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A roof that’s been properly replaced or repaired doesn’t just stop leaking. It stops the slow damage you don’t see — the moisture working into your decking, the heat escaping through an attic that’s been ventilated wrong for 40 years, the flashing at your chimney that’s been failing quietly since the last nor’easter. When those things get fixed, your home is tighter, your energy bills are lower, and you’re not dreading the next storm.
For Wood-Ridge homeowners in the Old Town core — the Cape Cods, colonials, and bi-levels built between the 1940s and 1960s — the stakes are higher than most. These homes have absorbed decades of Bergen County freeze-thaw cycles, wet nor’easter snow loads, and summer UV on south-facing slopes. A lot of them are carrying roofing systems that are well past their service life, even if they haven’t started leaking yet. Getting ahead of that is the difference between a planned replacement on your timeline and an emergency call at midnight.
If you’re in the Wesmont side of Wood-Ridge — a newer townhome or a recently purchased property — the concern is different but just as real. Low-slope roofing systems, shared drainage, and the fine print on builder warranties all deserve a second look before something goes wrong. Either way, knowing exactly where you stand costs nothing. That’s why the inspection is free.
We’re a family-owned exterior contractor based in northern New Jersey, licensed under NJ Home Improvement Contractor License #13VH10605800 — a number you can verify yourself on the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs website in under a minute. That’s not a throwaway detail. Wood-Ridge’s own municipal code requires licensed contractors for all roofing work, and after every major storm, Bergen County sees its share of crews that don’t meet that standard.
We’ve been working across Bergen County for over a decade — through nor’easter seasons, ice dam calls, and full replacements on homes that hadn’t had a new roof since the Curtiss-Wright plant was still running. The work spans everything from traditional pitched roofing on Old Town colonials to flat and low-slope systems on newer construction throughout Wood-Ridge. Our manufacturer certifications from major shingle brands mean homeowners here can access enhanced system warranties that most contractors in the area simply can’t offer. That’s a real difference, not a marketing line.
It starts with the free inspection. A trained technician comes out to your Wood-Ridge home, gets on the roof, and actually looks — shingles, flashing, ridge cap, gutters, fascia, and attic ventilation if accessible. You get a clear photo report of what was found, what it means, and what the options are. No obligation to move forward. Just information you can use.
If you decide to proceed, you’ll receive a full itemized estimate before any work is scheduled. Every material, every labor cost, every disposal fee — written out and approved by you before a single nail goes in. In Wood-Ridge, full roof replacements require a permit under the NJ Uniform Construction Code, and we handle that process. You don’t need to chase down the borough’s Construction Code Official or figure out the paperwork — that’s part of the job.
On installation day, our crew shows up on time, protects your property, and works clean. Tear-off, decking inspection, underlayment, new shingles, flashing, and ridge cap — done in sequence, done correctly, and done with the fastening patterns and starter courses that Bergen County wind exposure actually demands. Final walkthrough, full cleanup, and your warranty documentation before anyone leaves.
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Roofing is the core of what we do — full replacements, repairs, flat and low-slope systems, storm damage response, and 24/7 emergency service when Bergen County weather doesn’t wait for business hours. But the exterior doesn’t stop at the shingles. Gutters that are pulling away from the fascia or draining poorly will undermine a new roof faster than almost anything else. Siding that took storm damage is letting moisture in whether you can see it or not. All of it gets looked at during the inspection, and all of it can be addressed by the same crew.
For Wood-Ridge homeowners dealing with older homes, that matters. A house built in 1955 in the Sunshine City section of Old Town isn’t just dealing with one aging system — it’s dealing with several that have been degrading on the same timeline. Addressing them together, with one contractor who understands how they interact, is more efficient and less expensive than calling three different companies over three different seasons.
Our manufacturer certifications mean the warranties available here go well beyond what most local roofers can offer — up to 50 years on qualifying systems, covering both materials and labor. If you’re planning to stay in your home long-term or thinking about resale value, that’s worth understanding before you sign anything.
That depends on a few things — the age of the roof, how widespread the damage is, and what the decking looks like underneath. If your home was built in the 1950s or 1960s and the roof hasn’t been replaced since the 1990s or early 2000s, you’re likely past the point where repairs are a long-term solution. Patching a 30-year-old shingle roof in Wood-Ridge is a bit like putting new tires on a car with a cracked frame — you’re addressing the symptom, not the problem.
