Hear from Our Customers
New Milford has a flooding history that most Bergen County towns don’t. When Hurricane Irene pushed the Hackensack River to nearly 12 feet above its banks in 2011, homes along River Road and the New Bridge corridor took the brunt of it. A roof that’s been patched twice and is pushing 70 years old isn’t just a maintenance issue at that point — it’s a liability.
What you get after a proper roof replacement or targeted repair isn’t just peace of mind. It’s a home that stops leaking heat in February, stops letting water in after a nor’easter, and stops costing you money in ways you can’t always see right away. Older Cape Cods and split-levels — the dominant housing styles throughout New Milford — tend to have lower-pitch rooflines that collect debris and hold standing water longer than steeper modern designs. That accelerates wear, and it’s exactly the kind of thing a thorough inspection catches before it becomes a $10,000 problem.
When the gutters, flashing, and roof are all handled by one contractor, nothing falls through the cracks. For homes near the Hackensack River in New Milford, that’s not a convenience — it’s protection.
We’ve been working in Bergen County for over 17 years, which means we were here before Hurricane Irene, before Hurricane Ida, and before every nor’easter that’s tested the roofs in New Milford and throughout the region. We’re not a storm-chasing crew that showed up after the last big weather event and will be gone before the warranty matters.
We’re family-owned and operated, which means the name on the estimate is the name that answers the phone when something needs attention. We hold certifications from major shingle manufacturers — credentials that unlock extended manufacturer warranties most contractors in New Milford simply can’t offer. We’re also fully licensed under New Jersey’s Home Improvement Contractor requirements and registered with local building departments, including the kind of permit compliance that New Milford’s Borough Code specifically requires for re-roofing work.
From the older homes near New Bridge Landing to the established neighborhoods throughout New Milford, we know what Bergen County construction looks like from the inside out.
It starts with a free inspection. Not a sales call dressed up as an inspection — an actual assessment of your roof’s condition. A technician gets up there, looks at the shingles, the flashing, the decking, the gutters, and tells you what they see. If a repair is the right call, that’s what gets recommended. Replacement only comes into the conversation when it’s genuinely the better long-term option.
Once you have the estimate and decide to move forward, we handle the permit process. In New Milford, re-roofing requires a permit and contractor registration with the Borough Building Department — requirements that unlicensed operators routinely skip, leaving homeowners with unpermitted work that can cause real complications if you ever go to sell. That paperwork is handled for you, not handed off to you.
Installation is typically completed in one day for a standard residential replacement. Our crew works clean, hauls everything out, and does a final walkthrough with you before we leave. Spring and fall tend to be the busiest booking windows in Bergen County — post-winter damage inspections and pre-freeze preparation both drive demand — so if you’re thinking about getting an assessment done, earlier in the season is always better than waiting until everyone else calls at the same time.
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Not every call needs a new roof. We handle small roof repair in New Milford, NJ with the same attention we bring to a full replacement — because a properly repaired roof is a better outcome than an unnecessary one. Missing shingles, failed flashing, a small leak around a chimney or vent — these are fixable problems when they’re caught early, and that’s exactly what the free inspection is designed to do.
For homeowners who are done re-roofing every 20 years, metal roofing is worth a real conversation. Metal systems last 40 to 70 years, handle Bergen County snow loads and ice buildup significantly better than asphalt shingles, and resist the wind uplift that nor’easters routinely generate. For a New Milford home built in the 1950s that’s already been re-roofed once, a metal roof can genuinely be the last roof you ever install.
Beyond the roof itself, we also handle gutters and siding — which matters more than it sounds for homes near the Hackensack River, where the entire exterior envelope needs to work together. Manufacturer certifications back the installation quality, and those certifications unlock extended warranties that standard contractors can’t provide. You get documentation, not just a handshake.
Yes — and this is one of the more important details to get right before any work starts. New Milford’s Borough Code requires a permit for re-roofing, and any contractor working in the borough must register with the Building Department before beginning the job. This isn’t just a formality. Unpermitted roofing work can create real problems when you go to sell your home, refinance, or file an insurance claim. A title search or home inspection will often flag it, and correcting it after the fact can be costly and time-consuming.
