Hear from Our Customers
A ceiling stain that showed up after last January’s nor’easter isn’t just cosmetic. Water that gets under a lifted shingle or a failed flashing joint doesn’t stop moving — it works its way into your decking, your insulation, and eventually your interior walls. By the time you see visible damage inside, the problem outside has usually been building for months.
For Cresskill homeowners, that cycle is especially punishing. Bergen County’s freeze-thaw pattern — temperatures swinging above and below freezing repeatedly between December and March — turns a minor roof issue into a structural one faster than most people expect. A small gap that costs a few hundred dollars to seal in October can easily become a multi-thousand-dollar decking repair by spring if it’s left alone through a full winter.
What changes after a proper repair isn’t just that the leak stops. You stop wondering whether this winter is going to be the one that finally costs you. For a home worth close to $900,000 — which is right around the median in Cresskill — that peace of mind isn’t a luxury. It’s the whole point.
We’ve been serving Cresskill and northern New Jersey homeowners for over ten years. That means we’ve worked through enough Bergen County winters, nor’easters, and summer hail events to know exactly what roofs in this area face — and what it takes to fix them correctly the first time.
We hold contractor licenses required by the State of New Jersey, carry full general liability and workers’ compensation insurance, and are certified by major shingle manufacturers. Those certifications aren’t just credentials on a wall — they’re what allow us to offer manufacturer-backed warranty coverage that most contractors in this market simply can’t provide.
Cresskill is a community that takes its homes seriously. From the established colonials near Merritt Circle to the larger estates up in the Tamcrest area, the homes here are well-maintained and high-value. We work at that level — with materials, craftsmanship, and accountability that match what you’ve invested in your property.
It starts with a free inspection. We come out, get on the roof, and give you an honest read on what’s actually going on — not a sales pitch. If a targeted repair will solve the problem, that’s what you’ll hear. If the roof has reached the point where repair is just delaying the inevitable, we’ll tell you that too, with a clear explanation of why.
From there, you get a written, itemized estimate. Every material is named — brand, product line, color. Every labor item is listed. The number on the estimate is the number on the invoice, assuming the scope doesn’t change.
Once the work is approved, we handle the permit process with Cresskill Borough Hall’s Construction Department. Roofing work in Cresskill requires a building permit, a final inspection, and a certificate of approval before the job is legally complete. We manage that from start to finish — so there’s no unpermitted work sitting on your property that could complicate a future sale or an insurance claim. When the job is done, the site is clean, the paperwork is in order, and the roof is watertight.
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Roof repair in Cresskill isn’t one thing. It’s a missing shingle on a 1960s cape cod near Anderson Avenue after a wind event. It’s a flashing failure around a chimney or skylight on one of the larger Tamcrest homes. It’s an ice dam that forced water under the eaves all winter and left a stain on the ceiling of a bedroom. It’s a flat roof section on a garage or rear addition that’s been pooling water for two seasons. Each of those is a different problem with a different fix, and treating them all the same is how repairs fail.
We handle shingle roof repair — including missing, cracked, or granule-stripped asphalt shingles — along with flashing repair, pipe boot replacement, ridge cap repair, and emergency roof repair when a storm leaves you with an active leak and no time to wait. For flat and low-slope sections, we work with TPO, EPDM, and modified bitumen systems. We also assist with storm damage documentation for homeowners going through the insurance claim process, which comes up regularly in Bergen County after significant hail or nor’easter events.
If you’re not sure whether you need a repair or a full replacement, the free inspection is the right first step. We’ll give you a straight answer either way.
It depends on the scope of the work. Minor repairs — replacing a few shingles, resealing a flashing joint, patching a small area — typically don’t require a permit. But any work that involves replacing a significant portion of the roof surface, or what Cresskill’s code classifies as reroofing, does require a building permit from Cresskill Borough Hall’s Construction Department.
