Hear from Our Customers
A roof that’s been ignored through a few Bergen County winters doesn’t just look tired — it’s actively letting moisture in. By the time you notice a ceiling stain, the damage has usually already reached the insulation and framing. Getting ahead of it means a repair instead of a full structural remediation.
Wallington’s position along the Passaic River puts homes here in a consistently high-moisture environment. That’s not a generic weather warning — this borough was 25% flooded during Tropical Storm Irene in 2011. Wind-driven rain, ice dam formation on those low-slope Cape Cod dormers, and the freeze-thaw cycle every winter accelerate wear faster than most homeowners realize.
When the work is done correctly, you stop watching the ceiling every time it rains. Your attic stays dry. Your insulation does its job. And with a manufacturer-certified installation, you’re backed by a warranty that actually holds — not just a handshake from a crew that may not be around next year. For a home carrying over $10,000 a year in property taxes, that kind of protection isn’t optional maintenance. It’s the responsible call.
We’re a licensed, family-owned exterior renovation contractor serving Wallington and the surrounding Bergen County communities. Our NJ Home Improvement Contractor License #13VH10605800 is publicly verifiable through the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs — look it up before you call anyone.
We hold certifications from major shingle manufacturers, which means homeowners in Wallington get access to manufacturer-backed system warranties that most local roofers simply cannot offer. That’s not a sales line — it’s a structural difference in what you’re covered for after the job is done.
In a borough this tight-knit — one square mile, neighbors who talk, and a community that’s been here for generations — a contractor’s reputation travels fast in both directions. That’s exactly the kind of accountability that keeps the work honest.
It starts with a free roof inspection — no obligation, no pressure, and no fee. We cover the exterior roof surface, the attic interior, drainage systems, and any visible structural concerns. You get a detailed photo report to keep, regardless of whether you move forward with any work.
If repairs or a replacement make sense, you’ll get a clear, upfront price before anything starts. Wallington’s Building Department on Maple Avenue requires permits for roofing work, and we handle that process on your behalf — you won’t be left figuring out the flat-fee permit structure on your own. Everything is coordinated, documented, and explained before the first nail goes in.
Our crew works through the job with cleanup built into the process, not treated as an afterthought. When they leave, the yard is cleared, the materials are hauled, and the job is inspected before anyone signs off. If a storm rolls through Bergen County overnight and you’ve got an active leak, our 24/7 emergency line means you’re not waiting until Monday morning to get someone on the phone. That’s the whole process — straightforward, start to finish.
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Roofing in Wallington isn’t one-size-fits-all. The Cape Cods and ranch-style homes that make up most of the borough’s housing stock have specific vulnerabilities — low-slope dormers that collect ice, original ventilation systems that were never designed for modern insulation, and flashing details around chimneys that have been patched over decades. Our inspection and the work account for all of that, not just the surface layer.
We offer full roof replacements, targeted repairs, storm damage assessments, and emergency roof repair in Wallington, NJ for situations that can’t wait. Gutter and siding work is also available, which matters when you’re dealing with a 70-year-old home where the roof, fascia, and drainage are all connected problems. Handling it through one contractor means nothing gets missed between trades.
The manufacturer certifications we hold open up warranty coverage in the 30-to-50-year range — transferable if you ever sell the home. For homeowners along the Passaic River corridor who’ve watched what moisture and storm exposure can do to a structure over time, that level of documented protection is worth understanding before you choose a contractor. Transparent pricing means you’ll know the full scope and cost before any work begins, with no hidden fees added after the fact.
Yes, a permit is required for roofing work in Wallington. The borough follows New Jersey’s Uniform Construction Code, and the Building Department at 159–161 Maple Avenue enforces it. The good news is that Wallington assesses roofing permits on a flat fee basis rather than calculating cost as a percentage of the project value — so the permit cost is predictable and straightforward.
