Hear from Our Customers
Most Bergenfield homeowners don’t think about their roof until something goes wrong. Then they’re dealing with a water stain on the ceiling, a gutter pulling away from the fascia, or shingles that didn’t survive the last nor’easter. At that point, the question isn’t just “how much will this cost?” — it’s “who can I actually trust to fix this the right way?”
That’s where the difference between a credentialed contractor and a random name from a search result starts to matter. Over 80% of Bergenfield’s housing stock was built between the 1930s and 1960s — the post-WWII boom that followed the George Washington Bridge construction. Those homes were built well, but their roofing systems have been fighting Bergen County winters, freeze-thaw cycles, and 25-plus severe weather days a year for decades. A roof that was replaced in the 1990s is likely past its useful life right now.
When the job is done right, you stop chasing the problem. No more ceiling stains after a rainstorm. No more wondering if that soft spot near the chimney is getting worse. You get a roof that’s been installed by a certified contractor, backed by a real manufacturer warranty, and permitted through Bergenfield’s Building Department — so it’s documented, inspected, and tied to your home’s value when it’s time to sell.
We’ve been working on homes across Bergenfield and Bergen County for over 17 years. Not as a franchise. Not as a call center that subs everything out. As a family-owned operation where the same standards that applied to the first job in Bergenfield still apply to every job today.
The homes we work on in Bergenfield — the capes off Washington Avenue, the colonials near Cooper’s Pond, the ranches that have been in families for two or three generations — they’re not just projects. They’re someone’s biggest investment. We treat them that way. That means showing up when we say we will, explaining what we find during an inspection without inflating it, and standing behind the work after we leave.
We’re licensed in New Jersey, certified by major shingle manufacturers, and fully insured. If something needs to be permitted through Bergenfield’s Building Department at 198 N. Washington Avenue, we handle that process for you. You don’t have to figure that part out on your own.
It starts with a free inspection. We come out, get on the roof, and give you an honest read on what’s going on — whether that’s a minor flashing issue around a chimney, a section of shingles that needs to be replaced, or a system that’s reached the end of its life. You get a clear answer, not a vague estimate designed to upsell you into a full replacement you might not need.
From there, if work is needed, we walk you through the scope and the cost before anything starts. Bergenfield requires a building permit for roofing work, and we pull it — that’s not something you should have to navigate on your own, and it’s not something we skip. A permitted job means a municipal inspector signs off on the work, and it means the project is on record when you go to sell the home. Given that Bergenfield requires a Certificate of Occupancy for all home resales, that paper trail protects you.
Once the job is underway, we keep the site clean, keep you informed, and don’t disappear mid-project. Bergen County’s weather windows can be tight — especially in the fall when homeowners are trying to get ahead of winter — so we work efficiently without cutting corners. When we’re done, the cleanup is thorough, the work is inspected, and you have documentation of everything that was done.
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Whether you need a targeted repair on an aging ranch roof or a full replacement on a colonial that’s been in the family since the 1950s, the scope of what we offer is built around what Bergenfield homes actually need. That includes asphalt shingle roofing, metal roofing, flat roofing systems, and full exterior work that covers gutters and siding when those systems are connected to the problem.
Metal roofing is worth a real conversation if you’re tired of replacing the same asphalt system every 20 to 25 years. A properly installed metal roof can last 50 years or more in Bergen County’s climate — through the nor’easters, the ice buildup, the summer heat cycles. It resists the algae growth that shows up on north-facing shingle roofs in humid NJ summers, and it holds up against wind-driven rain in a way that aging three-tab shingles simply don’t. For Bergenfield homeowners who want a long-term answer rather than another short-term fix, it’s a legitimate option worth understanding.
Every installation we complete is backed by manufacturer certification — which means the warranty on your materials isn’t just a piece of paper. It’s tied to a certified installer who met the manufacturer’s standards to earn that designation. Non-certified contractors can’t offer those same extended warranties. That’s a real, concrete difference — not a marketing point — and it matters when you’re making a decision on a home valued at $600,000 or more in Bergenfield’s current market.
Yes — Bergenfield explicitly requires a building permit for roofing work. This is confirmed on the borough’s official website, and it applies to full replacements as well as significant repairs. The permit is filed through the Building and Zoning Department, located in the basement level of Borough Hall at 198 N. Washington Avenue.
This matters more than most homeowners realize. Bergenfield also requires a Certificate of Occupancy for all home resales. If roofing work was done without a permit, that can surface as a problem at closing — delaying or complicating the sale and potentially leaving you with no legal recourse if the work was defective. When we handle a job in Bergenfield, we pull the permit as part of the process. You don’t have to coordinate with the Building Department yourself, and the completed work is on record as inspected and code-compliant.
