Hear from Our Customers
A small leak doesn’t stay small. What starts as a water stain on your ceiling can quietly work its way into your decking, insulation, and framing — and by the time you see the real damage, you’re no longer looking at a repair. You’re looking at a gut job. Getting ahead of it early is almost always the cheaper, smarter move.
Edison’s housing stock makes this especially relevant. A lot of homes in North Edison were built during the early-2000s boom, and those roofs are now hitting the 20-plus-year mark — right around when asphalt shingles start losing granules, curling at the edges, and letting water find its way in. If your home falls in that window, a professional eye on your roof isn’t just a good idea. It’s overdue.
The winters here don’t help either. Ice dams are a real and recurring problem across Edison and Middlesex County — when heat escapes through the roof deck, melts snow at the ridge, and refreezes at the eaves, water backs up under your shingles and into your home. Catching that damage in the spring, before it compounds through the next freeze cycle, is exactly the kind of thing a free inspection is built for.
We’ve been doing exterior work across central New Jersey for over a decade, and Edison has been a consistent part of that work. We know the neighborhoods — Clara Barton, Oak Tree, Bonhamtown, North Edison — and we know the kind of roofing problems that show up in each one, whether it’s aging shingles on a 1980s colonial or flashing issues on a flat addition near the Oak Tree Road corridor.
We’re family-operated, which means the same people who walk your roof and write your estimate are accountable for the finished work. There’s no handoff to a subcontracted crew you’ve never met. We hold certifications from major shingle manufacturers, carry full liability and workers’ comp coverage, and we handle the permit process with Edison Township’s Construction Code Enforcement office so you don’t have to.
If the honest answer is a targeted repair, that’s what you’ll hear. We’re not in the business of recommending replacements that aren’t necessary.
It starts with a free inspection. We get on your roof, look at what’s actually going on, and give you a straight assessment — not a sales pitch. If there’s damage, we show you where it is and explain what caused it. If it’s something that can wait, we’ll tell you that too. You leave the inspection with real information, not pressure.
From there, you get a written, itemized estimate. The scope of work is defined clearly — materials, labor, what’s being repaired and why. If the scope doesn’t change, the price doesn’t change. That’s not a policy we invented; it’s just how honest contractors operate.
Once you approve the work, we handle the permit with Edison Township if one is required — and for most roof repairs on residential properties here, it is. Standard permits are typically issued within a few days, and we schedule around your timeline. The crew shows up, does the work, and before we leave, we run a magnetic sweep for nails, haul away all debris, and walk the property with you. The job isn’t done until you’ve seen it and signed off.
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Roof repair in Edison, NJ isn’t one-size-fits-all — and the range of homes here reflects that. We handle shingle roof repair across Edison’s residential neighborhoods, from granule loss and curling edges on aging asphalt systems to missing shingles after a wind event. When a nor’easter or summer storm moves through Middlesex County, shingle damage can happen fast, and the window between “damaged” and “structurally compromised” is shorter than most homeowners expect.
Flashing is one of the most common failure points we find — especially around chimneys, skylights, and roof-to-wall transitions on older homes in South Edison and Bonhamtown. It’s not glamorous work, but failed flashing is responsible for a large percentage of the roof leak repair calls we handle. We also work with flat roof repair for additions, detached garages, and mixed-use structures, working with TPO, EPDM, and modified bitumen systems — because flat roof repair requires a completely different approach than shingle work, and not every contractor knows the difference.
If your damage is storm-related, we can document it in a format that holds up with insurance adjusters. Many homeowners in Edison have never filed a roofing claim and don’t know where to start — we’ve helped plenty of Edison residents through that process, and we can walk you through it from the first photo to the final approval.
For most roof repairs on residential properties in Edison, yes — a permit is required under New Jersey’s Uniform Construction Code, which Edison Township enforces through its Construction Code Enforcement office. This applies to roof covering repairs and replacements on detached one- and two-family homes. The good news is that standard permits in Edison are typically issued within three days, and in some cases can be approved at the counter.
