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Roselle’s housing stock is mostly early-to-mid 1900s colonials, Cape Cods, and two-family homes — and most of them are on their third or fourth roof by now. That means there’s a real chance the last contractor who touched your roof cut corners you can’t see from the driveway. Missing underlayment, poor ventilation, flashing that was never properly sealed at the chimney — these aren’t hypothetical problems. They’re common findings in homes throughout Roselle, and they quietly get worse every winter.
When a roof is done right, you stop thinking about it. No water stains showing up on the ceiling after a nor’easter. No ice dams forming along the eaves because the attic ventilation was never balanced. No mystery drafts that drive your heating bill up every December. For a home near Warinanco Park or anywhere along Roselle’s older residential corridors, that kind of peace of mind isn’t a luxury — it’s what you’re supposed to get when you hire a roofer.
The difference between a roof that lasts and one that fails early usually comes down to what happened underneath the shingles. Proper decking inspection, code-compliant ice and water shield at the eaves and valleys, and balanced attic ventilation aren’t upsells — they’re the baseline. That’s what a thorough job looks like, and it’s the standard every Roselle homeowner should expect.
We’re based in Elizabeth, NJ — which shares a direct border with Roselle. That’s not a coincidence, and it’s not a marketing line. It means when you call, you’re not waiting on a crew driving in from Bergen County. You’re getting a team that already knows this area, knows the housing stock in Roselle and throughout Union County, and has been working here for over a decade.
We’re family-owned, licensed under NJ HIC License #13VH10605800, and certified by major shingle manufacturers — which matters more than most homeowners realize. Those certifications aren’t just credentials on a wall. They’re what authorize us to offer enhanced manufacturer-backed warranties that most other local roofers simply cannot provide.
And because more than 44% of Roselle residents are Hispanic, we offer fully bilingual service. You can go through the entire process — inspection, estimate, scope of work, questions — in Spanish if that’s what’s comfortable for you. That’s not a footnote. For a lot of Roselle homeowners, it’s the reason they call.
It starts with a free inspection — and this isn’t a contractor standing in your driveway glancing at the roofline. The inspection covers the full exterior surface, the attic space, drainage performance, and every penetration point: chimneys, vents, skylights, anything where water can find a way in. You walk away with a photo-documented report of exactly what was found, regardless of whether you move forward. That report is yours to keep.
If work is recommended, you get a clear, itemized estimate before anything is scheduled. No vague totals, no line items that appear after the job starts. In Roselle, where the borough requires a construction permit for full roof replacements, we handle the permit process as part of the job — so you’re not navigating that on your own or unknowingly hiring someone who skips it. A pulled permit also creates a documented record of the work, which matters when it comes time to sell.
Once the project begins, our crew works through a defined scope: tear-off, decking inspection and repair where needed, proper underlayment and ice-and-water shield installation at vulnerable areas, new shingles installed to manufacturer spec, and full cleanup before we leave. If anything unexpected comes up mid-job, you hear about it immediately — before any additional work is done. No surprises at the end.
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Most roofing quotes look similar on the surface. The difference shows up later — in the warranty coverage, in what happens when something fails, and in whether the contractor who did the work is still reachable. Our manufacturer certifications mean the warranties backing your new roof come from the manufacturer directly, not just from our word. That’s a meaningful distinction for any Roselle homeowner whose property value has climbed significantly and wants real protection on that investment.
We cover full roof replacements, targeted repairs, storm damage assessment, and emergency response for situations that can’t wait — available 24/7. For Roselle’s two-family homes, which have their own drainage and ventilation considerations, the inspection and estimate process accounts for the full roofing system, not just the most visible section. Gutters and siding are also available under the same roof, so if a nor’easter took out more than just shingles, you’re not coordinating three separate contractors.
Pricing is upfront and itemized. If you bring in a comparable written estimate from another licensed, insured contractor, we’ll beat or match it — same materials, same warranty coverage, same scope. The goal isn’t to be the cheapest option. It’s to be the one that’s actually worth what you pay, backed by certifications and warranties that hold up long after the crew leaves.
