Hear from Our Customers
Most Union homeowners don’t call a roofer until something’s already wrong — a water stain on the ceiling, shingles in the yard after a nor’easter, or gutters pulling away from the fascia. By then, a small issue has usually had time to become a bigger one. Getting ahead of it with a free inspection means you know exactly what you’re dealing with before it turns into an emergency repair or an insurance conversation you weren’t ready for.
Union Township’s housing stock tells the story pretty clearly. A significant portion of the homes in Connecticut Farms, Battle Hill, Putnam Manor, and Townley were built during the post-WWII suburban expansion — the 1950s and 1960s. That puts a lot of roofs in Union at or past the natural replacement cycle for asphalt shingles, even accounting for one prior replacement. Add in the full four-season punishment of northeastern New Jersey — nor’easters, ice dam formation, summer heat and UV, freeze-thaw cycles that widen every small crack — and you’ve got a recipe for compounding wear that doesn’t announce itself until it’s already done damage.
A proper inspection gives you a clear picture: what’s fine, what needs attention, and what can wait. No pressure, no upsell, no manufactured urgency. Just an honest assessment from a contractor who’s been working on Union County homes for over 17 years and has no interest in recommending work you don’t need.
USA Home Remodeling is a family-owned exterior renovation company based in Union County, NJ. We’ve spent the last 17 years learning how Union’s homes age, what the climate here does to roofing systems, and how to build solutions that actually hold up. Roofing is the core of what we do — full replacements, repairs, flat roofing, TPO, EPDM, and metal roofing — with gutters and siding rounding out a full exterior scope that most local roofers simply don’t offer. That matters when you’re dealing with an aging Colonial in the Connecticut Farms section and the issues aren’t limited to just the roof.
We hold a New Jersey Home Improvement Contractor license, carry full insurance, and are certified by major shingle manufacturers — which means we can offer extended manufacturer warranties that non-certified contractors can’t touch. Our reputation in Union County isn’t built on marketing. It’s built on roofs that are still holding up years later, and homeowners who call us back when it’s time for the next project.
It starts with a free inspection. We come out to your home in Union, take a close look at the roof, the gutters, the flashing, the fascia — anything that affects how your exterior is holding up. We’re not looking for reasons to sell you a replacement. We’re looking for an accurate picture of what’s actually going on, and we’ll tell you straight.
If work is needed, we put together a detailed, itemized estimate. No vague line items, no numbers that shift after you’ve already said yes. In Union Township, roof replacement and significant repair work requires a construction permit through the Union Township Building Department under New Jersey’s Uniform Construction Code. We handle that process. A contractor who offers to skip the permit is a red flag — unpermitted roof work can complicate a home sale down the road and leaves you with no documented protection if something goes wrong.
Once the job is scheduled, our crew manages the site cleanly and efficiently. On a street in Battle Hill or Vauxhall where homes sit close together, that matters. When the work is done, we walk you through what was completed, what materials were used, and what your warranty covers. You shouldn’t have to chase anyone down for that information — we give it to you before we leave.
Ready to get started?
Whether you need a full replacement on a 1960s Colonial in Putnam Manor or a targeted repair on a flat roof near the Kean University corridor, the scope of work is built around what your home actually needs — not a standard package that gets applied to every job.
For asphalt shingle roofing, we work with manufacturer-certified materials and can offer extended warranties that go well beyond what a standard contractor provides. If you’ve been looking into metal roofing contractors in Union, NJ, that’s a conversation worth having — metal roofing is one of the fastest-growing segments in residential roofing right now, and for good reason. It handles nor’easter snow loads better than asphalt, resists ice dam formation more effectively, reflects summer heat, and carries a lifespan of 40 to 70 years. For a Union homeowner making a long-term investment in a home worth $400,000 or more, that’s a meaningful difference.
We also handle flat roofing systems — TPO and EPDM — which are common on additions and commercial-style structures throughout Union Township. And because we cover gutters and siding alongside roofing, we can address the full exterior in one scope of work. That’s not a convenience feature — it’s the difference between fixing the problem and fixing the symptom.
Yes — roof replacement in Union Township requires a construction permit through the Union Township Building Department. This falls under New Jersey’s Uniform Construction Code, which governs permit fees, plan reviews, and required inspections for construction work including roofing. The plan review fee alone is 25% of the construction permit fee, so it’s not a step you want to skip or discover after the fact.
