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A roof that’s properly installed or repaired doesn’t just stop leaking — it stops costing you money in ways you don’t always see coming. No more water stains creeping down interior walls. No more wondering whether that soft spot near the eave is going to become a real problem by February. When the work is done correctly, you stop thinking about your roof entirely, and that’s exactly where you want to be.
Elizabeth’s housing stock is older than most people realize. Homes in the North End were built in the 1920s for workers at the Duesenberg plant. Bayway homes go back even further — turn of the century, some of them. That kind of age means layered roofing history, worn flashing, and underlayment that was never designed to handle today’s storm cycles. A contractor who understands what they’re working with on a 90-year-old row home is a very different thing from one who learned their trade on new suburban construction in Woodbridge.
There’s also the wind factor. In Elizabeth’s denser neighborhoods — Peterstown, Elmora, the North End — buildings are close together, and wind accelerates through those gaps in ways that put concentrated pressure on roof edges and ridgelines. That’s a specific, Elizabeth-specific condition that affects where roofs fail first and how they need to be reinforced. Getting that right matters, especially heading into nor’easter season.
We’re a family-owned exterior renovation company that has been serving Elizabeth and Union County homeowners for over 17 years. Our work is roofing-primary — full replacements, repairs, flat roofing, TPO, EPDM — with gutters and siding handled in-house so there’s one contractor accountable for the entire exterior. No finger-pointing between trades when something doesn’t line up at the roofline.
We hold NJ Home Improvement Contractor registration, carry full liability insurance and workers’ compensation, and are certified by major shingle manufacturers — which means the warranties available to Elizabeth homeowners through us are longer and more comprehensive than what most local operators can offer. That’s not a small thing when you’re spending $15,000 to $25,000 on a roof.
Homeowners across Elizabeth — from Elizabethport to Elmora Hills — have trusted us based on word of mouth and genuine reviews, not advertising spend. That kind of reputation takes years to build and about one bad job to lose. It’s why the work gets done right the first time.
It starts with a free inspection — no charge, no obligation, no pressure to buy anything. Someone comes out, gets on the roof, and tells you what’s actually there. If a repair is all you need, that’s what you’ll hear. If the roof is past the point where repairs make sense, you’ll get a clear explanation of why, not a vague recommendation designed to push you toward the most expensive option.
Once you decide to move forward, the estimate you receive is the number you pay. Elizabeth requires a building permit for full roof replacements, and we pull that permit as a standard part of the process — not as an add-on, not as something you have to chase down yourself. Contractors who skip the permit step are cutting corners that can create real problems when you sell the property or file an insurance claim. The City of Elizabeth’s Bureau of Construction oversees all of this, and working within that process is just how licensed contractors operate.
The installation itself is thorough — old material removed, decking inspected, new underlayment, proper flashing at every penetration and edge, and shingles installed to manufacturer spec so the warranty holds. When the job is done, the site is cleaned and you’re walked through what was done and what’s covered. The goal is that you feel informed, not just invoiced.
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Whether you’re dealing with a small leak near a chimney flashing, missing shingles after a windstorm, or a full replacement on a home that hasn’t had a new roof since the 1990s, our approach is the same: assess honestly, price transparently, and install correctly. We handle residential roofing across the full range — asphalt shingles, metal roofing, flat roofing systems including TPO and EPDM, and everything in between.
Flat roofing deserves a specific mention here, because it’s more common in Elizabeth than in most of the surrounding towns. Row homes in Elizabethport, two-family structures throughout the North End, and mixed-use buildings near downtown frequently have flat or low-slope roof systems that require a different skill set than pitched shingle work. TPO and EPDM membranes, properly installed and seamed, can outlast a poorly done shingle roof by a decade. If you own a multi-family property in Elizabeth, this is worth asking about specifically.
The manufacturer certifications we hold matter here in a practical way: they unlock extended warranty coverage — on both materials and workmanship — that non-certified contractors simply cannot offer. For a homeowner in Elmora or Bayway making a long-term investment in a property they’ve owned for decades, that kind of protection has real, lasting value.
Yes — a building permit is required for full roof replacements in Elizabeth. The City of Elizabeth’s Bureau of Construction oversees all construction activity within the city and enforces the Uniform Construction Code, which includes roofing work. Permit processing typically takes around 20 to 30 business days for standard review, so it’s something that needs to be factored into your project timeline from the start.
