Hear from Our Customers
A roof problem in Garfield rarely stays a roof problem for long. Water gets in through a cracked shingle or failed flashing, works its way into the decking, soaks the insulation, and eventually shows up as a stain on your ceiling — or worse, a structural issue you didn’t see coming. Catching it early is the difference between a $400 repair and a $4,000 one.
Most of Garfield’s housing stock was built between 1940 and 1969. That means a significant number of roofs in this city are either at or well past the end of their expected lifespan. The freeze-thaw cycles that hit Bergen County every winter — ice forming, expanding, and contracting along your shingles and flashing — accelerate that deterioration faster than most homeowners realize. Add in the nor’easters and summer hailstorms that regularly move through the Passaic River corridor, and you’ve got a roof that’s working harder than most.
Getting the repair done right means the leak stops, the damage doesn’t spread, and you’re not calling someone else six months from now to fix what the first contractor missed. That’s the outcome — a roof that holds up through what New Jersey actually throws at it.
We’ve been serving homeowners across Garfield and Bergen County for over ten years. We’re a family-operated exterior renovation company — roofing is what we do first, and we back it up with contractor licenses, manufacturer certifications, and the kind of accountability that comes with having a real name attached to every job.
In a city like Garfield, where neighbors talk and word travels fast through tight-knit communities along Midland Avenue, Outwater Lane, and the Passaic Street corridor, your reputation is everything. We don’t use rotating crews or commissioned salespeople. The same people who assess your roof, write your estimate, and answer your follow-up calls are responsible for what gets installed.
We also know that a lot of Garfield homeowners own duplexes or small multi-family properties — rental income on the line, tenants to think about. We’ve handled those jobs too, and we understand the urgency that comes with them.
It starts with a free inspection. We come out, get on the roof, and look at what’s actually going on — not just what’s visible from the ground. In Garfield’s older housing stock, the real damage is usually at the flashing around chimneys and vents, along the valleys, or in flat sections on attached garages and rear additions. We check all of it.
After the inspection, you get a written estimate that breaks down exactly what needs to be done and what it costs. If the scope doesn’t change, the price doesn’t change — no surprises at invoice time. For jobs that require a permit under New Jersey’s Uniform Construction Code, we handle that through Garfield’s Building Department so you’re not navigating the FastTrack permitting portal on your own.
Once work begins, we keep you informed. You’ll know what day the crew is coming, what they’re doing, and what to expect when they leave. If your roof took storm damage and you’re filing an insurance claim, we document everything the adjuster needs — photos, written assessments, scope of damage — so the claim reflects what the repair actually costs.
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Garfield roofs aren’t one-size-fits-all. The pitched asphalt shingle roofs on older single-family homes along Garfield’s residential blocks need a different approach than the flat or low-slope sections common on duplexes, attached garages, and rear additions throughout the city. We work on both — shingle roof repair, flat roof repair using TPO, EPDM, and modified bitumen systems, flashing repair, emergency roof repair after storm events, and full roof leak diagnostics when the source isn’t obvious.
For shingle repairs, we match replacement materials carefully — color, texture, and profile — so the repaired section doesn’t stick out like a patch job on a block where every neighbor can see your roof. For flat roof sections, we use materials and methods appropriate to the specific system, not whatever’s easiest to install. A flat roof done wrong fails within a season; done right, it holds for years.
We also hold certifications from major shingle manufacturers, which means repairs we perform can qualify for manufacturer-backed warranty coverage. That’s not something every roofing contractor in Bergen County can offer — and for a homeowner who plans to stay in their Garfield property for the long haul, it’s a protection worth having in writing.
This is the most important question to get right, and the honest answer is: it depends on the age of your roof, the extent of the damage, and what’s happening underneath the shingles. If your roof is under 15 years old and the damage is isolated — a few missing shingles, a failed flashing seal, one section of granule loss — repair is almost always the right call. If your roof is 25 or 30 years old and you’re seeing widespread granule loss, multiple leak points, or soft spots in the decking, replacement is likely the more cost-effective long-term decision.
