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A new roof in Northvale isn’t just about curb appeal. It’s about knowing that when the next nor’easter rolls through the Northern Valley and dumps a foot of wet snow on your house, your home is sealed tight — no ice dams forcing water back under your shingles, no flashing failures around your chimney, no ceiling stains showing up three weeks later.
The homes throughout Northvale aren’t new. A lot of them were built in the mid-20th century, and if your roof was replaced in the 1990s or early 2000s, you’re likely at or past the end of its useful life. A full replacement done right — with proper ice and water shield at the eaves, correct ventilation, and quality materials — means you’re not patching the same problem every spring.
Beyond weather performance, a properly installed roof protects what your home is actually worth in Northvale. With median home values in the area running close to $580,000, this isn’t a maintenance expense — it’s asset protection. The right contractor, the right materials, and a clean installation mean you’re not revisiting this decision for another 30 years.
We’ve been doing exterior work across Northern New Jersey for 17 years, and that includes a lot of roofs throughout Northvale and the surrounding Bergen County area. We work on homes in tight-knit boroughs like Northvale where your neighbor will absolutely notice who you hired and how the job went.
We’re GAF certified, which isn’t just a logo on a website. It means we’ve met GAF’s licensing, insurance, and installation requirements, and it means your new roof qualifies for enhanced system warranties that most contractors simply can’t offer. You can verify our certification directly on GAF’s contractor locator — no need to take our word for it.
We’re fully licensed under New Jersey’s Home Improvement Contractor requirements and carry complete insurance coverage. We pull permits through the Northvale Building Department on Paris Avenue the way the job requires. No shortcuts, no verbal promises — just a written estimate, a clean crew, and a roof that performs.
It starts with a free roof inspection. We get up there, look at what’s actually happening — shingle condition, flashing, decking, ventilation — and give you a straight answer. If you need a replacement, we’ll tell you why and show you. If you don’t, we’ll tell you that too. No upselling a $15,000 job to someone who needs a $400 repair.
If replacement is the right call, we’ll pull the necessary permit through the Northvale Building Department before any work begins. Every residential roof replacement we perform in Northvale includes a full tear-off — every layer of old material comes off so we can inspect the decking underneath. In a borough where homes routinely date back 50 to 70 years, skipping that step means hiding problems, not solving them.
Installation includes ice and water shield application at eaves and valleys, drip edge, ridge vent assessment, and full debris removal when we’re done — including a magnetic nail sweep of your yard. If the job involves storm damage, we’ll document everything properly and work directly with your insurance adjuster so you’re not navigating that process alone. Bergen County nor’easters and summer hail events create real damage that insurance should cover — and we know how to make sure it does.
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Most of the roofing work we do in Northvale is residential — asphalt shingle replacement on single-family homes throughout the borough, from the streets off Paris Avenue to the quieter blocks near the Norwood and Old Tappan borders. We work with architectural shingles that carry strong wind ratings, which matters in a Northern Valley community that sees real weather every winter.
But Northvale isn’t only residential. The industrial and commercial corridor along Paris Avenue and Livingston Street — home to manufacturers and businesses like Inrad Optics, GlobTek, and others — creates a real demand for commercial flat roofing. We handle TPO, EPDM, and modified bitumen systems for the light industrial and commercial buildings common to this part of Bergen County. Flat roofing in a NJ climate takes a beating from freeze-thaw cycling and standing water, and it needs contractors who understand that — not a residential-only crew stepping outside their lane.
Whether it’s a colonial on a residential street in the 07647 zip code or a commercial building on Livingston Street, the process is the same: written estimate, permitted work, quality materials, and a clean finish. If your property has both a pitched residential roof and a flat commercial section, we handle both without subcontracting either job out to someone you’ve never met.
Yes — in Northvale, a full roof replacement requires a permit pulled through the Northvale Building Department at 116 Paris Avenue. New Jersey enforces the Uniform Construction Code at the local level, and Northvale’s construction code office handles permit issuance, inspections, and compliance for all roofing work in the borough.
