Hear from Our Customers
The most common thing homeowners say after a proper gutter replacement isn’t about aesthetics — it’s about relief. No more water pooling along the foundation after a hard rain. No more soft spots in the fascia that have been quietly rotting behind an old spike-and-ferrule system. For a lot of Union homes, that peace of mind has been a long time coming.
Union Township has a housing stock that skews older — a significant portion of homes here were built before 1960. That means original or aging gutter systems that were never designed to handle the rainfall loads Union County regularly sees today. When weather stations in Mountainside and Watchung have recorded over five and six inches of rain in a single storm event, a sagging or leaking gutter isn’t a minor inconvenience — it’s actively directing water toward your foundation, your basement, and your home’s framing.
Replacing your gutters with a properly pitched, seamless system doesn’t just stop the overflow. It stops the chain reaction. Fascia boards stay dry. Basements stay dry. And when it’s time to sell, a home that passed inspection without a single water damage flag is worth more than one that didn’t.
We’ve been working on homes across Union County for over a decade. We’re a family-owned operation, which means when something goes wrong — or right — it comes back to us directly. There’s no franchise layer, no call center, and no crew you’ve never met showing up unannounced. You know who’s coming, and you know who to call.
Our background is roofing first, which gives us an edge that gutter-only companies don’t have. We understand how a roof’s pitch, overhang, and drainage pattern affect how a gutter system needs to be sized and installed. For older homes in neighborhoods like Battle Hill and Connecticut Farms — where the original construction wasn’t exactly built to modern drainage standards — that matters more than most homeowners realize.
We’re licensed, insured, and certified by major manufacturers. Free estimates and free inspections are standard, not a promotion. And our growth over the years has come almost entirely from reviews and referrals from homeowners right here in Union County.
It starts with a free inspection. We get up close — not just a look from the driveway — and assess the full condition of your gutter system, the fascia behind it, and how your downspouts are routing water away from the home. On older Union homes, that fascia check matters. What looks fine from the ground can be soft and compromised behind the gutter, and we’d rather find that before installation than after.
Once we’ve assessed everything, you get a clear, itemized estimate. Materials, linear footage, fastener type, downspout count — all of it laid out so you know exactly what you’re paying for and why. No vague totals, no line items that appear after the fact. If there’s fascia work needed before we can install properly, we’ll tell you upfront.
On installation day, we fabricate your seamless gutters on-site to the exact measurements of your home. That’s not a selling point — it’s just how it should be done. Sectional gutters joined with seam tape fail at the joints, and Union’s freeze-thaw winters accelerate that failure significantly. Hidden hangers replace the old spike-and-ferrule systems that pull away from fascia under ice load. When we leave, the system is pitched, secured, and ready for whatever Union County’s weather brings next.
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Every gutter replacement we do in Union starts with that free inspection — not because it’s a hook, but because it’s the only honest way to give you an accurate scope of work. Union’s older housing stock means conditions vary significantly from one home to the next. A 1955 Colonial in Connecticut Farms has different needs than a newer build off Route 22, and we assess each one accordingly.
The installation itself uses seamless aluminum gutters fabricated on-site, hidden hanger systems rated to handle ice load, and properly sized downspouts routed to move water well away from the foundation. Given that Union County sits on the NWS flash flood warning list alongside towns like Cranford, Westfield, and Scotch Plains, proper downspout placement isn’t optional — it’s the difference between a system that works and one that just looks like it works.
If your fascia boards need attention before we can install correctly, we handle that too. We’re not going to bolt new gutters onto rotted wood and call it done. And because our primary background is roofing, we can assess the full exterior picture in a single visit — roof, gutters, soffit, fascia — so you’re not juggling three different contractors trying to figure out where one trade ends and another begins. That’s a real advantage for Union homeowners dealing with homes where multiple exterior systems are aging at the same time.
The honest answer is that it depends on what’s actually failing — and that’s exactly what a proper inspection is for. Gutters that are pulling away from the fascia, sagging in the middle, or leaking at the seams are often candidates for replacement rather than repair, especially if the system is more than 15 to 20 years old. Patching a seam on an aluminum gutter that’s already warped or improperly pitched is a short-term fix that doesn’t address the underlying problem.
