Can You Add a Remote to an Existing Motorized Roller Shutter?
Your motorized roller shutter doesn’t have to stay tied to a wall switch forever. If the door already has the right motor and controls, upgrading it to a remote roller shutter is often a straightforward process.
Still, not every shutter is ready for it. Some need only a receiver and handset, while others need motorisation first. Once you know what you’re working with, the answer becomes much clearer.
Key Takeaways
- Electric roller shutters with wall switches can usually be upgraded to remote control by adding a radio receiver and handsets, if the motor is compatible.
- Manual shutters require motorisation, power supply, and controls first—or often a full replacement makes more sense.
- Professional inspection of motor, controls, shutter condition, and safety features is essential before any upgrade.
- Remote adds convenience, security, and ease for garages, shops, and hurricane shutters but won’t fix mechanical issues like bent slats or worn motors.
- Regular maintenance and battery checks prevent common problems like pairing losses or signal failures.
Yes, but the shutter type decides everything
In many cases, yes, you can add remote control to an existing roller shutter. The biggest split is simple: electric shutters can often be upgraded, while manual shutters usually can’t, at least not without bigger work.
If your shutter already opens with a wall switch, key switch, or hard-wired installation, there’s a good chance a radio receiver can be added. That receiver listens for a signal from a remote handset and tells the motor to move.
A manual shutter is different. If you lift it by hand, pull a chain, or wind a crank, there is no motor for a remote to control. In that case, you’re looking at converting it to a motorized roller shutter or a full replacement.
This quick table covers the usual cases.
| Current setup | Can remote be added? | What may be needed |
|---|---|---|
| Electric shutter with wall switch | Usually yes | Receiver, handsets, programming |
| Manual shutter with spring or chain | Not directly | Motor, power supply, controls |
| Older electric shutter with worn controls | Maybe | New control panel, receiver, or motor |
| Shutter that sticks or jams | Repair first | Mechanical check before upgrade |
If your shutter is manual, compare the cost of conversion with new electric roller shutters. Once motorisation, wiring, and controls are added, a fresh install can make more sense.
A remote doesn’t make the shutter stronger. The curtain, guides, and motor still do the heavy work. What it does add is automatic raising and lowering for enhanced security and protection, speed, ease, and better day-to-day access, especially for shopfronts, garages, rolling hurricane shutters, and busy units where opening and closing happens several times a day.
What needs checking before you fit remote control
A proper check by a professional installer comes before any remote kit goes near the shutter. First, the motor has to be compatible. Next, the shutter has to move cleanly on its current controls. If it struggles now, a handset won’t hide that problem.

A remote adds convenience, but it doesn’t cure a worn motor, bent slats, or bad alignment.
A professional installer will usually check the motor type, control box, power supply, and travel limits. On commercial doors, they should also check safety devices such as photocells, safety edges, and emergency stop controls where fitted. If any of those parts are missing, damaged, or outdated, the remote upgrade may pause until the shutter is safe.
Condition matters as much as wiring. A shutter with damage to impact-resistant materials and galvanized steel components, bent slats, noisy guides, or a curtain that runs out of line should be repaired first. Many breakdowns that look like remote faults are really shutter faults. A failed strap, dirty guide, weak motor, or bad limit setting can all stop smooth travel.
This step matters because shutters are often the first barrier against forced entry and rough weather, providing essential storm protection and the ability to withstand high winds and debris. This is particularly crucial for hurricane shutters. If the door protects stock, tools, or vehicles, reliability comes first. For that reason, busy sites should treat the remote as the final layer, not the starting point.
Choosing the right remote system and fitting it
Once the shutter passes inspection, the next step is choosing the right wireless control system for remote control. Most people opt for a key fob remote control. Others prefer a wall-mounted wireless control near the entrance. Modern alternatives include smart home integration with voice control and smartphone app control, although compatibility depends on the motor and receiver.
A good wireless control system matches how the shutter is used. A garage may need two handsets and an internal override. A shop with several users may need extra transmitters. A warehouse with more than one door may need multi-channel remotes, so each button controls a different shutter.
A complete roller shutter remote kit usually includes the receiver and two transmitters. The receiver is the small part that gets wired into the control side of the shutter. After that, the remotes are paired to it.

