Hear from Our Customers
When your roof is solid, you stop thinking about it. No water stains creeping across the ceiling after a nor’easter. No missing shingles showing up on the lawn after a wind event. No wondering whether that dark spot in the corner of the attic is something you should be worried about. You just live in your house — and that peace of mind is worth more than most people realize until they’ve lost it.
Hillsdale’s housing stock tells a specific story. Most of the ranches, cape cods, and colonials on these streets were built in the 1950s, ’60s, and ’70s. If your home is in that range, the roof you’re living under right now may be at or past the end of its natural lifespan — even if it hasn’t failed visibly yet. The damage usually starts quietly: flashing that’s lost its seal, granules washing off shingles after heavy rain, small gaps forming around chimney bases where freeze-thaw cycles have done their work over years.
The valley geography that gives Hillsdale its name also concentrates weather exposure. Cold air settles in low terrain. Snow accumulates, melts during the day, and refreezes at the eave line overnight — that’s exactly how ice dams form, and ice dams are one of the most common causes of interior water damage in older Bergen County homes. Getting ahead of it with a proper inspection and, where needed, a quality installation isn’t just maintenance. On a home valued anywhere near Hillsdale’s median, it’s one of the smarter financial decisions you can make.
We’ve spent the last ten years doing exterior work on homes across northern New Jersey — the kind of work where there’s no hiding from the results. Roofing either holds up through a Bergen County winter or it doesn’t. There’s no spin on that.
We’re family-owned, licensed under NJ HIC License #13VH10605800, and certified by major shingle manufacturers. That last part matters more than it might sound. Manufacturer certification isn’t just a credential — it’s the only way to unlock enhanced system warranties of 30 to 50 years that uncertified contractors simply cannot offer. For homeowners in Hillsdale, where properties regularly sit in the $700,000 to $900,000 range, that warranty is a real and transferable financial asset.
Every job starts with a free inspection and a detailed photo report — no obligation, no pressure. You get the information first. Then you decide. That’s how it should work, and that’s how we work.
It starts with a free inspection. One of our qualified technicians walks the full exterior — roof deck, flashing, gutters, siding, chimney base, and any areas showing wear. If there’s attic access, that gets checked too, because water damage often shows up inside before it’s visible from the street. You receive a photo report documenting everything found, in plain language, before any conversation about cost.
From there, you get a written estimate that’s clear and itemized. No vague line items. No scope that expands after you’ve already said yes. If you’re comparing quotes — and you should be — our beat-or-match guarantee means price alone is never a reason to walk away. Just make sure every quote you’re comparing covers the same scope: same materials, same warranty tier, same manufacturer certification status.
Once you approve the work, we pull permits through Hillsdale’s Building and Construction office before anything starts. The borough issues permits on Mondays and Wednesdays, so we plan around that schedule without it becoming your problem. Work gets done efficiently, the site gets cleaned up completely, and the final inspection closes it out properly. If something comes up after — you call, and we answer.
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Roofing in Hillsdale isn’t one-size-fits-all. A 1960s colonial on a quiet street off Kinderkamack Road has different needs than a newer build, and we treat the work that way. Full roof replacements include tear-off of the existing system, inspection of the decking underneath, installation of ice-and-water shield along the eave line — which is a code requirement in New Jersey and a practical necessity in a community that sees real nor’easters — and installation of the new shingle system with proper flashing at every penetration point.
Repairs get the same level of attention. Whether it’s a few shingles that came loose after a wind event, a flashing failure around a chimney or skylight, or a leak that only shows up during heavy rain, we scope the repair to fix the actual source — not just cover it. We also handle gutter replacement and siding work, which matters when a full exterior assessment turns up more than just the roof.
For homeowners dealing with storm damage, the photo report from the initial inspection is formatted to support an insurance claim. Hail events and high-wind damage are documented weather realities in Bergen County, and having clear, professional documentation from the start makes the claims process significantly smoother. We offer emergency roof repair in Hillsdale, NJ around the clock — because damage after a late-night storm doesn’t wait for business hours.
Yes — a full roof replacement in Hillsdale requires a building permit issued through the borough’s Building, Construction and Zoning department. Permits are issued on Mondays and Wednesdays between 3:00 PM and 6:00 PM, and the office does not issue permits after 2:00 PM, so timing the application matters. Construction Code Inspections are held on Tuesdays between 4:00 PM and 6:00 PM by appointment.
