Hear from Our Customers
A roof that’s doing its job is one you never think about. No water stains spreading across the ceiling after a nor’easter. No missing shingles after a wind event rolls through the Palisades corridor. No call to a contractor in a panic because what started as a small drip turned into something that touched the insulation. That’s what a properly installed, properly maintained roof actually gives you — peace of mind that doesn’t evaporate the first time the weather turns.
For homes in Cresskill, that matters more than most people realize. The borough sits on the eastern slope of the Palisades ridge, which means wind-driven rain and snow hit the front face of a lot of homes with more force than homeowners expect. Add in the freeze-thaw cycling that North Jersey winters are known for, and you’ve got real ice dam risk at the eaves — especially on older homes that weren’t built with modern underlayment systems. Getting that right isn’t just about materials. It’s about knowing what this area actually throws at a roof.
Cresskill’s housing stock skews older in a lot of pockets — mid-century construction that’s well past the typical lifespan of the original shingles. If your home was built in the 1960s or 70s and the roof hasn’t been replaced, you’re likely overdue. A free inspection tells you exactly where things stand, without any pressure to do more than what’s actually needed.
We’ve been working across Bergen County for over 17 years. That’s not a number thrown out for effect — it means we’ve been here through the storms, the seasons, and the kind of jobs where the real test is what happens after the crew leaves. Cresskill is part of that footprint, and the homes here get the same level of attention as every other job in the county.
We’re family-owned and operated. That means the people making decisions about your project are the same people whose reputation is on the line when it’s done. There’s no corporate buffer, no franchise playbook. Just a contractor who knows Bergen County homes, understands what the local building department at 67 Union Avenue requires for permitted work, and takes the job seriously because our name is attached to it.
Licensing, insurance, and manufacturer certifications are all in place — not because it’s required for the pitch, but because those credentials exist to protect you. We offer extended manufacturer warranties, pull proper permits, and provide real accountability. That’s the baseline here.
It starts with a free inspection. We come out, get on the roof, and give you an honest read on what’s happening up there. Not a sales pitch — an actual assessment. If it’s a repair situation, that’s what we recommend. If the roof is genuinely past the point where repairs make sense, you’ll hear that too, with a clear explanation of why. Cresskill’s Borough Code requires roofs to be maintained watertight, so if there’s a real problem, it’s worth knowing sooner rather than later.
From there, you get a detailed estimate. The number you see is the number you pay — no surprise line items discovered on the final invoice, no material upgrades slipped in without a conversation. Once you’re ready to move forward, we handle the permit process through the borough’s Construction Department. That step matters. Unpermitted roofing work creates headaches at resale, and in a market where Cresskill homes are selling well into the seven figures, that’s not a risk worth taking.
On installation day, our crew works clean and works efficiently. Materials are staged carefully, the existing roof is removed properly, and the new system goes down according to manufacturer specs — because that’s what keeps the warranty intact. When the job is done, the site gets cleaned up and you get documentation of everything: the permit, the warranty, the work completed. Nothing ambiguous, nothing left open-ended.
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Roofing is our primary focus, and our scope covers the full range of what Cresskill homeowners actually need. Targeted repairs for things like failed flashing at a chimney, wind-lifted shingles after a Bergen County storm, or ice dam damage along the eaves. Full replacements using architectural shingles, which hold up significantly better than basic 3-tab on homes in this area and carry stronger manufacturer warranty coverage. And metal roofing for homeowners who want a system built to last 40 to 70 years on a high-value property — a legitimate option for the premium homes that make up a large portion of Cresskill’s housing stock.
Manufacturer certifications matter here because they change what warranty coverage you can actually access. A non-certified installer cannot offer the same extended warranty that we can — and on a $15,000 to $25,000 roofing investment, that gap is significant. Our certifications unlock those extended programs, which means your new roof is backed by more than just a handshake.
Gutters and siding are also part of what we offer. When a roof issue connects to a drainage problem or compromised siding — which happens more than people expect in older Bergen County homes — having one contractor handle the full exterior scope eliminates the runaround. Every service includes a free estimate upfront and a clear scope of work before anything starts.