Yes — the Borough of Roselle requires a construction permit for full roof replacements. The fee for residential roofing on standard single- and two-family homes is $150, and the permit needs to be pulled before work begins. This is a step that some contractors skip, either because they don’t know or because they’re trying to move faster. Skipping it isn’t just a code violation — it means the work isn’t inspected, and there’s no official record of it.
That matters more than most people realize. When you go to sell your home, buyers and their attorneys often pull permit history. Unpermitted roofing work can complicate or delay a closing. A contractor who handles the permit as a standard part of the job — not an add-on or an afterthought — is giving you documentation that protects the value of your home, not just the roof itself.
The honest answer is that you usually can’t tell from the ground, and even a basic visual inspection from the roof surface only tells part of the story. In Roselle’s older housing stock — a lot of which was built between the 1920s and 1960s — the more telling signs are often in the attic. Water staining on the sheathing, soft spots in the decking, or daylight visible through the roof structure are indicators that damage has already moved past the shingles and into the system underneath.
On the surface, granule loss in the gutters, shingles that are curling at the edges or cracking, and flashing that has separated at chimney bases or dormers are all signs that a roof is past its serviceable life. A full inspection — not just a quote call — is the only way to get an accurate read. That’s exactly why we offer a free inspection with a documented report: so you know what you’re actually dealing with before anyone asks you to commit to anything.
The most frequent issues we find in Roselle’s early-to-mid 1900s homes come down to three things: inadequate ventilation, deteriorated flashing, and the legacy of previous overlay installations. Many of these homes have had multiple roofs installed over the decades, and not every contractor did a full tear-off. When new shingles go over old ones without addressing the decking underneath, moisture gets trapped and the decking deteriorates from the inside out — often without any visible sign until the damage is significant.
Flashing failures at chimneys are also extremely common in Roselle’s housing stock. These homes frequently have brick chimneys, and the flashing that seals the joint between the chimney and the roof is one of the first things to fail as it ages. When it goes, water follows the chimney down into the wall cavity — which can look like a plumbing leak, not a roofing problem. Ventilation issues are the third major factor: poor attic airflow accelerates shingle wear from below and contributes to ice dam formation during Union County’s freeze-thaw cycles from December through February.
For a standard single-family home in Roselle, a full roof replacement typically falls in the range of $8,000 to $18,000 depending on the size of the roof, the pitch, the materials selected, and what the inspection reveals about the decking underneath. Two-family homes, which are common throughout the borough, tend to run higher due to the larger footprint and more complex drainage configurations.
What shifts the number significantly is what’s found under the shingles. If decking needs to be replaced — which is not uncommon in homes that have had multiple overlay installations — that adds to the total. The same goes for chimney flashing, fascia replacement, or ventilation corrections. This is why an honest, itemized estimate based on an actual inspection matters more than a ballpark number from a phone call. You want to know the real scope before you commit, not discover it mid-project.
The first priority is limiting interior damage. If you’re seeing active water intrusion, emergency tarping can stop it from spreading while a full assessment is scheduled. We offer 24/7 emergency response for exactly this situation — because nor’easters and summer thunderstorms don’t wait for business hours, and in Roselle’s older housing stock, a small breach can become a significant interior water event within hours if it’s not addressed.
After the immediate situation is stabilized, the next step is a documented inspection with photos — both for your own records and for any insurance claim you plan to file. Insurers want evidence of the damage in its original state, not after it’s been partially repaired. A thorough, photo-documented assessment gives you the documentation you need to support the claim and understand the full scope of what the storm actually did, not just what’s visible from the outside.
Yes — we offer fully bilingual service in English and Spanish. For a borough where more than 44% of residents are Hispanic, being able to go through an inspection, review an estimate, and ask questions in Spanish isn’t a minor convenience. It’s the difference between feeling confident in what you’re agreeing to and feeling like you’re signing something you’re not entirely sure about. Roofing is a significant financial decision, and clear communication throughout the process is part of what makes it a good experience rather than a stressful one.
This is especially relevant for Roselle homeowners who may be first-generation property owners — people who have invested seriously in their homes and want to make sure they fully understand the scope of work, the warranty coverage, and what they’re getting for their money. The bilingual capability exists because this community deserves the same level of clear, direct communication as any other, and that means meeting people where they are — not asking them to navigate a major home investment in a second language.
Other Services we provide in Roselle