The honest answer is that it depends on the age of the roof, the extent of the damage, and what the underlying structure looks like — and you can’t fully assess that from the ground. What looks like a few missing shingles from the street can sometimes indicate a larger issue with the decking or flashing underneath. That’s exactly why a professional inspection matters before any decision is made.
For most Bergenfield homes, which were built between the 1940s and 1960s, the relevant question is often whether the roof has already been replaced once or twice. If it has, and it’s showing signs of wear — granule loss, curling edges, recurring leaks, or soft spots near the ridge or valleys — a full replacement is usually the more cost-effective long-term answer. If the system is relatively newer and the damage is isolated, a targeted repair may be all that’s needed. We’ll tell you which one honestly after the inspection, without steering you toward the more expensive option if it isn’t warranted.
Bergen County’s climate is genuinely demanding on roofing systems. You’re dealing with humid summers that accelerate algae growth on north-facing shingle surfaces, freeze-thaw cycles through the winter that stress flashing and sealant, wind-driven rain from nor’easters, and occasional hail. The right material depends on your budget, your timeline, and how long you plan to stay in the home.
Architectural asphalt shingles are still the most common choice — they’re cost-effective, widely available, and when installed by a certified contractor, they come with strong manufacturer warranties. Algae-resistant shingles are worth the modest upgrade in Bergenfield’s humid environment. Metal roofing is increasingly popular for homeowners who want a longer-lasting system — properly installed, it can last 50 years or more and handles Bergen County’s wind and ice load significantly better than asphalt. Flat roofing systems using TPO or EPDM are common on additions and low-slope sections of older Bergenfield homes. We’ll walk you through what makes sense for your specific roof during the free inspection.
A manufacturer certification isn’t just a badge on a website. It means the contractor has met documented standards set by the shingle manufacturer — including installation experience requirements, insurance verification, and in some cases ongoing quality audits. The practical benefit to you is access to extended warranty coverage that non-certified contractors cannot offer.
Standard manufacturer warranties cover materials only, and they’re often limited to 25 or 30 years. When a certified contractor installs the system, that can unlock enhanced warranties that cover both materials and workmanship — sometimes for the life of the roof. For a Bergenfield homeowner investing $15,000 to $25,000 or more in a roofing system on a home worth $600,000-plus, that extended warranty is meaningful protection. If a defect shows up five years after the job is done, you have a documented path to resolution. Without certification, you’re relying entirely on the contractor’s willingness to come back — and in a market with as many short-lived operators as Bergen County has, that’s a real risk.
For some homeowners, yes — and the math is clearer than most people expect. A standard asphalt shingle roof in New Jersey typically lasts 20 to 30 years under Bergen County’s weather conditions. A metal roof, properly installed, can last 50 years or more. If you’re on your second or third roof replacement on a post-WWII Bergenfield home, you’re already familiar with that cycle. Metal roofing breaks it.
Beyond longevity, metal roofing holds up better against the specific conditions that shorten the life of asphalt systems here — the ice load from Bergen County winters, the humidity-driven algae growth, and the wind uplift from nor’easters. It can also reduce cooling costs during summer, and some insurance carriers offer lower premiums for metal roofs due to their durability and fire resistance. The upfront cost is higher, but when you factor in the reduced replacement frequency and the warranty coverage that comes with a certified installation, it’s often the more cost-effective choice over a 30-to-40-year horizon.
After any significant weather event in Bergen County, the number of roofing contractors showing up in Bergenfield increases fast. Some are legitimate. Others are out-of-state operators who move through storm-affected areas, collect deposits, and disappear before the work is finished or before any warranty issues surface. It’s a well-documented pattern in NJ, and it’s worth knowing how to protect yourself.
The most reliable filters are verifiable credentials. A New Jersey Home Improvement Contractor license is legally required for any contractor doing work over $500 in the state — ask for the license number and look it up through the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs. Bergenfield also requires local contractor registration through the Building Department. Beyond licensing, manufacturer certifications from major shingle brands are tied to real accountability — those certifications can be verified directly through the manufacturer’s website. Finally, a contractor who has been operating continuously in New Jersey for 17-plus years, has local reviews from Bergenfield homeowners, and pulls permits through Bergenfield’s Building Department is not a storm chaser. That track record is public, verifiable, and the clearest signal that we’ll still be around when you need us.