Yes — the Borough of Cresskill requires a permit for reroofing work, and any contractor performing that work must hold a certificate of registration from the borough’s Construction Department, located at Borough Hall on 67 Union Avenue. This isn’t a formality you can skip without consequences. Unpermitted work can create real problems when you go to sell your home, and in Cresskill’s real estate market — where median sale prices have reached well into the high six figures — that’s a risk that’s simply not worth it.
We handle this process as a standard part of the job, not an add-on. If a contractor you’re talking to doesn’t mention the permit or suggests you don’t need one, that’s a red flag. The permit process exists to protect you, and a contractor who pulls it properly is one who’s accountable for the work they do.
For most single-family homes in Cresskill, a full roof replacement falls somewhere in the range of $15,000 to $27,000, with the average landing around $21,000. That range moves based on the size of the roof, the pitch, the material you choose, and whether there are any underlying issues — like damaged decking or compromised flashing — that need to be addressed before the new system goes down.
In Cresskill specifically, a lot of homeowners are choosing architectural shingles over basic options because the homes here carry significant value and the upgrade in durability and warranty coverage makes sense proportionally. Metal roofing is also a real conversation for higher-end properties, especially on homes where longevity matters more than upfront cost. A free estimate gives you a specific number based on your actual roof — not a ballpark pulled from a general calculator.
Ice dams form when heat escaping through the roof melts snow near the ridge, and that water runs down to the colder eaves where it refreezes. Over time, the ice buildup forces water back under the shingles and into the structure — which leads to water intrusion, damaged insulation, and sometimes interior ceiling damage that’s expensive to fix.
Cresskill homes are genuinely at risk for this. The borough sits at higher elevation on the eastern slope of the Palisades, which means more snow accumulation and more pronounced temperature differences between sun-exposed and shaded roof surfaces. Older homes in the area — particularly mid-century construction — often weren’t built with the ice and water shield protection that modern installations include at the eaves and valleys. If your home is older and hasn’t had a full roof replacement, this is worth asking about during an inspection.
The honest answer is: it depends on the age of the roof, the extent of the damage, and whether the underlying structure is still sound. A few missing shingles after a windstorm is usually a repair. Widespread granule loss, multiple failing areas, or a roof that’s 25 to 30 years old with recurring problems is typically a replacement conversation — because at that point, you’re patching a system that’s past its design life, and the repairs start adding up faster than a replacement would have cost.
A free inspection takes the guesswork out of it. We give you an honest read — not a sales pitch — and tell you exactly what we found and why we’re recommending what we’re recommending. In Cresskill, where a lot of the housing stock dates back to the 1950s and 60s, the replacement conversation comes up more often than homeowners expect. Knowing where your roof stands before a problem forces the decision is always the better position to be in.
For most Cresskill homeowners, architectural asphalt shingles are the practical choice — they’re significantly more durable than basic 3-tab shingles, carry better wind resistance ratings, and qualify for stronger manufacturer warranty programs. For homes on the more exposed eastern side of the borough, where wind-driven precipitation off the Palisades ridge is a real factor, the heavier weight and layered construction of architectural shingles makes a meaningful difference in how the roof performs over time.
Metal roofing is the premium option for homeowners who want a system that’s genuinely built to last. A properly installed metal roof can hold up for 40 to 70 years, handles freeze-thaw cycling better than asphalt, and is highly wind-resistant — which matters in a county that sees its share of nor’easters and summer storm systems. The upfront cost is higher, but on a high-value Cresskill property, the math often works out in favor of the longer-lasting system.
Manufacturer certifications aren’t just a credential on a website — they change what warranty coverage you can actually receive. A contractor who isn’t certified by a major shingle manufacturer like GAF or Owens Corning is legally unable to offer the extended warranty programs those manufacturers provide. That means a homeowner who hires an uncertified contractor may get a standard limited warranty, while a homeowner who hires a certified one can access coverage that extends up to 50 years on materials and 25 years on workmanship, depending on the program.
For a Cresskill homeowner investing $15,000 to $25,000 or more in a new roof, that gap in coverage is a real financial difference — not a marketing distinction. Certified contractors also have to meet ongoing standards to keep their status, which means there’s a built-in accountability layer that doesn’t exist with uncertified installers. When you’re protecting a home worth $730,000 or more, knowing your roof warranty is actually backed by the manufacturer is worth asking about before you sign anything.