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When your roof is in good shape, you stop thinking about it — and that’s exactly where you want to be. No more water stains spreading across your ceiling after a nor’easter. No more wondering if that soft spot near the chimney is getting worse. You just live in your house without that low-level anxiety sitting in the back of your head.
Edison’s winters are hard on roofs. The freeze-thaw cycle that runs through central New Jersey from December through March is one of the most destructive forces acting on any residential roofing system. Water gets into small cracks, freezes, expands, and widens those gaps a little more with every cycle. By the time a leak shows up inside the house, the damage has usually been building for a while. Catching it early — or replacing a system that’s past its lifespan — is what prevents a manageable repair from turning into a much bigger problem.
For homeowners in neighborhoods like Menlo Park Terrace, Stelton Gardens, or Bonhamtown, where a lot of the housing stock dates back to the post-war era, this isn’t a hypothetical. It’s the reality of owning a home that was built 50-plus years ago. A properly installed roof with the right materials and ventilation doesn’t just protect the structure — it protects the value of an asset that, in Edison, is often worth $500,000 or more.
USA Home Remodeling has been working on homes across Edison and central New Jersey for over 17 years. That’s not a number we throw around to sound impressive — it means we’ve been through enough seasons, enough storm cycles, and enough Middlesex County permit offices to know exactly how this market works and what Edison homeowners actually need.
We’re a family-owned operation, which means the name on the truck is the name on the line. When you call six months after a job is done, you reach someone who knows your project. That accountability isn’t something a storm chaser or a national chain can offer, and it matters more than most people realize until they actually need it.
We’re also manufacturer-certified, which means the warranties we can offer — in some cases up to 50 years on materials — aren’t available from every contractor in Edison. Free inspections, transparent pricing, and no hidden costs from start to finish. That’s how we’ve built the reputation we have in Edison, and it’s how we plan to keep it.
It starts with a free inspection. One of our experienced roofing contractors comes out, gets on the roof, and gives you an honest assessment — not a sales pitch. If you need a repair, we’ll tell you that. If the system is genuinely at the end of its life, we’ll walk you through why and what your options are. You’ll leave that conversation with a clear picture, not more confusion.
From there, if you decide to move forward, we handle the permit process through Edison Township’s Construction Code Enforcement office. Roofing permits for residential work are typically issued within three days here, and we manage that paperwork so you don’t have to. Skipping permits might save a day upfront, but it creates real problems when you go to sell your home — buyers’ inspectors flag unpermitted work, and it can derail a closing fast. We don’t cut that corner.
Installation is scheduled around your timeline, with a crew that shows up when they say they will and cleans up when they leave. We communicate throughout the job — not just at the beginning and end. Once the work is done, the township inspection closes it out with a certificate of occupancy, and you have the documentation to prove the job was done right.
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Asphalt shingles are still the most common choice for Edison homeowners, and for good reason — they’re durable, cost-effective, and when installed correctly by a manufacturer-certified contractor, they can be backed by extended warranties that give you real long-term protection. We work with major shingle brands and can walk you through the options that make sense for your home, your budget, and how long you plan to stay in the house.
Metal roofing is worth a serious conversation if you’re thinking long-term. A properly installed metal roof can last 40 to 70 years, which means an Edison homeowner who installs one today may genuinely never need another roof replacement. It also delivers meaningful energy savings — somewhere in the range of 15 to 35 percent depending on the setup — which adds up in a township that sees both heavy winter snow loads and extended summer heat waves. Interest in metal roofing has grown significantly across New Jersey, and it’s a strong fit for the higher-value homes along the 08820 corridor.
Beyond full replacements, we handle small roof repairs, flat roof work, gutters, and siding — the full exterior envelope. That matters because when a leak shows up at the edge of a roof where it meets a gutter, you don’t want two contractors pointing fingers at each other. One company, one standard, one point of contact.
Yes — Edison Township requires a permit for roofing work, and it’s not something you want to skip. The permit process here is handled through Edison Township’s Construction Code Enforcement office, and for residential roofing, permits are typically issued within three days of submission. It’s one of the faster turnarounds you’ll find in Middlesex County, so it doesn’t add meaningful delay to your project timeline.
The reason it matters isn’t just compliance — it’s protection. When you sell your home, buyers’ inspectors and title companies look for unpermitted work. An unpermitted roof can stall or kill a closing, or give a buyer leverage to renegotiate the price downward. A properly permitted job comes with a certificate of occupancy that documents the work was inspected and approved. That piece of paper protects your home’s value. We pull permits automatically on every Edison roofing project — if a contractor isn’t, that’s a red flag worth paying attention to.