We handle the permit process on your behalf as a standard part of the job — not as an add-on or an afterthought. If a contractor tells you a permit isn’t necessary for a full replacement, that’s a red flag. Unpermitted roofing work can create real problems when you go to sell the home, and it means the work was never inspected for compliance with New Jersey’s Uniform Construction Code, which includes specific requirements for ice-and-water shield installation, flashing, and ventilation.
The honest answer is that most homeowners can’t tell from the ground — and by the time interior damage shows up, the roof has usually been failing for a while. The most reliable way to know is a professional inspection that covers the full system: shingles, flashing, gutters, fascia, and attic condition.
That said, there are signs worth paying attention to. Shingles that are curling at the edges or losing granules — you’ll notice the granules collecting in gutters or at downspout exits — are telling you the material is past its useful life. Flashing that’s pulling away from chimney bases or dormers is a common failure point on older Hillsdale homes, especially after years of freeze-thaw cycling. If your home was built between the 1950s and 1970s and hasn’t had a roof replacement in the last 20 to 25 years, the math alone suggests it’s time to get eyes on it. A free inspection gives you the facts without any commitment attached.
Ice dams form when heat escaping from the living space warms the upper portion of the roof deck, melting snow that then flows toward the colder eave overhang and refreezes. Over time, that ice buildup creates a dam that forces liquid water back under the shingles — and from there, into the attic, insulation, and eventually the ceiling below.
Hillsdale’s valley geography and Bergen County’s winter weather pattern make this a real and recurring risk, not a theoretical one. The borough sits in low terrain that holds cold air, and the older homes throughout Hillsdale were built with insulation levels well below what modern energy codes require. Less insulation means more heat loss through the roof deck, which means a higher likelihood of ice dam formation during the kind of extended freeze-thaw cycles that Bergen County sees every winter. Proper attic ventilation and adequate insulation are the long-term fix. Proper ice-and-water shield installation during a roof replacement is the protection layer that limits damage when conditions do produce ice dams.
For a typical single-family home in Hillsdale — a ranch, cape cod, or colonial with a standard footprint — a full roof replacement generally runs between $10,000 and $18,000. The range depends on the size and pitch of the roof, the condition of the decking underneath once the old material is removed, the shingle product selected, and whether any flashing or ventilation components need to be addressed at the same time.
That range can feel wide, and it is — which is exactly why a detailed, itemized estimate matters before you commit to anything. Our free inspection and written estimate process is designed to give you a specific number based on your actual home, not a ballpark pulled from a zip code average. One thing worth factoring in: the cost difference between a standard installation and a manufacturer-certified installation is often modest, but the warranty difference is significant. On a home in Hillsdale’s value range, a 30- to 50-year system warranty is a meaningful asset — both for your own peace of mind and for the home’s resale value.
In most cases, yes — homeowner’s insurance covers sudden storm damage caused by wind, hail, or falling debris. Bergen County sees documented hail events and high-wind nor’easters on a regular basis, and both qualify as covered perils under standard homeowner’s policies. What insurance typically does not cover is damage resulting from age, wear, or deferred maintenance — which is why the distinction between storm damage and general deterioration matters during the claims process.
The key is documentation. A professional inspection with a detailed photo report, completed promptly after a storm event, gives your insurance adjuster a clear and organized picture of what happened and when. That documentation makes it significantly harder for a claim to be minimized or denied on the basis of pre-existing conditions. If you’re filing a claim for storm damage to your Hillsdale home, having a licensed, experienced roofing contractor involved from the beginning — not just brought in after the adjuster has already written the scope — puts you in a much stronger position.
Start with the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs. Every contractor performing home improvement work over $500 in New Jersey is required by law to hold a current Home Improvement Contractor registration, and the Division maintains a publicly searchable database where you can verify any contractor’s license number in under a minute. Our license number is #13VH10605800 — look it up.
Beyond the license, look for manufacturer certifications. Certified contractors have met specific training and installation standards set by the shingle manufacturer, and that certification is what unlocks the enhanced system warranties that uncertified contractors cannot offer. Check Google and Trustpilot reviews for recent, specific feedback — not just star ratings. And when you’re comparing estimates, make sure the scope is truly apples to apples: same materials, same warranty tier, permits included, full cleanup included. In Hillsdale, where homes have been standing for decades and their owners take pride in maintaining them, the contractors who have been doing this work honestly for years aren’t hard to identify.