coming
Hale's recurring consumable is a soft flap you replace on schedule, $36 to $204 by size, once in many years. PawPort's recurring stack is tag batteries, possible extra tags, charging behavior, and smart-device troubleshooting, on top of a 1-year warranty on the motorized core.
The fair read: if you don't need smart access control, Hale usually gives you more pet door per dollar. And one cost only applies to PawPort: a return can refund the product, but it can't un-cut a door, un-cut glass, patch a wall, or recover an installer's labor.
In fairness
The narrow cases where PawPort wins
We'll say it plainly: PawPort is the better buy in a few specific situations, and we're not going to pretend otherwise. If one of these is a hard requirement, buy theirs with confidence. For a buyer who wants the pet door itself, none of them applies.
App control and per-pet access
Remote lock and unlock, schedules and curfews, activity tracking, a phone alert if something tries to force it, and access by collar tag for one pet at certain hours. Hale is mechanical and offers none of that. If app control is why you're shopping, PawPort is the honest pick.
Upgrading a door you keep
If you already have a compatible opening up to 13.25" × 24.25" and mostly like it, PawPort mounts over it and refunds your purchase plus shipping within 30 days if it doesn't fit. Hale is the new door, so if you don't want to replace the opening, that's friction you may not need.
A pet that refuses any flap
PawPort opens wide, so a pet doesn't push anything with its face. For a dog that flat-out refuses a flap, that automatic motion can be the thing that finally works. Our flap is soft, quiet, and timid-pet-friendly, but it is still a flap.
If two or more of those describe you, go read PawPort's pages with our blessing. We'd rather you buy the right thing than the wrong one with our name on it.
Side-by-side
The whole picture, on one screen
Everything below is current and verifiable. On the lines most buyers weigh, fit, install breadth, reliability, price, and warranty, Hale comes out ahead (✓). PawPort owns the smart-control rows: app access, per-pet tags, remote locking, and tracking.
| Comparison point | ||
|---|---|---|
| Product type | Custom mechanical pet door | Powered smart cover / full smart system |
| Works in a power outage | ✓Always, fully mechanical | Local operation only if on a battery pack; remote app needs Wi-Fi |
| Power required | ✓None at all | USB-C / concealed power / optional battery |
| App control, schedules, tracking | Mechanical by design | Yes |
| Per-pet / collar-tag access | Mechanical by design | Yes, tag required for auto access |
| Remote lock & alerts | Mechanical lock, no remote | Yes |
| Install types | ✓Door, wall, screen, in-glass, kennel | Retrofit; tunnel/frame for door & wall; glass mount |
| Screen & kennel installs | ✓Yes | Not a core product class |
| Sizing | ✓11 standard + custom, up to 15.5" × 27.5" | 3 sizes; retrofit width cap 13.25" |
| Exterior weather | ✓Purpose-built mechanical exterior doors | Smart door is indoor-only unless protected or paired |
| Sound-sensitive / nervous pets | Quiet flap; boring, in the good way | Motor & bolt noise can spook some pets |
| Active intruder / wildlife control | Mechanical security cover (most models) | Deadbolts, always-locked default, phone alerts |
| Price (hardware, direct) | ✓$149–$975 by model, before glass/install | Smart door from $699; full systems $1,000–$2,100+ |
| Warranty | ✓Lifetime frame + 10-year prorated flap | 1-year limited on the smart door |
| Replacement parts | ✓Full published parts catalog | Accessory ecosystem; internal repair parts not publicly listed |
| Returns | 30 days less shipping; 31–90 days less 10% restocking | Free, no restocking fee, no original packaging needed |
| Made | Made to order in the USA since 1985 | Phoenix-based smart-electronics company |
Prices are the most time-sensitive line here. Re-check any current sale price before you order.
What PawPort owners run into
The snags that show up in early reviews
PawPort is a young smart-hardware product, so the public review base is thin. The early-owner voice is real and specific, and it clusters around exactly the things a mechanical door doesn't have: tags, sensors, firmware, and motor noise.
On firmware, the failure a mechanical door can't have
Software updates could break your door, leaving the dog stuck inside or outside. Regretted owning it after about a week and a half.
On tags, the access you have to keep paired
Went through four sets of tags that wouldn't pair, so they never got to see how the door actually worked.
On the motor, the noise that scares some pets
The whirring motion and bolt clank scared an 11-month-old dog badly enough to undo house training, a great idea but an expensive bet they regretted.
On sensors, the detection you have to trust
With four dogs: some not near the door triggered it; others standing right there couldn't get it to open. A replacement was coming, but they had lost faith.
The pattern isn't "PawPort is junk," it's "some buyers become unpaid beta testers." For contrast, Hale's footprint is older and deeper: 4.4/5 from 482 reviews on Trustpilot, the normal shape for a long-running custom-hardware brand, with most owners praising build quality, longevity, and fit. We don't hide that flaps wear; that's why we sell them and warrant them for a decade.