That permit process also requires a final inspection and a certificate of approval before the job is considered legally complete under New Jersey’s Uniform Construction Code. Skipping that step might seem like a shortcut, but it creates real problems — unpermitted work can surface during a home sale, complicate an insurance claim, or leave you financially exposed if something goes wrong later. We handle the permit process as a standard part of every job that requires one, so you don’t have to track it down yourself.
The range is wide because the scope varies so much. A straightforward shingle repair — replacing a handful of damaged or missing shingles after a wind event — might run a few hundred dollars. Flashing repairs around chimneys, skylights, or roof penetrations typically fall in the $300–$800 range depending on complexity. More involved repairs, like addressing ice dam damage that’s worked its way into the decking, or repairing a flat roof section with membrane failure, can run $1,000 to $3,000 or more.
For Cresskill homeowners, the more relevant question is usually whether repair makes financial sense relative to the age and condition of the roof. A $600 repair on a roof that has three years of useful life left is often a worse investment than putting that money toward a replacement. That’s exactly the kind of honest assessment we give during the free inspection — so you’re making the decision with full information.
In Cresskill and throughout Bergen County, nor’easters are the most frequent driver of emergency roof repair calls. High-sustained winds lift shingle tabs, damage ridge caps, and compromise flashing seals — especially on older homes where the sealant has already started to dry out. The storm doesn’t have to be catastrophic to cause real damage; a 50 mph gust on a roof that’s already showing its age can open up a leak that wasn’t there the week before.
Ice dams are the second major cause, and they’re particularly common in Cresskill because of the region’s freeze-thaw cycle. When heat escapes through the roof and melts snow at the ridge, that water runs down and refreezes at the colder eaves — building a dam that forces water back under the shingles. Homes with older insulation or inadequate attic ventilation are the most vulnerable. Summer hail events also show up regularly in Bergen County and cause granule damage that isn’t always visible from the ground but shortens the roof’s remaining life significantly.
The honest answer is that you usually can’t tell from the ground, and even a ceiling stain doesn’t tell you the full story. What looks like a minor leak inside can reflect a fairly localized repair need — or it can be the visible symptom of widespread shingle degradation, decking damage, or failed underlayment that makes repair a temporary fix at best.
A few things that typically point toward replacement rather than repair: the roof is 20–25 years or older, you’re seeing widespread granule loss in your gutters, there are multiple separate leak points, or the shingles are curling or cracking across large sections of the surface. Cresskill’s housing stock includes a lot of homes built in the post-WWII era through the 1970s — roofs on those homes may be on their second or third installation, and if the last one went in during the late 1990s or early 2000s, it’s at or near end-of-life. The free inspection is specifically designed to answer this question clearly.
Yes, and it’s something that comes up often after significant weather events in Bergen County. When a nor’easter or hail storm moves through the area, a lot of Cresskill homeowners are dealing with the same damage at the same time — which means insurance adjusters are busy and the documentation you submit matters.
We can provide a written damage assessment with photographic documentation that clearly identifies what was damaged, what caused it, and what the repair scope involves. That kind of structured documentation is what adjusters need to process a claim efficiently, and it helps ensure that the repair scope we’re proposing actually aligns with what your policy covers. We’re not a public adjuster and we don’t negotiate claims on your behalf — but we can make sure the physical damage side of the process is documented in a way that supports your claim rather than complicating it.
For active leaks or storm damage that’s leaving your home exposed, we prioritize same-day or next-day response. Bergen County weather doesn’t give you a grace period — water that gets into your home during a storm doesn’t wait for a convenient appointment window, and every hour of delay increases the damage to your decking, insulation, and interior finishes.
When we arrive for an emergency call in Cresskill, the first priority is stopping active water intrusion. That usually means deploying temporary protective measures — professional tarping or emergency patching — to protect the home while a permanent repair is planned and scheduled. We assess the full scope of the damage, give you a clear picture of what happened and what it will take to fix it properly, and walk you through next steps including whether the damage is likely to support an insurance claim. The goal on an emergency call isn’t just to stop the leak — it’s to make sure you understand exactly where things stand before we leave.