Hear from Our Customers
A roof that’s been properly replaced or repaired isn’t something you think about anymore. No more watching the ceiling during a nor’easter. No more wondering if that dark spot upstairs is getting worse. That’s the real outcome — not a new roof, but the peace of mind that comes with knowing your home is actually protected.
Kings Woods sits inside Union Township, where a significant share of homes were built before 1960. That’s decades of freeze-thaw cycles, heavy snow loads, and summer storms working against materials that were never designed to last forever. When a roof is done right on a home like this, it means the decking was checked, the flashing was replaced — not just resealed — and the ventilation was assessed so ice dams don’t undo the work next winter.
Union Township also sees real storm exposure. A properly installed roof with manufacturer-certified materials means you’re not calling for emergency repairs every time a storm rolls through. It means you’ve made a decision that holds up — season after season.
We’ve been serving Kings Woods and Union County homeowners for over ten years. That’s not a talking point — it’s just context for why the process works. We hold NJ Home Improvement Contractor License #13VH10605800, which you can look up yourself through the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs. Certifications from major shingle manufacturers mean access to enhanced warranties that most contractors in the Kings Woods area simply can’t offer.
We’re a family-owned operation based out of Elizabeth, minutes from Kings Woods and the broader Union Township community. The same people who show up for the inspection are accountable for the finished job. There’s no hand-off to a subcontracted crew you’ve never met. And for Spanish-speaking homeowners in Kings Woods — a community where nearly one in five residents is Hispanic — we communicate fluently in Spanish throughout the entire process, from estimate to final walkthrough.
It starts with a free inspection — no charge, no obligation. We come out, walk the roof, check the attic condition, look at the flashing, drainage, and gutters, and give you a clear picture of what’s actually going on. You get a photo report to keep regardless of what you decide next. Most homeowners in Kings Woods find this is the first time anyone’s actually shown them what their roof looks like up close.
If work is needed, you receive a written estimate with the full scope, all materials, and all labor costs laid out before anything is touched. New Jersey law requires written contracts for home improvement work over $500 — but our process goes further than the legal minimum. You approve the price before a single nail goes in. No surprise line items, no “we found additional damage mid-job” calls without a conversation first.
Once work begins, Union Township requires building permits for full roof replacements, and we handle that process correctly. Permitted work gets a final inspection sign-off from the township — documentation that matters when you’re dealing with your insurer or eventually selling the home. After the job is done, the site is cleaned, the work is reviewed with you directly, and your warranty documentation is in hand before our crew leaves.
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Our roofing work covers the full range of what Kings Woods homes actually need. That includes roof inspections, repairs, full replacements, flat roofing systems, TPO, and EPDM — plus gutters and siding when those issues are connected to what’s happening at the roofline. Because on an older Kings Woods home, they often are. A gutter pulling away from the fascia or siding with moisture infiltration points can undo a new roof faster than the next storm.
The manufacturer certifications matter here more than most homeowners realize. Only a small fraction of roofing contractors nationally hold top-tier certifications from brands like GAF or CertainTeed. Those certifications unlock system warranties that can extend to 30 years or more — covering both materials and labor — that an uncertified contractor cannot legally offer. For a Kings Woods homeowner making a $10,000 to $15,000 investment in a home valued around $350,000, that warranty difference is not a small thing.
We offer emergency roof repair 24 hours a day. If a storm comes through Union Township overnight and you’ve got a compromised roof, there’s a real person to call — not a voicemail box. Emergency tarping, rapid damage assessment, and insurance claim documentation support are all part of how we respond when timing actually matters.
Yes — in Union Township, a full roof replacement requires a building permit under the New Jersey Uniform Construction Code. This isn’t optional, and it’s one of the clearest ways to tell whether a contractor is operating legitimately. Contractors who skip the permit process are cutting a corner that creates real problems for you: insurance claims can be complicated, and when you go to sell the home, an unpermitted roof replacement can surface during the buyer’s inspection and delay or kill the deal.