When you work with us, the permit process is handled for you. You don’t need to navigate the application, schedule inspections, or track down the building official. It’s built into how a properly run job gets done. Skipping the permit — or working with a contractor who suggests skipping it — creates real liability if you ever sell the home or file an insurance claim, so it’s not a step worth cutting.
The honest answer is that you usually can’t tell from the ground. Granules in the gutters, curling shingles, and water stains on the ceiling are all signs something is wrong — but whether that means a targeted repair or a full replacement depends on what’s happening at the deck, the flashing, and the attic, not just the surface layer you can see from the driveway.
For homes in Wallington that were built in the 1940s and 1950s, the calculation often tips toward replacement rather than repair — not because contractors push it, but because a 70-year-old roof system that has been through multiple Bergen County winters, ice dam cycles, and Passaic River storm events is typically past the point where repairs extend its life in any meaningful way. A free inspection with a photo report gives you the actual condition of the system, not a guess. That’s the right starting point before any decision gets made.
Ice dams form when heat escaping through an inadequately insulated attic melts snow on the upper part of the roof. That water runs down and refreezes at the colder eaves, building up a ridge of ice that forces water back under the shingles and into the structure. By the time you see a water stain on the ceiling, the damage has usually already reached the insulation, framing, and drywall.
Wallington’s dominant housing stock — Cape Cods and ranch-style homes built in the 1940s and 50s — is particularly vulnerable. The low-slope dormer sections and original ventilation systems in these homes were never designed to meet modern insulation standards. That combination of cold Bergen County winters, high moisture from the Passaic River corridor, and aging attic conditions creates the exact environment where ice dams form repeatedly. The fix isn’t just removing the ice — it’s addressing the underlying ventilation and insulation conditions that allow it to happen in the first place. A proper attic assessment during the inspection identifies those conditions before they cause damage.
The range for a full roof replacement in the Wallington area typically runs between $8,000 and $20,000 for a standard residential home, depending on the size and pitch of the roof, the materials selected, the condition of the decking underneath, and whether any structural repairs are needed before new shingles go down. Homes in the borough’s older housing stock sometimes have surprises under the surface — deteriorated decking, outdated flashing, or ventilation issues — that affect the final scope.
The most important thing to understand is that a quote you receive before anyone has actually looked at your roof is not a real quote. It’s a number designed to get you to call back. A legitimate price comes after a full inspection that documents what the system actually looks like. With us, you get the inspection for free, the report is yours to keep, and the price is set before work begins — no adjustments mid-job without a conversation first.
In most cases, yes — homeowners insurance covers sudden storm damage caused by wind, hail, or falling debris. What it typically does not cover is damage that resulted from deferred maintenance or a roof that was already at the end of its useful life before the storm hit. That distinction matters a lot in Wallington, where homes are older and some roofing systems were already compromised before the last nor’easter came through.
The key is documentation. Filing a claim without a detailed damage assessment is one of the fastest ways to get a denial or a low settlement. A proper inspection after a storm — with photos, written documentation of the damage, and a clear scope of what needs to be repaired or replaced — gives your insurance company what it needs to process the claim accurately. Our inspection includes that documentation, and we can walk you through what the damage report needs to show before you file.
The practical difference comes down to what warranty you’re eligible for after the job is done. A non-certified contractor can install the same shingles, but they cannot offer a manufacturer-backed system warranty — only a certified installer can unlock that coverage. Depending on the manufacturer, that warranty can run 30 to 50 years and is transferable to the next owner if you sell the home. For a property in Wallington where median home values are pushing $500,000 and property taxes run over $10,000 a year, a transferable long-term warranty is a documented asset, not just a piece of paper.
Beyond the warranty, certification requires contractors to meet specific installation standards set by the manufacturer — which means the work itself is held to a higher bar. In a borough where neighbors notice everything and word travels fast, that accountability matters. A general contractor who pulls a roofing job without manufacturer certification is leaving you with a shorter warranty window and no manufacturer standing behind the installation if something goes wrong down the road.