This is the question most Edison homeowners are really asking when they call, and the honest answer is: it depends on the age of your roof, the extent of the damage, and what the underlying deck looks like once someone actually gets up there and checks.
If your roof is under 15 years old and the damage is isolated — a few missing shingles after a storm, a small flashing failure around a chimney or skylight — repair is usually the right call. If your roof is 25 years or older, which covers a significant portion of Edison’s housing stock given the median construction year of 1970, the math often shifts toward replacement. Patching a system that’s already degraded across the board tends to buy you a year or two at most, and you end up spending repair money on top of replacement money.
The only way to know for sure is an honest inspection from someone who isn’t incentivized to push you toward the more expensive option. That’s exactly what our free inspection is for — a straight answer, no pressure, no obligation.
For most residential homes in Edison, a full roof replacement runs somewhere between $15,000 and $27,000, with the average landing around $20,000 to $21,000. The range is wide because it depends on the size of your roof, the pitch, the material you choose, and what condition the underlying deck is in once the old shingles come off.
Edison’s housing stock skews toward split-levels, ranches, and colonials from the 1960s and 70s — roof configurations that vary significantly in complexity. A simple ranch in Stelton Gardens will come in at a different number than a two-story colonial in North Post Estates with multiple dormers and valleys. Material choice also moves the number: standard architectural shingles sit at the lower end of the range, while premium shingles with extended manufacturer warranties and metal roofing systems sit higher.
The best way to get a real number for your specific home is a free estimate. We’ll measure the roof, assess the condition, walk you through the material options, and give you a written quote with no surprises built in.
Most roofs give you warning signs well before water shows up on your ceiling — you just have to know what to look for. The most common ones are granules collecting in your gutters or at the base of your downspouts, which means the protective coating on your shingles is breaking down. Curling or cupping at the shingle edges is another clear indicator, especially on north-facing slopes where Edison’s winter moisture tends to sit longer.
Sagging sections, dark streaking across the surface, and visible daylight through the attic are all signs that something is wrong and getting worse. Flashing failures — around chimneys, skylights, and roof valleys — are also common on older homes and are often the first place a leak develops. The freeze-thaw cycle that runs through central New Jersey every winter is particularly hard on flashing because the repeated expansion and contraction works the sealant loose over time.
If you’re seeing any of these and your roof is over 20 years old, it’s worth getting an inspection before the next nor’easter season. Catching it early is almost always cheaper than dealing with it after water has already gotten into the structure.
For the right homeowner, yes — and Edison is actually a strong market for it. Metal roofing has a lifespan of 40 to 70 years, which means if you’re planning to stay in your home long-term, you’re likely installing the last roof you’ll ever need. Given that Edison home values regularly sit between $500,000 and $950,000 depending on the neighborhood and ZIP code, that kind of durability is a meaningful investment in the asset itself.
From a performance standpoint, metal roofing handles Edison’s weather profile well. It sheds snow more efficiently than asphalt, which reduces the ice dam risk that plagues a lot of the older homes in this area. It’s also significantly more resistant to wind damage — relevant in a township that sees nor’easters with sustained high winds every winter. And the energy efficiency angle is real: reflective metal roofing can reduce cooling costs by 15 to 35 percent, which adds up during the extended heat waves that hit central New Jersey in July and August.
The upfront cost is higher than asphalt, but when you factor in lifespan, reduced maintenance, and energy savings, the long-term math is often compelling. We can walk you through the numbers specific to your home during a free estimate.
The Edison roofing market gets crowded fast after a major storm. Out-of-state contractors show up, offer low bids, collect deposits, and in the worst cases, disappear before the work is done — or do work that fails within a year. It’s a real and documented problem, not just contractor industry talk.
A few things to check before you hire anyone: First, confirm they hold a New Jersey Home Improvement Contractor license. This is a legal requirement for any job over $500 in NJ, and it means the contractor carries liability insurance and workers’ compensation. If they can’t give you a license number, stop there. Second, ask whether they pull permits. A contractor who skips the permit process is either cutting corners or operating outside the law — either way, the risk lands on you as the homeowner. Third, look for manufacturer certifications. Certified contractors are held to higher installation standards and can offer extended warranties that non-certified operators simply can’t provide.
Beyond the credentials, look for a contractor who has been operating continuously in Edison and central New Jersey — not one who showed up after the last big storm. A company with 17-plus years in the area has a track record you can actually verify, and we’ll still be around when you need a warranty call honored.