When we complete a roof replacement in Kings Woods, the permit process is handled correctly from the start. That means the township’s building department inspects and signs off on the finished work, and you receive documentation you can present to your insurer or a future buyer. It’s a step most homeowners don’t think about until it matters — and by then, it’s too late to go back and fix it.
The honest answer is that you need an inspection to know for certain — and the answer depends on more than just how old the roof is. Age matters, but so does the condition of the decking underneath, the state of the flashing around chimneys and penetrations, how much granule loss has occurred on the shingles, and whether there’s been any water infiltration into the attic or insulation.
For Kings Woods homeowners in Union Township, where a significant share of homes were built before 1960, the roof itself may have been replaced once or twice already — but the underlying structure hasn’t always been properly assessed each time. A repair makes sense when the damage is isolated and the rest of the roof has meaningful life left. A replacement makes sense when repairs would just be buying time on a system that’s already past its window. The free inspection gives you a clear, photo-documented answer to that question before you spend anything.
For most Kings Woods homes, architectural asphalt shingles are the practical standard — they’re durable, widely available, and when installed by a manufacturer-certified contractor, they come with system warranties that cover both materials and labor for decades. The key isn’t just the shingle itself, though. It’s the full system: proper underlayment, ice and water shield along the eaves and in the valleys, adequate attic ventilation, and correctly installed flashing at every penetration point.
Union Township’s climate creates a specific problem that cheaper installations don’t account for: ice dams. When heat escapes through a poorly ventilated attic, it melts snow on the roof, which refreezes at the cold eaves and forces water back under the shingles. It’s one of the most common causes of interior water damage in older North Jersey homes, and it’s entirely preventable with the right ventilation assessment during installation. That’s something a thorough inspection and a properly scoped replacement will address — not just the shingles on top.
We can’t file the claim for you, but we can play a significant role in making sure it goes the right way. After a storm event in Union County, the difference between a claim that gets approved and one that gets underpaid often comes down to documentation — and that’s where having a contractor involved early matters.
Our free inspection produces a detailed photo report of all visible damage, which is exactly what your insurer needs to assess the claim accurately. Homeowners who call their insurance company before getting a professional assessment often find that damage gets missed or undervalued because there’s no independent documentation on file. The inspection is free, and the report is yours regardless of what you decide to do next — but having it in hand before you call your adjuster puts you in a much stronger position than going in without it.
For a standard single-family home in Kings Woods, a full roof replacement typically takes one to two days once work begins. The variables that affect that timeline are roof size, pitch, the number of layers being removed, and whether any decking needs to be replaced once the old material is off. Homes in Union Township’s older neighborhoods sometimes have two or three layers of shingles already on them, which adds time and disposal costs — something a thorough estimate will account for upfront so there are no surprises.
Weather is the other factor. Spring and fall are the busiest booking seasons in North Jersey, and scheduling a few weeks out is normal during peak periods. If you’re dealing with active damage or a leak that can’t wait, emergency service is available around the clock. For non-emergency replacements, the best approach is to book the free inspection early — especially heading into fall, when the window before the first freeze starts to close faster than most homeowners expect.
New Jersey requires any contractor doing home improvement work over $500 to hold a Home Improvement Contractor registration through the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs. That license is publicly searchable — meaning any homeowner can verify it in about thirty seconds before signing anything. Our license number is #13VH10605800. Look it up. That’s the point.
After every major storm in Union County, unlicensed contractors show up in neighborhoods like Kings Woods going door to door. They quote low, collect a deposit, and either disappear or deliver work that fails within a season. The damage isn’t always visible right away — sometimes it shows up as a slow leak six months later, after the contractor is long gone and your recourse is gone with them. A licensed contractor is accountable in ways an unlicensed one simply isn’t: there’s a legal record, a bonding requirement, and a complaint process through the state if something goes wrong. That accountability is part of what you’re paying for — and in a market where the risk is real, it’s worth paying for.