Renuity installs vinyl replacement windows across Tennessee, fabricated to the exact dimensions of each opening and paired with multi-pane insulated glass that uses low-emissivity coatings and inert gas fills to reduce heat transfer. Every project starts with a free in-home consultation, opening-by-opening measurement, and a walkthrough of style and glass options. Installation is handled by licensed and insured crews who set, seal, and finish each opening before moving to the next.
Older windows in Tennessee tend to fail in predictable ways: failed seals that fog the glass, weatherstripping that no longer compresses, sashes that bind or refuse to stay open, and rising cooling bills as conditioned air leaks through aging frames. Tennessee summers run long and humid, which keeps the cooling system working harder for more months of the year than in most of the country.
Replacement windows with insulated glass and tight seals reduce that load and stabilize indoor temperatures across the seasons.
Areas in Tennessee we serve
Renuity provides replacement windows across Middle and East Tennessee, serving homeowners in the cities below and the surrounding metro areas.
Window styles available for Tennessee homes
Each style below is fabricated to the exact dimensions of the opening it replaces. Order and emphasis depend on what the room needs to do: cool a sun-loaded great room, ventilate a kitchen, capture a view, or meet egress on a finished basement.
Double-hung windows: Two operable sashes that move independently, with both sashes tilting inward for cleaning from inside the home. The most common replacement style on Tennessee homes because it fits the proportions of single-story ranches, two-story colonials, and most everything in between.
Casement windows: Side-hinged panels that crank outward to a full unobstructed opening. The compression seal that forms when the sash closes resists air infiltration tightly, which matters on west-facing elevations exposed to wind-driven summer storms.
Picture windows: Fixed panes with no operable joints. Because there are no moving parts to seal, picture windows deliver the highest insulation value of the available styles and work well on sun-loaded walls where the goal is light and view rather than airflow.
Awning windows: Top-hinged units that open outward from the bottom edge. The angled opening sheds light rain, which suits Tennessee's spring and early summer pattern of sudden brief showers when a homeowner wants ventilation without closing every window.
Sliding windows: Horizontal sashes that glide past one another. Sliders save space in tight openings and operate without projecting in or out, useful in basements, hallways, and over countertops.
Bay windows and bow windows: Multi-panel projections that extend the wall outward to add light, depth, and interior space. Bay configurations pair a center picture pane with flanking operable units; bow configurations curve across four or more panels for a wider view.
Hopper windows: Bottom-hinged units that tilt inward from the top. Used in basements for secure ventilation and in egress configurations where finished basement bedrooms need a code-compliant exit opening.
Garden windows: Box projections with built-in shelves, typically installed above kitchen sinks. The enclosed design captures light from three directions and creates a small interior growing space for herbs.
Energy performance and materials for Tennessee's climate
Window performance in Tennessee is judged primarily against the cooling season. Heat transfer through aging glass and degraded seals shows up on summer cooling bills, and direct sun on south- and west-facing walls increases air conditioning runtime through long stretches of the year. Energy-efficient windows include materials and glass selections that are matched to that load.
Vinyl frames
Tennessee's sustained humidity is hard on wood-framed windows, which absorb moisture, swell, and eventually rot at the joinery. Vinyl windows hold their dimensions through humidity cycles, do not require painting or staining, and resist the finish failure that drives ongoing maintenance on older window systems.
Why Tennessee homeowners choose Renuity
Choosing a window installer means committing a team to dozens of openings that have to seal correctly the first time. Renuity provides:
2025 Guildmaster Award. Industry recognition based on verified post-project homeowner surveys covering customer satisfaction and likelihood to recommend.
Lifetime transferable warranty. Coverage on product and installation labor, transferable to a new owner if the home is sold.
Licensed and insured installation teams. Crews experienced with Tennessee climate conditions and the sealing methods required for long-term performance.
Free in-home estimates. A consultation that includes opening-by-opening measurement, evaluation of existing frame and trim conditions, and a walkthrough of style and glass options before any commitment.
How a Tennessee window project runs
The process is built around getting accurate measurements first and disrupting the home as little as possible during install.
Consultation. A Renuity specialist visits the home, measures every opening to be replaced, evaluates the condition of existing frames and surrounding trim, and reviews style and glass options against how each room is used and oriented.
Selection and fabrication. Once the homeowner confirms the configuration, every window is fabricated to the exact dimensions of its opening. Custom sizing means the new unit fills the opening cleanly, with no gaps that have to be packed out with filler material.
Installation. Crews work opening by opening. The existing window comes out, the opening is prepared, the new unit is set and sealed, and trim is integrated or replaced as needed before the crew moves to the next opening. A whole-home project of 10 to 15 windows typically finishes in a few days.
Final walkthrough. The crew operates each new window with the homeowner, confirms hardware function and seal performance, and reviews care guidance and the warranty before leaving the site.
During the consultation, homeowners can also learn about Renuity's bathroom remodeling and kitchen cabinet refacing services if other projects are on the horizon.