The fitting itself is often quick on an existing electric shutter. Power is isolated, the receiver is wired in, and a manual override is confirmed or added for safety during power cuts. The remotes are programmed, and then the shutter is tested several times in both directions. A careful installer will also confirm stop limits, response time, and safe operation.
Programming matters more than many people think. On sites with several nearby shutters, poor setup can cause signal mix-ups or lost pairing later. A clean install avoids that. So does keeping a manual override or local switch in place for power cuts and maintenance.
Common problems after the upgrade, and how to avoid them
Most remote issues are small. Flat batteries are common. So are pairing losses after a power cut, receiver reset, or battery change. Signal trouble can also happen if the handset is damaged or the receiver starts to fail.
If that happens, start with the simple checks first. Try the wall switch or local control. If the shutter works there, the problem is often with the handset, the battery, or the coding. If both controls fail, look beyond the remote. This guide to roller shutter remote problems covers the usual fault pattern.

Long-term reliability comes down to upkeep. External roller shutters serve as energy efficient solutions that provide thermal insulation, noise reduction, and light blocking, so they benefit greatly from regular maintenance. Compared to lighter electric window blinds or solar-powered shutters, these heavy-duty systems face more wear, which is why you should keep the guides clean, avoid ignoring odd noises, and replace weak remote batteries early. For business premises, annual servicing is a sensible baseline for safety and compliance. On busy shutters, twice-yearly checks are even better because wear often shows up first in guides, motors, and limits. Regular roller shutter servicing helps catch those issues before the door stops mid-travel.
Cost depends on the shutter’s age, motor type, and condition. If the shutter is already electric and working well, adding remote control is often much cheaper than replacing the whole unit. If the shutter is manual, the price can rise quickly because motorisation changes the job.
If you want a clear answer on compatibility, the best next step is a site check rather than a guess. You can Contact Us to ask about an upgrade, a repair-first assessment, or a replacement quote if the shutter is too old to convert well. These upgrades are especially vital for hurricane shutters to ensure they function when most needed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you add a remote to an existing motorized roller shutter?
Yes, most electric shutters with wall switches or wired controls can be upgraded using a radio receiver and handsets. Manual shutters pulled by hand, chain, or crank cannot— they need motorisation first. A professional site check confirms compatibility and condition.
What needs checking before fitting a remote?
The motor type, control box, power supply, travel limits, and shutter movement must all be inspected. Repair bent slats, noisy guides, or safety devices like photocells beforehand. This ensures safe, reliable operation, especially for security or storm protection.
How do you install a remote roller shutter kit?
Isolate power, wire the receiver into the control box, pair the handsets, and test fully in both directions. Confirm manual overrides for power cuts and check stop limits. Professionals handle programming to avoid signal issues on multi-shutter sites.
What are common problems after adding a remote?
Flat batteries, pairing losses after power cuts, or signal interference are typical. Test the wall switch first—if it works, check handset or battery. Regular servicing catches motor or guide wear early.
Is it cheaper to upgrade or replace an old shutter?
Upgrading electric shutters is often cheaper if in good condition, but manual conversions add motorisation costs. Compare with new installs for old or damaged units. A site inspection gives the clearest quote.
Conclusion
Many existing electric shutters can take remote control without major work. Manual shutters are different, because they need motorisation before a handset can do anything useful.
The real question isn’t only “can it be done?” It’s whether the shutter is in good enough shape to make the upgrade worth it. Whether dealing with custom fit dimensions or a standard roll down screen, professional advice is key. When the motor, controls, and curtain are sound, a remote roller shutter setup is a practical improvement that makes daily use much easier and enhances the security and protection of any property.
A quick inspection usually tells the full story. That’s better than buying parts first and finding out later that the shutter needed repair all along. As a provider of internal and external products, we can guide you through the process.





Leave a Reply
Want to join the discussion?Feel free to contribute!