The practical reason this matters: unpermitted roof work can surface during a home sale. If you’re ever selling your home in Union and a buyer’s inspector or attorney flags unpermitted work, it creates a real problem — either a price negotiation, a delay, or a requirement to bring the work into compliance before closing. We pull the permit as part of our process. That’s part of what you’re paying for, and it protects you, not just us.
The honest answer is that you need someone to actually look at the roof before anyone can tell you that. The age of the roof matters — asphalt shingles typically last 20 to 30 years, and a lot of the housing stock in Union Township’s established neighborhoods was built in the 1950s and 1960s. If the roof has already been replaced once, you may be looking at a system that’s 20-plus years old and showing wear from years of northeastern New Jersey winters.
That said, age alone doesn’t automatically mean replacement. If the damage is isolated — a few missing shingles, a flashing failure around a chimney, a small area of granule loss — a targeted repair can absolutely be the right call. The key is getting an honest assessment from someone who handles both repairs and replacements and doesn’t have a financial incentive to push you in one direction. That’s what the free inspection is for.
Ice dams are a genuine and recurring issue for the older Colonial and Cape Cod homes that make up a large portion of Union Township’s residential neighborhoods. They form when heat escapes from the living space into the attic, warms the roof deck, and melts snow at the upper portions of the roof. That meltwater runs down toward the eaves, hits the cold overhang, and refreezes. As the cycle repeats, a ridge of ice builds up at the roofline that traps water behind it — and that trapped water finds its way under shingles and into the structure.
The root cause is almost always inadequate attic insulation and ventilation, which is extremely common in homes built in the 1950s and 1960s. A nor’easter followed by a cold snap creates exactly the right conditions for ice dam formation. If you’ve noticed icicles forming at your roofline, water stains near exterior walls on the upper floors, or soft spots in the ceiling after a winter storm, those are signs worth investigating. Addressing the ventilation and insulation alongside the roofing work is the only real fix — patching the damage without solving the underlying cause just means it happens again next winter.
Nationally, roof replacement costs range from roughly $15,000 to $27,000 depending on the size of the home, the pitch of the roof, the materials used, and the condition of the underlying deck. In Union Township, where you’re often dealing with steep-pitched Colonials, dormers, chimney flashing, and older decking that may need partial replacement, the final number depends heavily on what the inspection reveals.
Material choice plays a significant role. Standard asphalt shingles sit at the lower end of the range. Architectural shingles with an extended manufacturer warranty sit in the middle. Metal roofing carries a higher upfront cost but a 40-to-70-year lifespan that changes the math considerably when you factor in what you’d spend on two or three asphalt replacements over the same period. The best thing you can do before worrying about cost is get an accurate scope of work from a licensed roofing contractor in Union, NJ — because a number without a real inspection behind it isn’t a real number.
It depends on the cause of the damage. Most standard homeowners insurance policies in New Jersey cover sudden and accidental damage — wind-lifted shingles from a nor’easter, hail impact, a tree branch through the roof. What they typically don’t cover is damage that results from neglect or gradual wear over time. If an adjuster determines that the damage was caused by a roof that was already well past its useful life, the claim may be denied or significantly reduced.
This is exactly why documentation matters. If you have a roof inspection on file that shows your roof was in reasonable condition before a storm event, you’re in a much stronger position with an insurance claim than a homeowner who hasn’t had the roof looked at in years. After a major nor’easter or summer hail event in Union Township, getting a licensed contractor out to assess and document the damage before you file a claim is one of the most practical steps you can take. We can walk you through what we’re seeing and what would support a claim.
Start with the basics: a valid New Jersey Home Improvement Contractor registration, proof of liability insurance, and workers’ compensation coverage. These aren’t optional — they’re legal requirements for any contractor doing home improvement work over $500 in New Jersey. A contractor without HIC registration means you have limited legal recourse if the work is substandard, and no workers’ comp means you could be liable if someone gets hurt on your property.
Beyond the paperwork, look for someone who has actually been operating in Union County long enough to have a real local reputation — not a contractor who flooded the area after the last nor’easter and will be gone by spring. Manufacturer certifications matter too, because they’re the only way to unlock extended warranties on materials and workmanship. And pay attention to how they handle the inspection and estimate process. A contractor who gives you a replacement quote before they’ve looked at the roof, or who can’t explain what’s in the estimate line by line, is telling you something important about how the rest of the job will go.