Already own a PawPort?
Here's exactly when to upgrade
No reason to replace a setup that's solving your problem
If your PawPort is installed, the tags work, your pet likes it, and it's doing the exact job you bought it for, keep it. We're not trying to be PawPort with a different logo, and we won't pretend app control and tag access don't matter when they're the reason you bought it.
Look at Hale when something changes: you're remodeling, moving to a wall, in-glass, screen, or kennel install, your base pet door is the wrong size or worn out, your pet never adjusted to the motor and noise, or you've simply decided you'd rather not have electronics deciding when your pet goes outside.
Switching to a built-in door? Get the fit right first.
Custom sizing works off real numbers, never an assumption. Before you order:
- Measure your pet, width at the shoulders and the height they can comfortably step over
- Measure the existing opening, interior frame, exterior frame, and the rough cutout if exposed
- Note the wall depth, or the door material and thickness
- Note what you have now, door, wall, sliding glass, or French door
- Photograph both sides of the current install
This is the step that prevents an expensive second mistake.
FAQ
Questions shoppers ask comparing the two
? Is Hale a good PawPort alternative?
Yes, if what you want is the pet door itself. Hale is a custom, mechanical, USA-built door with no app, no tag, and no battery to maintain, a precise fit, five install types, a quiet flap, and a lifetime frame warranty. Hale doesn't have app control, schedules, remote locking, or collar-tag access. If smart features are the reason you're shopping, PawPort is the better fit; for everything else about owning a pet door, Hale is.
? Does a Hale pet door work if the power goes out?
Always. There's nothing to power. A Hale door is fully mechanical, with no motor, no battery, and no Wi-Fi, so your pet uses it in a storm, a blackout, or a dead-router afternoon exactly like any other day. A PawPort can still let a pet through during an outage only if the unit is running on a battery pack, and remote app control needs Wi-Fi either way.
? Is PawPort waterproof?
Not on its own. PawPort's own help docs say the smart door is designed for indoor use and isn't waterproof by itself; it has to be protected by PawPort's outdoor pet door, a covered porch, or the retained flap of your existing door. Hale's exterior models are purpose-built mechanical doors with aluminum framing, weatherstripping, and double flaps on most models, designed for the weather from the start.
? Does PawPort need Wi-Fi?
Not for the door and tag to operate locally. Wi-Fi is required for the remote smart features: locking from your phone, schedules you change remotely, notifications, and tracking. So it's smart without Wi-Fi for basic use, and fully smart only with it. A Hale door has no such dependency, because there's no software to connect.
? Should I replace my old pet door or just add a smart cover over it?
It depends on the base. If your existing door is solid, well-sized, and well-sealed and you mostly want control, a smart cover makes sense. If it's the wrong size, cracked, drafty, or badly installed, a cover only fixes part of the problem, and you'd be bolting $700 or more of electronics onto a bad base. Often the smarter move is to fix the opening with a properly fitted door, not cover it.
? Which is better for large or giant dogs?
Hale. PawPort comes in three sizes with a retrofit opening cap of 13.25" wide. Hale offers 11 standard sizes plus custom, up to a 15.5" × 27.5" passage, and sizes by shoulder height and width, which matters for broad, tall, or unusually proportioned dogs. Start with the breed sizing guide.
? Which is quieter for a nervous or sound-sensitive pet?
Hale, clearly. A quiet mechanical flap opens with a gentle push and makes no motor or bolt noise. PawPort's own owners report that the whirring and deadbolt clank spooked nervous dogs, in one case enough to undo house training. Some pets adapt to a motorized door and some never do; a quiet flap removes that risk from day one.
? Can PawPort be installed over a Hale pet door?
Possibly, but check before you buy. PawPort says its smart door adjusts to fit most existing pet doors within its size limits, but the only way to know is to compare PawPort's current size guide against your specific Hale model and opening. Don't assume; measure.
? Which has the better warranty?
On the mechanical hardware, Hale, with a lifetime frame warranty and a 10-year prorated flap warranty. PawPort's smart pet door, the motorized heart of the product, carries a 1-year limited warranty. Some of PawPort's structural accessories carry 10 years, but the expensive electronic part is the 1-year item, while Hale's frame is covered for life.
? What's the best non-smart PawPort alternative?
A Hale pet door, if what you want is the door itself: custom-sized, mechanical, USA-built, with no app, no tag, and no battery to maintain. That's the entire reason this page exists. Browse the models or check your pet's size to start.
Get the door right in the first place
If you want a pet door that behaves like a smart-home device, app control, schedules, per-pet access, remote locking, PawPort has earned its credit. But if you want a pet door built around your pet, your opening, and your home, one that fits exactly, seals against the weather, works without power or a phone, and gives you parts and a warranty that last for years, that's the door we make.