Hear from Our Customers
Most gutter problems don’t announce themselves loudly. You notice a water stain on the fascia, a soft spot near the foundation, or overflow during a heavy rain that soaks the same corner of your yard every single time. By then, the damage is already in motion. A properly installed gutter system stops that cycle before it turns into a foundation repair bill.
Dumont’s housing stock is overwhelmingly mid-century — the majority of homes in neighborhoods like Dumont North and Dumont East were built between 1940 and 1969. A gutter system installed in 1995 on one of those homes is likely past its useful life, whether it looks it or not. Sectional gutters with spike-and-ferrule fasteners pull away from the fascia over time. Seams open up. Pitch shifts. Water ends up exactly where you don’t want it.
Bergen County also averages around 26 inches of snow per year, with freeze-thaw cycles that physically stress gutter seams and hangers through every winter. When water gets into a compromised gutter, freezes, and expands, the damage it causes often doesn’t show up until spring — right before the heaviest rain months. Getting ahead of that cycle with a proper replacement means your home is protected through the seasons that matter most.
We’ve been doing exterior work in Bergen County for 10 years — including right here in Dumont. We’re not a franchise, and we’re not a lead-generation site that farms your project out to whoever picks up the phone. We’re a family-owned company where the people running the job are the same people who built the reputation.
We hold contractor licenses and certifications from major shingle manufacturers — credentials that require documented experience and insurance verification, not just a fee. Every job comes with full general liability and workers’ compensation coverage, so you’re not carrying any risk if something goes sideways on your property.
Most of our work comes through referrals and reviews from real homeowners across Bergen County — including neighbors right here in Dumont. That’s what happens when a company does the job right and communicates clearly from start to finish. If you’ve asked someone on Washington Avenue or near Veterans Memorial Park who they used for exterior work, there’s a good chance our name has come up.
It starts with a free inspection. Not a sales call dressed up as an inspection — an actual evaluation of your gutter system, the fascia behind it, the pitch, the hanger condition, and the downspout placement. At the end of that visit, you’ll know what you have, what it needs, and what it will cost. No pressure, no obligation, no inflated scope.
If replacement makes sense, we fabricate seamless aluminum gutters on-site to the exact dimensions of your roofline. That matters because no two homes in Dumont are identical — the rooflines on a 1955 split-level on the north end of the borough are different from a Cape Cod closer to Knickerbocker Road, and the gutter system needs to match the home, not a standard catalog size. We replace any outdated spike-and-ferrule fasteners with hidden hangers, set pitch correctly at the industry standard of a quarter inch per 10 feet, and position downspouts to discharge water well clear of your foundation.
Depending on the scope of the project, some gutter replacements in Dumont may require a permit through the Borough’s Building Department at 50 Washington Avenue. It’s worth confirming before work begins, and we’ll tell you upfront whether your project falls into that category. After the job is done, we walk you through the work — so you know exactly what was installed and why.
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The gutters we install are seamless aluminum — the material and format that accounts for roughly 70% of professional installations nationwide because it outperforms sectional systems in real-world conditions. Seamless means no mid-run joints, which means fewer leak points in a county that sees close to 50 inches of rain per year. Aluminum means corrosion resistance and a lifespan of 20 years or more when installed correctly.
What sets our work apart from a basic gutter swap is the roofing background behind it. Because our primary expertise is exterior renovation — roofing included — we’re evaluating more than just the gutter channel when we’re on your home. We’re looking at whether the fascia has taken on moisture, whether the drip edge is directing water properly into the gutter, and whether the downspout locations make sense for your specific lot and drainage pattern. In Dumont’s dense residential environment, where homes sit close together on modest lots, getting the drainage direction right isn’t just a performance issue — it affects your neighbor’s property too.
Every replacement we do includes proper hanger spacing, sealed end caps, and downspout extensions that move water away from the foundation. The free inspection before the job and the walkthrough after it are standard — not add-ons. You’ll know what you’re getting before anyone picks up a ladder.
The honest answer is that you often can’t tell from the ground. What looks like a minor overflow issue could be a pitch problem across the entire run. What looks like a small gap at the seam could mean the fascia behind it has been absorbing water for years. A professional inspection is the only way to know for sure — and it’s free, so there’s no reason to guess.