When you hire us, the permit process is handled as part of the job. You don’t need to navigate the New Milford Borough Building Department yourself. The work gets done in full compliance with local code, which protects your home’s permit history and gives you clean documentation of the work completed — something that matters more than most homeowners realize until they need it.
The honest answer is that you often can’t tell from the ground — especially after the kind of nor’easters and wind events Bergen County gets regularly. Missing shingles are obvious, but the more common post-storm issues are subtler: lifted flashing around chimneys or vents, granule loss on asphalt shingles, small cracks along ridge caps, or water infiltration that won’t show up as a visible leak until it’s already caused damage to the decking or insulation below.
After a significant weather event — and New Milford has had its share, from Hurricane Irene’s near-record Hackensack River crest to the remnants of Ida — the right move is to get eyes on the roof before the next rain. We offer free inspections with no obligation, so there’s no cost to finding out whether you have a problem. If the roof is fine, you’ll know. If it isn’t, you’ll have a clear picture of what needs to happen and what it will cost.
The right answer depends on the age of your roof, the extent of the damage, and the condition of the underlying decking. A repair makes sense when the damage is isolated — a few missing shingles, a failed flashing seal, a small leak that hasn’t compromised the structure. Replacement becomes the better investment when the roof is past its expected lifespan, when multiple areas are failing at the same time, or when the decking itself has been compromised by water over time.
In New Milford, where the median home was built in 1954 and many roofs have already been replaced once, this question comes up constantly. A roof that’s been patched several times and is showing widespread granule loss or sagging is usually past the repair threshold — even if no single area looks catastrophic. The free inspection is specifically designed to give you an honest answer to this question, not to push you toward the more expensive option. If a repair is the right call, that’s what gets recommended.
For a standard residential roof replacement in New Jersey, most homeowners spend somewhere between $15,000 and $27,000, with the average landing around $21,000. The range depends on the size of your roof, the pitch, the material you choose, and whether any decking repair is needed once the old shingles come off. Cape Cods and split-levels — common throughout New Milford’s housing stock — tend to have more complex rooflines than a simple ranch, which can affect the total.
Metal roofing costs more upfront than asphalt shingles, typically running higher in that range, but the 40-to-70-year lifespan changes the math significantly when you factor in that you won’t be replacing it again in 20 years. Manufacturer-certified installation also unlocks extended warranty coverage that adds real long-term value. The free estimate from us gives you an itemized number specific to your home — not a ballpark pulled from a general range.
For a lot of New Milford homeowners, it’s actually one of the best options available. The borough’s housing stock skews heavily toward mid-century construction — homes that have already been re-roofed once and are approaching the point where asphalt shingles would need to be replaced again within the next decade. Metal roofing’s 40-to-70-year lifespan means that for a homeowner in their 40s or 50s, it’s realistically the last roof they’ll ever install on that house.
From a performance standpoint, metal handles Bergen County winters better than asphalt. It sheds snow more efficiently, resists ice dam formation — which is a real issue on the lower-pitch rooflines common to Cape Cods in New Milford — and holds up against the wind uplift that nor’easters generate. It’s also more resistant to the moisture cycling that comes with living near the Hackensack River corridor. The upfront cost is higher, but the long-term math usually works in its favor for homeowners who plan to stay in their homes.
Start with the basics: verify that the contractor holds a New Jersey Home Improvement Contractor license, carries liability insurance and workers’ compensation, and is registered with New Milford’s Building Department. These aren’t optional credentials — they’re legal requirements, and a contractor who skips them is leaving you exposed if something goes wrong on the job or with the work afterward. You can check NJ HIC registration through the Division of Consumer Affairs website.
Beyond the paperwork, look for longevity. A company that has operated continuously in Bergen County for 17-plus years has a track record that a newer operation simply doesn’t. Ask whether they pull permits, whether they offer manufacturer-backed warranties, and whether they’ll give you a written, itemized estimate before any work begins. New Milford is a small borough — word travels fast, and contractors who cut corners don’t tend to build long-term reputations here. The free inspection from us is a low-risk way to get a professional assessment and a clear sense of how we communicate before you commit to anything.