In Union specifically, a lot of homes have gutters that were installed on aging fascia boards — and if the wood behind the gutter has softened from years of moisture exposure, repair alone won’t hold. The gutter will pull away again. During our free inspection, we check the fascia condition alongside the gutter system itself, so you get a clear picture of what’s actually going on before you decide anything. We’ll tell you if repair is the right call — and we’ll tell you when it’s not.
For a standard single-family home in Union, most gutter replacement projects fall somewhere in the range of $1,000 to $2,000 depending on the linear footage, the number of downspouts, and whether any fascia work is needed before installation. Larger homes with more complex rooflines — which you’ll find in parts of Battle Hill and Larchmont Estates — can run higher, but that’s the realistic range for most of what we see in this township.
What affects the number most is the condition of what’s behind the gutters. If the fascia is solid and the installation is straightforward, costs stay on the lower end. If there’s rotted wood that needs to be replaced first, that adds to the scope. That’s why we give you a fully itemized estimate before any work starts — so there’s no number that surprises you after the job is done. The estimate is free, and there’s no obligation to move forward.
In most cases, a standard like-for-like gutter replacement in Union Township does not require a building permit under New Jersey’s Uniform Construction Code — it typically falls under ordinary maintenance. However, if the scope of work involves structural changes to the fascia, modifications to drainage routing that affect grading, or anything that touches the roofline structure, the Union Township Building Department may require a permit.
The more important compliance piece for Union homeowners is contractor registration. New Jersey requires all contractors performing home improvement work on residential properties to hold a valid Home Improvement Contractor registration through the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs. Any contractor you hire for gutter work in Union should be able to show you that registration without hesitation. We’re fully registered and licensed, and we’ll handle any permit questions that come up during the assessment process — you don’t need to figure that out on your own.
Seamless aluminum gutters, when properly installed, typically last 20 years or more. Sectional gutters — the kind joined together with seam tape and connectors — tend to fail significantly sooner because the joints are the weakest point in the system, and every seam is a potential leak. In Union’s climate, where freeze-thaw cycles put repeated stress on those joints through the winter months, sectional gutters tend to show their age faster than they would in a milder climate.
For older Union homes that were originally built with spike-and-ferrule fastening systems, the issue compounds. Those spikes loosen over time, especially under ice load, and the gutters start pulling away from the fascia. Hidden hanger systems — which is what we use — distribute the load more evenly and hold up far better through New Jersey winters. If your home still has the original gutter system from a pre-1960 installation, or even a replacement that’s more than 15 years old, it’s worth having it assessed before the next heavy rain season.
Fall and early spring are the two windows most Union homeowners think about, and for good reason. Fall makes sense if you want the system ready before winter — ice, snow, and the freeze-thaw cycle put real stress on aging gutters, and going into a New Jersey winter with a system that’s already failing is a risk most homeowners would rather avoid. Early spring is popular for homeowners who discovered problems during the winter and want them addressed before the heavy spring rain season hits.
That said, the most practical answer is: the best time to replace your gutters is when the inspection tells you they need it. Summer is actually an underrated window — we have more scheduling availability, the weather is cooperative for installation, and you’re protected heading into both fall leaf season and winter. Union’s tree-lined neighborhoods, especially in areas like Connecticut Farms and Battle Hill, mean gutters fill up fast in October. Getting ahead of that is always the smarter move.
The free inspection exists because it’s the only way to give you an honest answer. Union Township has a lot of older housing stock, and what a gutter system looks like from the street tells you almost nothing about what’s actually happening at the fascia line or along the pitch. Homeowners who call us often aren’t sure whether they need a repair, a full replacement, or nothing at all — and we’re not going to guess at that from a phone call or charge you to find out.
It also reflects how we’ve built this business. Our growth in Union County has come from referrals and reviews, not advertising. That only works if people trust what we tell them — which means we have to be straight with you even when the answer is “your gutters are fine, come back in a few years.” A free inspection with no pressure to buy is how that trust gets built. You get a clear picture of your home’s actual condition, a straight answer about what it needs, and an itemized estimate if replacement makes sense. That’s the whole offer.