Hear from Our Customers
When your roof is properly replaced or repaired, you stop losing sleep every time the weather forecast mentions heavy rain. No more checking the attic after a storm. No more water stains creeping across the ceiling. That peace of mind is real — and it starts with a roof that was actually installed correctly, with the right materials and the right process behind it.
For Fair Lawn homeowners specifically, that matters more than it might in a newer suburb. The borough’s housing stock is overwhelmingly post-war — most homes here were built between the 1940s and 1960s, and a roof that was last replaced in the ’90s or early 2000s is now well past its expected lifespan. Bergen County winters are hard on aging roofs. Freeze-thaw cycles, ice dams along older eaves, and nor’easters pushing 70 mph winds don’t give worn shingles much grace.
A properly done roof also protects your home’s value. With median home prices in Fair Lawn sitting above $723,000, a compromised roof isn’t just a maintenance issue — it’s a liability that can follow you to the closing table. Getting it handled the right way, with documented materials and a real warranty behind it, is one of the most straightforward ways to protect what you’ve built here.
USA Home Remodeling is a family-owned exterior renovation contractor licensed in New Jersey — NJ HIC License #13VH10605800, verifiable through the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs in about thirty seconds. That’s not a throwaway credential. Fair Lawn’s Building Department requires contractors to be registered before they touch a single shingle, and homeowners who skip that check sometimes find out too late what it costs them.
We’ve been serving Bergen County homeowners for over a decade, with a focus on roofing and exterior work on exactly the kind of post-war homes that make up most of Fair Lawn’s residential neighborhoods — from the Broadway corridor to the streets surrounding the Radburn community. Our approach is straightforward: show up, tell you what’s actually going on with your roof, give you a clear number, and do the work right.
Manufacturer certifications from major shingle brands back up our craftsmanship — and those certifications unlock system warranties that most contractors simply aren’t authorized to offer. That’s a real difference for a home in this market.
It starts with a free inspection. A technician comes out, evaluates the exterior, checks the attic, looks at the flashing, drainage, and decking — and you get a detailed photo report when it’s done. That report is yours whether you hire us or not. You’ll know what’s wrong, where it is, and what it’s going to take to fix it.
From there, you get a clear, itemized estimate before any work is scheduled. No vague ranges. No “we’ll figure it out once we’re up there.” The scope is agreed on, the price is set, and nothing changes without your sign-off. For jobs in Fair Lawn, we also handle the permit process through the borough’s Building Department — because a roof replacement here requires a construction permit, and skipping that step creates real problems down the road, especially at resale or during an insurance claim.
Once the job starts, our crew works efficiently and cleans up completely before they leave. Final walkthrough, permit closed, warranty documented. If something comes up mid-project — unexpected decking damage, deteriorated underlayment that wasn’t visible from the surface — you hear about it before anything changes, not after. Bergen County’s spring and fall booking windows fill up fast, so if your roof has been on your mind, sooner is better than waiting for the next storm to make the decision for you.
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The core of what we offer here is residential roofing — full replacements, repairs, storm damage response, and free inspections for homeowners who aren’t sure what they’re dealing with yet. Every job uses manufacturer-certified materials, and the installation is backed by enhanced system warranties that go well beyond what a standard contractor warranty covers. For a home in Fair Lawn worth $700,000 or more, that warranty is a tangible asset, not a formality.
Beyond the roof itself, we provide gutter and siding services as part of the same project. That matters because a new roof paired with failing gutters or cracked siding is an incomplete fix — water will find another way in. Homes near the Passaic River corridor and in lower-lying parts of Fair Lawn deal with elevated moisture exposure, and getting the full exterior envelope addressed at once is a smarter long-term move than patching things one piece at a time.
We also offer emergency roof repair around the clock. When a storm rolls through Bergen County and takes shingles with it, waiting until Monday morning isn’t an option. We deploy for emergency tarping, damage documentation, and insurance support — because the faster you get an opening secured, the less damage works its way into the structure. If you’re in Fair Lawn and dealing with something urgent, the line is open.
Yes — roof replacements in Fair Lawn require a construction permit through the borough’s Building Department, located at the municipal building on Fair Lawn Avenue. The department issues permits between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., and they can be reached at (201) 794-5307 if you have questions about the process.