If you’re dealing with emergency damage — say, a tree came through your roof during a storm — work can begin immediately, but a permit application needs to be submitted within 72 hours. Skipping the permit isn’t worth the risk: unpermitted work can void your homeowners insurance claim, create problems when you go to sell the home, and expose you to code violation penalties. We handle the permit process as part of every job, so it’s one less thing you have to think about.
This is one of the most common questions we get, and the honest answer depends on a few things: the age of the roof, how widespread the damage is, and whether the underlying decking has been compromised. If your shingles are under 15 years old and the damage is isolated — a section of missing shingles, a failed flashing, a small leak around a vent — targeted repair is almost always the right call. Replacing a roof that has years of life left is a waste of money.
Where it gets more complicated is with older roofs. A lot of Edison homes, particularly in North Edison and the neighborhoods built during the early-2000s housing boom, are now sitting on 20-plus-year-old shingle systems. At that age, if the damage is widespread and the granule loss is significant across the whole surface, repair starts to become a short-term fix on a system that’s already near the end of its useful life. We’ll tell you exactly where your roof stands after the inspection — with specific, observable evidence — so you can make a decision that actually makes financial sense.
The most common culprits we find in Edison are failed flashing, aging sealant around penetrations like chimneys and vents, and granule loss on shingles that have been through too many Middlesex County winters. Flashing — the metal that seals the joints where your roof meets a wall, chimney, or skylight — is often the first thing to fail on older homes, and it’s responsible for a surprisingly large percentage of the roof leak repair calls we go on.
Ice dams are another major source of leaks in Edison, especially in homes with inadequate attic ventilation. When heat escapes through the roof deck, it melts snow near the ridge, and that water refreezes at the colder eaves — building up a dam of ice that forces water back under the shingles. It doesn’t take much from there. If you’re seeing water stains on interior ceilings or walls in late winter or early spring, ice dam damage is worth investigating before the next freeze season arrives.
Generally, yes — if the damage was caused by a sudden event like wind, hail, or a fallen tree, most standard homeowners insurance policies in New Jersey will cover it. What they typically don’t cover is damage that resulted from neglect or gradual wear over time. The line between “storm damage” and “deferred maintenance” isn’t always obvious, and insurance adjusters are trained to look for reasons to classify damage in the latter category.
This is where documentation matters. When we inspect a roof after a storm event in Edison or anywhere in Middlesex County, we photograph and document damage in a way that clearly ties it to the weather event rather than general aging. We’ve helped homeowners through adjuster visits, and we know what adjusters look for. If you’re not sure whether your damage qualifies, the free inspection is the right starting point — we’ll give you an honest read on what’s likely covered before you spend time filing a claim that may not go anywhere.
When a storm moves through Middlesex County and your roof is actively leaking, the damage isn’t waiting. Water getting into your decking, insulation, and interior walls multiplies the repair cost with every hour it sits. Our goal with emergency roof repair in Edison, NJ is to get to you fast, stabilize the situation — whether that means emergency tarping or immediate patching — and stop the active damage while permanent repairs are planned.
Response time depends on the volume of calls after a major storm event, but we communicate clearly about when we can be there and what we’ll do when we arrive. We don’t disappear after an emergency call and leave you waiting weeks for the actual repair. If you’re dealing with an active leak right now, the best move is to call directly — not fill out a form and wait.
It’s a full visual assessment of your roof’s condition — not a walk-around with a sales pitch attached. We get on the roof, check the shingles for granule loss, curling, cracking, and missing sections. We look at all the flashing points: chimney, vents, skylights, valleys, and any roof-to-wall transitions. We check the gutters and fascia for signs of water damage that might point back to a roofing issue. If there’s an attic accessible, we’ll look for signs of moisture intrusion, daylight coming through the decking, or ventilation problems that could be contributing to ice dam formation in the winter.
At the end of the inspection, you get a straight report on what we found. If there’s damage that needs attention, we explain what it is, what caused it, and what fixing it actually involves. If everything looks solid, we tell you that too. There’s no obligation to move forward, and no pressure to sign anything on the spot. For Edison homeowners who want to know where their roof actually stands — especially if it’s a 2000s-era home approaching the 20-year mark — it’s a worthwhile hour.