Hear from Our Customers
When your roof is solid, you stop noticing it — and that’s the point. No more water stains creeping across the bedroom ceiling every March. No more granules collecting in the gutter after every storm. No more wondering whether that soft spot near the chimney is going to turn into something expensive over winter.
For Lyndhurst homeowners, the stakes are real. About 70% of the homes in this township were built before 1970, and most of them are sitting on a roof that’s already cycled through its expected lifespan at least once. Add in the moisture that comes with being sandwiched between the Passaic River to the west and the Meadowlands to the east, and your roof is working harder than most in Bergen County — dealing with persistent humidity, organic growth on shingles, and a freeze-thaw cycle every winter that opens up gaps you won’t see until spring.
Getting it done right means the problem actually goes away. It means the next ice storm doesn’t back water under your shingles. It means your home’s value — and in Lyndhurst, that’s a real number worth protecting — doesn’t take a hit because of something that was visible from the street. That’s what a proper roof replacement or repair actually delivers.
We’ve been working on Northern New Jersey homes for over 17 years, with deep roots in Lyndhurst and the surrounding communities. We’re not a franchise or a lead-gen site with a toll-free number. We’re a real, family-owned operation with licensed crews, manufacturer certifications, and a track record you can actually look up.
The homes in Lyndhurst — the post-war colonials near Veterans Memorial Park, the older ranches along the Passaic River streets, the capes tucked in around Ridge Road — these aren’t generic builds. They have quirks, older flashing configurations, and ventilation setups that require someone who’s seen them before. That’s the kind of experience that matters when we’re standing on your roof making decisions.
The certifications we hold from major shingle manufacturers aren’t just credentials on a wall. They unlock extended warranties — the kind non-certified contractors flat out cannot offer — and they represent a standard of installation that protects your investment long after our crew has packed up and left.
It starts with a free inspection. No charge, no obligation. We send a trained eye over your roof and give you an honest read — not a sales pitch. If it’s a repair situation, you’ll hear that. If replacement is genuinely the right call, you’ll understand exactly why before any paperwork gets signed.
From there, you get a clear, written estimate. What’s included, what it costs, and what the timeline looks like. In Lyndhurst, roof replacements typically require a building permit under the New Jersey Uniform Construction Code, and we handle that process as a licensed Home Improvement Contractor — so you’re not left managing paperwork or risking an unpermitted job that causes headaches when you sell.
On installation day, the old material comes off, the deck gets inspected for any soft spots or water damage that wasn’t visible from below, and the new system goes on — including ice and water shield at the eaves, which matters a lot in a Bergen County winter. Cleanup is thorough. Communication throughout is direct. When the job is done, you’ll have documentation of the work, your warranty information, and a roof that’s built to handle what Lyndhurst weather actually looks like.
Ready to get started?
Not every call needs a full replacement. We handle small roof repair work in Lyndhurst, NJ — missing shingles after a windstorm, resealed flashing around a chimney, a section of damaged decking from an ice dam — and the free inspection is specifically designed to tell you which category you’re in before any money changes hands. That honesty is the job.
For full replacements, the options include asphalt shingles, which remain the most cost-effective and widely used material for Lyndhurst’s residential housing stock, and metal roofing systems, which are gaining ground fast for good reason. A metal roof installed on a 1960s colonial in Lyndhurst today is likely to outlast the next two owners of that home — and it handles moss and algae growth, which is a persistent issue for homes near the Passaic River, far better than asphalt does over time.
Because we also handle gutters and siding, there’s one contractor accountable for the full exterior. In a moisture-heavy environment like Lyndhurst’s, where the intersection of your roofline and your gutter system is a common failure point, that matters more than it might in a drier part of the state. One contractor, one scope, no finger-pointing when something needs to be addressed.
Yes, in most cases you do. Roof replacements in Lyndhurst fall under the New Jersey Uniform Construction Code, which is enforced locally by the Township of Lyndhurst’s Building Code Official. That means a permit is typically required, and the work needs to be performed by a contractor who is registered as a Home Improvement Contractor with the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs.