This matters more than people realize. If a contractor suggests skipping the permit to save time or money, that’s a red flag — not a favor. Unpermitted roofing work can create real problems when you sell your home, file an insurance claim, or need warranty coverage. Any contractor legally working in Northvale must also hold a current NJ Home Improvement Contractor registration and carry adequate general liability and workers’ compensation insurance. We handle all of this as a standard part of every job — it’s not an add-on, it’s how the work is supposed to be done.
For a standard single-family home in Northvale, a full roof replacement typically runs somewhere between $11,000 and $18,000, depending on the size of the roof, its pitch, the materials selected, and what the tear-off reveals underneath. Homes throughout Northvale vary quite a bit — ranches, colonials, and split-levels all have different roof geometries that affect labor and material quantities.
The most common variable that shifts cost unexpectedly is decking condition. On homes built in the mid-20th century — which represent a significant portion of Northvale’s housing stock — the decking underneath old shingles can have rotted sections or water-damaged areas that need to be replaced before new material goes on. That’s exactly why a full tear-off matters: it’s the only way to know what you’re actually working with. We identify any decking issues during the inspection and include them in your written estimate before work begins, so there are no surprises on the final invoice.
For most homes in Northvale, architectural asphalt shingles are the right call — they offer significantly better wind resistance than older 3-tab shingles, they handle the freeze-thaw cycling that Northern Valley winters bring, and they come in impact-resistant grades that stand up better to the summer hail events that periodically hit this part of Bergen County.
The key isn’t just the shingle — it’s the full system. Ice and water shield applied at the eaves and valleys is essential in a climate where nor’easters can dump wet snow that sits on your roof for days before melting and refreezing at the edge. Without it, that freeze-thaw cycle forces water back under the shingles and into your home. Proper ridge ventilation matters too — it regulates attic temperature in a way that reduces ice dam formation and extends the life of the shingles themselves. We spec every residential roof installation in Northvale with these details built in, not as upgrades.
It depends on your policy and the type of damage, but many homeowners in Northvale are surprised to find out how much of a storm-damaged roof is actually covered — if the damage is documented correctly and the claim is filed properly. Nor’easter wind damage, hail impacts, and ice dam-related leaks are among the most common covered events for Bergen County homeowners.
The challenge is that insurance adjusters are not always looking for the same damage you are. Hail damage to asphalt shingles, for example, is often invisible to the untrained eye — but it systematically destroys the granule layer that protects the shingle from UV degradation, dramatically shortening the roof’s remaining life. If that damage isn’t properly documented and presented, it may not make it into your settlement. We work directly with adjusters on storm damage roof replacement in Northvale — documenting damage thoroughly, communicating what we find, and making sure your claim reflects the actual scope of what needs to be replaced. You shouldn’t have to fight that battle alone.
The honest answer is: it depends on the age of your roof, the extent of the damage, and what the decking looks like underneath. A missing shingle or a small flashing failure on a roof that’s only 10 years old is usually a repair. The same issue on a roof that’s 22 years old, with granule loss across multiple sections and soft spots in the decking, is a replacement — because you’d be spending money to extend the life of a system that’s already failing.
In Northvale, where a lot of the housing stock dates to the mid-20th century and many roofs were last replaced in the 1990s, the math often points toward replacement. But we don’t make that call based on what’s profitable for us — we make it based on what we find when we’re up there. Our free roof inspection gives you a clear, written assessment of your roof’s condition and an honest recommendation. If a repair is genuinely the right answer, that’s what we’ll tell you.
Most roofing contractors will put a manufacturer’s logo on their website. GAF certification is different because it’s independently verifiable — you can look up any contractor’s certification status directly on GAF’s website. That’s not something a contractor can fake or imply. To earn and maintain GAF certification, a contractor has to meet documented requirements around licensing, insurance, installation training, and background verification. It’s a bar that a lot of contractors in the NJ market simply haven’t cleared.
What it means for you practically is warranty coverage. A GAF certified contractor can offer GAF’s enhanced system warranties — coverage that protects both the materials and the workmanship together, for up to 50 years, in writing. A non-certified installer can only offer the standard material warranty, which covers the shingles themselves but not the installation. For a Northvale homeowner investing $12,000 to $18,000 in a new roof on a home worth close to $580,000, the difference between those two warranty tiers is significant. It’s the kind of protection that actually holds up if something goes wrong five or ten years down the road.