In Garfield specifically, a lot of homes have roofs that were last replaced in the late 1990s or early 2000s — which puts them right at that decision point now. When we do a free inspection, we’ll tell you exactly where your roof falls and why. We don’t default to replacement because it’s more profitable. If a repair gets you another 8–10 years of performance, that’s what we’ll recommend.
Cost depends on the type of repair, the size of the affected area, and the roofing system involved. For minor repairs — patching a small section of missing shingles, resealing flashing around a chimney or vent, addressing a single leak point — you’re generally looking at a range of $300 to $1,500. More involved repairs, like replacing a larger section of damaged shingles, repairing a flat roof membrane on a detached garage, or addressing ice dam damage that’s compromised the underlayment, can run $1,500 to $5,000 or more depending on scope.
In Garfield, the age of the housing stock is a real factor. Older homes sometimes have underlayment or decking issues that only become visible once the damaged surface layer is removed. We’ll let you know upfront if we find anything that changes the scope, and we’ll explain why before any additional work is done. The written estimate you receive before we start reflects what we expect to find — and we stand behind it.
It depends on the scope of work. Under New Jersey’s Uniform Construction Code, minor repairs — like replacing a handful of shingles, resealing flashing, or patching a small section of flat roof membrane — typically don’t require a permit. However, more significant work, like replacing a large portion of the roof surface or making structural repairs to the decking, generally does require a construction permit from Garfield’s Building Department.
Garfield has moved its permitting process online through the FastTrack Government portal, which makes the application process more straightforward than it used to be. When we scope your repair, we’ll tell you upfront whether a permit is required for your specific job and handle the filing if it is. You shouldn’t have to figure that out on your own, and you definitely shouldn’t hire a contractor who skips the permit process — unpermitted work can create real problems when you go to sell the property or file an insurance claim.
The first priority is stopping the water from spreading. If you’re seeing active water intrusion — dripping, wet insulation, water stains growing in real time — move anything valuable away from the affected area and place a container to catch dripping water if it’s coming through the ceiling. Don’t go on the roof yourself, especially if it’s still wet or icy.
Call a roofing contractor as soon as possible. In Garfield, where summer thunderstorms and nor’easters can hit hard and fast, the window between “manageable repair” and “the water reached the decking and now we have a bigger problem” can be short. When we respond to an emergency roof repair call, the first step is getting temporary protection in place — tarping, emergency patching — to stop active intrusion while we assess the full scope of damage. If you’re planning to file a homeowners insurance claim, don’t make any permanent repairs before the adjuster has a chance to document the damage, but do get temporary protection in place immediately. We can help you navigate that sequence.
Ice dams are one of the most common causes of roof leaks in northern New Jersey, and Garfield is no exception. They form when heat escaping from the living space warms the upper portion of the roof, melting snow that then refreezes at the colder eaves. That ice buildup creates a dam, and water pools behind it — eventually working its way under the shingles and into the home.
The damage ice dams cause is often more extensive than it looks from outside. Water forced under shingles saturates the underlayment, soaks into the decking, and can travel along rafters before showing up as a ceiling stain well away from where the actual entry point is. When we inspect for ice dam damage, we’re looking at the full path the water took — not just the surface. In most cases, the shingles and flashing in the affected area need to be replaced, and the underlayment needs to be assessed for saturation. Proper repairs also address the conditions that allowed the ice dam to form, which sometimes involves improving attic ventilation to reduce the heat differential that causes the problem in the first place.
The straightforward answer is accountability. Garfield is a dense, connected city — word travels fast on Midland Avenue, through the Passaic Street neighborhood, and across the close-knit communities that make up this city. A contractor who does bad work here hears about it. We’ve been operating in this region for over a decade because the work holds up and the communication is honest.
Practically speaking, we’re licensed, insured, and certified by major shingle manufacturers — which means the repairs we do can qualify for manufacturer-backed warranty coverage that most contractors in this market can’t offer. We provide written estimates that don’t change at invoice time. We pull permits when the job requires them. And for the significant number of Garfield homeowners who own duplexes or rental properties, we understand that a roof issue isn’t just a home comfort problem — it’s a business problem with tenants and rental income involved. We treat it with that level of urgency. The free inspection costs you nothing and gives you a clear, honest picture of what your roof actually needs.