This matters more than it might seem. An unpermitted roof replacement can create real complications when you go to sell your home — it can surface during the buyer’s inspection, delay closing, or require remediation at your expense. We’re fully licensed and pull the necessary permits as part of the job, so the work is documented, legal, and clean on your record. You shouldn’t have to manage that process yourself, and with us, you won’t.
For most residential homes in Lyndhurst, a full roof replacement runs somewhere between $15,000 and $28,000 depending on the size of the roof, the pitch, the material selected, and what the deck looks like once the old material comes off. Homes in the 1,500 to 2,500 square foot range — which covers a large portion of the post-war capes and colonials that make up the township — tend to fall in the middle of that range for a standard asphalt shingle replacement.
Metal roofing costs more upfront, typically 1.5 to 2 times the cost of asphalt, but the lifespan is significantly longer — 40 to 70 years versus 20 to 30 — which changes the math over time. The free estimate we provide gives you a specific number for your specific home, with no hidden add-ons after the fact. What’s quoted is what you pay.
The honest answer is: it depends on the age of the roof, the extent of the damage, and what’s happening underneath the surface. A few missing shingles after a storm is usually a repair. Widespread granule loss, multiple areas of soft decking, visible sagging, or a roof that’s already 25 or more years old is usually a replacement conversation.
In Lyndhurst specifically, where roughly 70% of homes were built before 1970, a lot of roofs are already on borrowed time. The freeze-thaw cycle every winter opens up small vulnerabilities that compound over years. A roof that looks okay from the street can have real water infiltration happening at the flashing points or in the valleys. That’s exactly what a free inspection is for — to give you an honest read before you commit to anything. If it’s a repair, you’ll hear that. No upsell, no pressure.
Ice dams form when heat escaping through your attic warms the roof deck above the living space, melting snow that then refreezes at the cold eave overhang — where there’s no heat below to keep it moving. That ice buildup creates a dam, and water backs up behind it, working its way under the shingles and into your home.
By the time you notice a water stain on your ceiling in March, the damage to the decking, insulation, and interior finish has often been building since December. Bergen County winters are particularly hard on older homes in Lyndhurst because many of them have attic ventilation setups that weren’t designed with ice dam prevention in mind. A proper roof installation addresses this at the system level — ice and water shield at the eaves, correct drip edge, and a ventilation assessment — so the problem doesn’t just get covered up and repeat itself next winter.
Yes, we install metal roofing systems for residential properties in Lyndhurst, NJ. And whether it’s worth the cost depends largely on how long you plan to stay in the home and what you’re dealing with now.
For Lyndhurst homeowners near the Passaic River or in the lower-lying areas closer to the Meadowlands, metal roofing has a specific practical advantage: it resists moss and algae growth far better than asphalt shingles over time. That’s a real issue in a moisture-heavy environment, and it’s one of the reasons metal is gaining traction in this part of Bergen County. Metal also handles the freeze-thaw cycle better than asphalt, doesn’t shed granules, and carries a lifespan that can reach 50 to 70 years with proper installation. If you’re in a home you plan to stay in, or one you want to maximize value on before selling, the math often works in metal’s favor over the long run.
Start with the basics: verify that the contractor holds an active NJ Home Improvement Contractor registration, carries liability insurance and workers’ compensation, and pulls permits for the work. You can check HIC registration directly on the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs website. Any contractor who resists pulling a permit or can’t produce proof of insurance is a contractor worth walking away from.
Beyond the paperwork, look for genuine local history. Lyndhurst is a tight-knit township, and a contractor’s real reputation in the community is usually findable if you look. Be cautious of search results showing toll-free numbers and city-specific landing pages with no real local presence — those are often lead-generation sites that hand your call off to whoever buys the lead that week, not a vetted local roofer. We’ve been operating in Northern New Jersey for over 17 years, hold manufacturer certifications, and offer a free inspection with no obligation — so the first step costs you nothing and tells you a lot.