This matters more than most homeowners realize. If a contractor completes a roof replacement without pulling a permit, you may face complications when you go to sell the property, refinance, or file an insurance claim. A licensed contractor handles the permit as a routine part of the job — it’s not an extra step, it’s just how the work is supposed to be done. If a contractor tells you permits aren’t necessary or offers to skip them to save time, that’s a clear sign to look elsewhere.
The honest answer is that it depends on the age of the roof, the extent of the damage, and what the underlying decking looks like once someone actually gets up there. A few missing shingles after a windstorm on a roof that’s only 10 years old is a repair situation. A 25-year-old roof in the North End with granule loss, soft spots near the eaves, and worn flashing throughout is a different conversation entirely.
The free inspection is exactly where this question gets answered. There’s no charge to find out the truth about your roof’s condition, and there’s no obligation attached to the inspection. You’ll get a straight assessment — not a sales pitch designed to push you toward a full replacement if a repair is genuinely the right call. For older homes in Elizabeth where the roof may have already been replaced once or twice, understanding what’s actually there before making a decision is worth the time it takes.
For most pitched roofs in Elizabeth, architectural asphalt shingles are the practical standard — they’re durable, cost-effective, and when installed by a manufacturer-certified contractor, they come with warranty coverage that protects you for decades. The key is wind resistance rating. Elizabeth’s dense neighborhoods create localized wind pressure at roof edges and ridgelines, and shingles rated for higher wind speeds hold up significantly better through nor’easters than standard-grade options.
For flat or low-slope roofs — which are common in Elizabethport and throughout Elizabeth’s older residential neighborhoods — TPO and EPDM membranes are the better fit. They handle standing water, temperature swings, and the kind of freeze-thaw cycling that Elizabeth winters produce without cracking or delaminating the way older built-up roofing systems do. Elizabeth’s proximity to the waterfront and the Bayway Refinery also means metal components like flashing and fasteners are exposed to corrosive air, so material selection and proper sealing at every penetration point matters more here than it would in an inland suburban market.
For most residential properties in Elizabeth, a full roof replacement falls somewhere between $15,000 and $27,000 depending on the size of the roof, the pitch, the materials selected, and what the decking looks like once the old material is removed. Elizabeth-area pricing generally tracks close to regional averages, though older homes with complex rooflines or significant decking damage can push costs higher.
What you want to avoid is a quote that seems unusually low without a clear explanation of what’s included. Low-price bids often reflect cut corners — cheaper materials, skipped underlayment, no permit pulled, or a crew that won’t be reachable if something goes wrong six months later. The estimate you receive from us covers everything: permit, removal of existing material, decking inspection, underlayment, flashing, and installation — with no hidden line items added after the fact. The number you’re quoted is the number you pay.
New Jersey requires any contractor performing home improvement work valued over $500 to hold a Home Improvement Contractor registration through the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs. You can verify any contractor’s HIC registration directly on the state’s online portal — it takes about two minutes and tells you whether the license is active and in good standing. Any reputable contractor will give you their license number without hesitation.
Beyond HIC registration, you want to confirm that the contractor carries general liability insurance and workers’ compensation coverage. If a crew member is injured on your property and the contractor doesn’t carry workers’ comp, you could be held liable. Elizabeth’s competitive roofing market includes unlicensed operators who target homeowners with low prices and no accountability — the licensing check is a simple step that filters them out immediately. We’re fully licensed, insured, and carry workers’ compensation, and that documentation is available upon request.
Because a lot of Elizabeth homeowners have been burned before — by contractors who charged for an inspection and then used that visit as the opening move in a high-pressure sales conversation. The free inspection policy exists because the first conversation should be about your roof, not about closing a sale. You deserve to know what’s actually going on up there before you make any financial decision, and that information shouldn’t cost you anything to get.
Elizabeth has a lot of older housing stock — homes in Bayway, the North End, and Peterstown that have been in families for decades. Many of those homeowners have been putting off a roofing conversation because they weren’t sure who to trust or what it would cost just to get an honest opinion. Removing the financial barrier from that first step is how we’ve built our reputation in Union County — not through advertising, but through homeowners who called, got a straight answer, and told their neighbors about it.
Other Services we provide in Elizabeth