That said, there are signs worth taking seriously. If your gutters are sagging visibly, pulling away from the fascia, showing rust or visible cracks, or overflowing consistently during rain despite being clean, those are indicators that repair is unlikely to solve the underlying problem. In Dumont, where most homes were built between 1940 and 1969, it’s also worth factoring in age. A gutter system that’s 25 or 30 years old — even one that’s been patched along the way — is likely approaching the end of its useful life regardless of how it looks. Replacement at that point is usually the more cost-effective call over the long run.
For a typical single-family home in Dumont, gutter replacement generally runs between $1,000 and $1,500 for a standard seamless aluminum system. Larger homes, homes with complex rooflines, or projects that involve fascia repair alongside the gutter work will fall toward the higher end of that range or above it. Every estimate we provide is itemized and explained before any work begins — you’ll know exactly what you’re paying for and why.
It’s worth putting that number in context. The median home value in Dumont is over $650,000. Foundation repair in Bergen County can cost $10,000 to $30,000 or more depending on the extent of the damage. A properly functioning gutter system is one of the most cost-effective ways to protect that investment — and waiting until there’s visible water damage in the basement or against the foundation almost always makes the eventual bill larger, not smaller.
Dumont’s Building Department requires permits for almost all home improvement projects, with limited exceptions for things like interior painting, flooring, and same-size window or door replacements. Whether a specific gutter replacement project requires a permit depends on the scope — particularly if the work involves fascia repair, new downspout locations, or any structural changes to the roofline area.
Before any work begins, it’s worth confirming directly with the Building Department at Borough Hall, 50 Washington Avenue, Dumont, NJ 07628. We’re familiar with Bergen County’s construction environment and hold a valid New Jersey Home Improvement Contractor registration, as required by the state. We’ll tell you upfront whether your project falls within permit territory and handle the process accordingly.
Under normal conditions, a properly installed seamless aluminum gutter system has a lifespan of around 20 years. In Bergen County’s climate — which delivers close to 50 inches of rain annually, 26 inches of average snowfall, and regular freeze-thaw cycles through the winter — that lifespan is achievable, but it depends heavily on the quality of the installation and whether the system is maintained over time.
The freeze-thaw cycle is the factor most homeowners underestimate. When water sits in a gutter with improper pitch, it freezes, expands, and puts physical stress on seams, hangers, and end caps with every cycle. Over several winters, that stress compounds. Ice dam events — which Bergen County homes experience regularly — can force water under shingles and into the gutter system in ways that cause damage that isn’t visible until spring. A seamless system with correctly set pitch, proper hanger spacing, and no mid-run joints holds up significantly better through those conditions than a sectional system that was pieced together years ago.
Sectional gutters are assembled in pieces — typically 10-foot sections joined together with connectors and sealant. Every one of those joints is a potential failure point. Over time, the sealant breaks down, the joints open up, and water starts leaking at the seams. In a climate like Bergen County’s, where those joints go through freeze-thaw stress every winter and handle significant rainfall volume every year, sectional systems tend to fail faster and require more ongoing maintenance than most homeowners expect.
Seamless gutters are fabricated on-site as a single continuous run from one end of your roofline to the downspout. There are no mid-run joints, which eliminates the most common source of leaks. The material — typically aluminum — is cut to the exact measurements of your home, so there’s no trimming, no improvised fitting, and no gaps. The result is a system that handles Bergen County’s precipitation load more reliably and requires less intervention over its lifespan. For homes in Dumont that are already dealing with aging infrastructure, switching from a sectional system to seamless is usually one of the most meaningful upgrades you can make.
Because gutters don’t exist in isolation. They’re the last step in a water management system that starts at the roof — and if something upstream is wrong, replacing the gutter alone won’t fix the problem. A roofing contractor who understands how water moves across a roof, through the drip edge, and into the gutter channel can identify issues that a gutter-only company would miss entirely.
In Dumont, where a significant portion of the housing stock is 60 to 80 years old, the relationship between the roof and the gutter system is often complicated by decades of repairs, additions, and material changes. The fascia may have taken on moisture from a previous gutter failure. The drip edge may be directing water behind the gutter instead of into it. The downspout placement may not account for how water actually flows off that specific roofline. We bring a decade of exterior renovation experience — roofing included — to every gutter replacement job. That means you’re getting an evaluation of the full system, not just a swap of the channel that’s visible from the street.