That said, not every situation calls for a full tear-off. If the damage is isolated — a section of flashing that failed after a nor’easter, a few lifted shingles, a pipe boot that’s cracked and leaking — a targeted repair can buy you several more years at a fraction of the cost. The only way to know for certain is a proper inspection that looks at the full picture, not just the visible surface. That’s what the free inspection is for.
For a standard single-family home in Wood-Ridge, a full asphalt shingle replacement typically runs somewhere between $8,000 and $18,000, depending on the size of the roof, the pitch, the number of layers being torn off, and the condition of the decking underneath. Homes with dormers, chimneys, skylights, or complex rooflines — which are common in the older Cape Cod and colonial-style homes in the Old Town section of Wood-Ridge — tend to land on the higher end because of the additional flashing and detail work involved.
Material choice also moves the number. Standard three-tab shingles are the most affordable option, but architectural shingles — which are more durable and better suited to Bergen County’s wind and freeze-thaw conditions — are generally worth the modest price difference. If you’re considering a premium or designer shingle, factor that in as well. The best way to get an accurate number for your specific Wood-Ridge home is a free estimate, which includes a full breakdown before you commit to anything.
Nor’easters hit Bergen County hard — sustained winds, heavy wet snow, and driving rain that can last for days. On a roof, that combination does several specific things. Wind at 50-plus mph gets under ridge caps and starter courses, especially on older homes where the sealant has dried out. Wet snow adds significant weight to the roof deck, and when it melts and refreezes at the eave line, it creates ice dams that force water backward under the shingles. Flashing at chimneys, dormers, and valleys — already the most vulnerable points on any roof — takes the hardest hit.
After a major storm, walk around your home and look for lifted or missing shingles, granules collecting in your gutters or downspout splash pads, and any daylight visible from inside the attic. If you see water stains on your ceiling or walls, the damage has already gotten past the shingles. Even if nothing looks obviously wrong from the ground, it’s worth having someone get on the roof — storm damage is often subtle until it becomes expensive.
Yes. Under the New Jersey Uniform Construction Code, a building permit is required for full roof replacements in Wood-Ridge. The permit gets issued through the borough’s Construction Code Official, and the work has to be performed by a licensed contractor — Wood-Ridge’s own municipal code is explicit on that point. This isn’t a bureaucratic inconvenience; the permit creates a record of the work that protects you for insurance purposes and when you eventually sell the home.
We handle the permit process as part of the job. You don’t need to file anything, call anyone at the borough, or track down inspection scheduling. That’s included. What you want to avoid is any contractor who suggests skipping the permit to save time or money — that creates liability that falls entirely on you as the homeowner, and it can complicate a future sale or insurance claim in ways that are expensive to untangle.
A standard workmanship warranty covers the contractor’s labor — typically for 5 to 10 years. If something goes wrong with how the roof was installed, that warranty is your recourse. What it doesn’t cover is the materials themselves beyond the manufacturer’s basic product warranty, and it doesn’t cover the system as a whole if a problem develops at the intersection of multiple components.
A manufacturer-backed system warranty is different. It covers both the materials and the installation together, often for 30 to 50 years, and it’s backed by the manufacturer — not just the contractor. The catch is that these warranties are only available through certified contractors. Not every roofer in Bergen County qualifies. We hold manufacturer certifications that unlock these enhanced warranties, which means when you replace your roof in Wood-Ridge, you’re getting coverage that a non-certified contractor literally cannot offer you. For a homeowner investing in a property they plan to stay in or sell, that distinction is worth understanding before you compare bids.
The honest answer is that most Wood-Ridge homeowners don’t know what condition their roof is actually in — and a lot of them have been putting off finding out because they’re worried about what a contractor is going to try to sell them. The free inspection removes that barrier. You get a real assessment, documented with photos, that tells you exactly what’s going on with your roof, your flashing, your gutters, and your attic ventilation. No pressure to move forward. No inflated findings designed to manufacture urgency.
Bergen County’s housing stock — and Wood-Ridge’s in particular, with a median construction year of 1962 — means a large percentage of homes are at or near the point where roofing decisions need to be made. Getting ahead of that with accurate information is genuinely useful, whether you end up calling us or not. The inspection gives you a baseline. If your roof has five good years left, you’ll know that. If it needs attention now, you’ll know that too — and you’ll have the photos to back it up if you need to file an insurance claim or get a second opinion.