This matters more than most homeowners realize. A roof replaced without a permit can create serious complications when you go to sell the home, file an insurance claim, or deal with a code inspection down the line. Some buyers’ attorneys and home inspectors specifically flag unpermitted roofing work, and it can hold up or kill a closing. We pull the appropriate permits as a standard part of every job in Fair Lawn — it’s built into the process, not an add-on. You don’t have to manage that piece. We do.
For a standard single-family home in Fair Lawn, roof replacement costs generally fall somewhere between $9,000 and $18,000 depending on the size of the roof, the pitch, the materials selected, and what’s found underneath the old shingles once the tear-off is done. Bergen County labor costs run higher than the national average, and permit fees add a modest but real line item to the total.
What affects the number most is the condition of the decking. Homes built in the 1950s — which describes the majority of Fair Lawn’s housing stock — sometimes have original decking that’s absorbed decades of moisture and needs partial or full replacement before new shingles go down. That’s not something every contractor will tell you upfront, but it’s something you’ll find out either way — better before the job starts than after. We provide a clear, itemized estimate after the inspection so you know the full number before any work begins.
The most common issues in Fair Lawn’s post-war homes come down to age and ventilation. Homes built in the 1940s through 1960s were not designed to modern energy codes, which means attic ventilation is often undersized. When warm air can’t escape the attic properly, it heats the roof deck in winter, melts snow, and the meltwater refreezes at the eaves — that’s an ice dam, and it forces water under the shingles and into the home.
Beyond ice dams, older flashing details around chimneys, skylights, and valleys are a consistent failure point. The original flashing on a 1950s Fair Lawn colonial may have been replaced once or twice, but if it wasn’t done correctly, it’s likely leaking in a way that won’t be obvious until there’s already interior damage. Granule loss on aging shingles is another common finding — shingles that look intact from the driveway can be at the end of their useful life when you get up close. A proper inspection catches all of this before it becomes an emergency.
The honest answer is that you usually can’t tell from the ground. A few missing shingles after a storm might be a straightforward repair. But if the underlying issue is widespread granule loss, compromised underlayment, or deteriorated decking, patching the surface doesn’t solve the problem — it just delays it.
The way to know for certain is a proper inspection that includes the attic, not just the exterior. Attic checks reveal moisture staining, soft spots in the decking, and ventilation problems that don’t show up in a visual exterior scan. For Fair Lawn homeowners, especially those in homes built before 1970, the inspection often reveals that what looked like a repair situation is actually a replacement — because the roof as a whole has reached the end of its lifespan. Our free inspection includes a photo report of everything found, inside and out, so you’re making a decision based on what’s actually there — not a guess.
It depends on the policy and the cause of the damage, but storm damage from wind, hail, and falling debris is generally covered under standard homeowner’s insurance policies in New Jersey. What matters is how the claim is documented and submitted. Insurance adjusters work from the evidence in front of them, and a poorly documented claim — or one filed without a contractor’s assessment in hand — often results in a lower payout than the actual scope of damage warrants.
Bergen County sees regular nor’easters with winds that can approach 70 mph, and summer hail events that cause granule damage not always visible from the ground. After a significant storm in Fair Lawn, we can assess the damage, document it thoroughly with photos and a written report, and support you through the insurance process. That documentation can make a meaningful difference in what the claim covers. If you’re not sure whether recent storm activity affected your roof, a free inspection is the right first step before you decide whether to file.
Most standard residential roof replacements in Fair Lawn are completed in one to two days for a typical single-story or two-story home. Larger homes, steeper pitches, or roofs with multiple complex angles can extend that to three days. Weather is the main variable — Bergen County’s spring and fall seasons are the busiest booking windows, and scheduling around forecasted rain is a real part of the planning process.
What can extend the timeline is unexpected decking damage found during tear-off. On Fair Lawn homes from the 1950s and 1960s, it’s not unusual to find sections of decking that need replacement once the old shingles are removed — and that work has to be done before new materials go down. We communicate any findings like that immediately, before proceeding, so you’re never surprised by a scope change. The permit process through Fair Lawn’s Building Department is handled on our end and doesn’t typically delay the job, but it does need to be in place before work begins — which is another reason not to wait until the last minute when storm season is approaching.