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A lot of Piscataway homeowners are in the same spot: the roof is old, something feels off, but you’re not sure if it’s a small fix or a full replacement. That uncertainty is stressful, especially when you’re looking at a home worth $500,000 or more. Getting a clear, honest answer shouldn’t cost you anything — and with us, it doesn’t.
The majority of homes in Piscataway were built between the 1940s and the 1990s. That means a huge portion of the township’s single-family homes — in neighborhoods like Possumtown, Quibbletown, and Stelton — are sitting on roofing systems that are either at or well past their expected lifespan. A 30-year-old asphalt shingle roof doesn’t fail all at once. It fails quietly, in ways that aren’t obvious until water is already getting in.
Central New Jersey’s winters make this worse. The freeze-thaw cycle that runs through Piscataway every year — temperatures bouncing above and below freezing repeatedly — is one of the most destructive forces a roof faces. Ice dams form at the edges, water backs up under shingles, and before long you’ve got damage inside the home that started on the outside. Catching that early is the difference between a repair and a much bigger bill.
We’ve been working on homes across Piscataway and central New Jersey for over 17 years. That kind of track record doesn’t happen by accident — it comes from showing up, doing the work right, and being the kind of company people call back and refer to their neighbors.
We hold our New Jersey Home Improvement Contractor license and carry certifications from major shingle manufacturers. Those certifications aren’t just credentials on a wall — they’re what allow us to offer extended manufacturer warranties that most local contractors simply can’t provide. For a homeowner in Middlesex County investing in a full roof replacement, that warranty coverage is real financial protection.
This is a family-owned operation. The work done on a home in Arbor or along the Possumtown Road corridor reflects directly on the people doing it. That’s not a talking point — it’s just how a family business works. You get straight answers, transparent pricing, and a crew that treats your home the way we’d want ours treated.
It starts with a free inspection. We come out, get on the roof, and actually look at what’s going on — not just a glance from the driveway. You’ll get a clear picture of the roof’s condition, where the problems are, and what the realistic options are. No pressure, no upsell, no charge.
From there, you get a detailed estimate that breaks down exactly what the work involves and what it costs. Piscataway homeowners tend to ask good questions — and you should. If something in the estimate doesn’t make sense, ask about it. The goal is for you to understand what you’re paying for before you agree to anything.
Once the work is scheduled, our crew handles everything — including navigating permit requirements under the New Jersey Uniform Construction Code. For straightforward re-roofing on a single-family home, the work may qualify as ordinary maintenance and not require a permit. For anything more involved, we manage that process correctly so you’re not left dealing with compliance issues after the fact. The job gets done, the site gets cleaned up, and you get documentation of the warranty coverage before anyone leaves.
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We handle the full range of residential roofing — asphalt shingle replacement, roof repair, flat roofing, and metal roofing installation. The right material depends on your home, your budget, and how long you want to go before thinking about your roof again.
Metal roofing has become a serious option for Piscataway homeowners who are done with the replacement cycle. A properly installed metal roof can last 40 to 70 years, sheds snow more effectively than asphalt during New Jersey winters, and reflects heat in a way that can reduce cooling costs by 15 to 35 percent. For a home built in the 1970s in a neighborhood like Hidden Woods — where tree canopy adds to the wear on an aging roof — switching to metal can be a long-term decision that makes real financial sense.
For homes that don’t need a full replacement, small roof repairs are handled with the same care as larger jobs. A single damaged section, a flashing failure around a chimney, a few missing shingles after a nor’easter — these are real problems that deserve a real fix, not a patch job that fails in two years. We also handle gutter repair and siding work, which matters when storm damage hits more than just the roof. One contractor, one call, one point of accountability for the full exterior.
This is the right question to ask, and the honest answer is: it depends on the specific condition of your roof — not just its age. A roof that’s 25 years old with isolated damage in one area might have several good years left with a targeted repair. A roof that’s showing widespread granule loss, multiple soft spots in the decking, or recurring leaks in different locations is likely past the point where repairs make financial sense.
The free inspection exists specifically to answer this question without costing you anything. We get up there, check the decking, look at the flashing, examine the shingles across the whole surface, and give you an honest read. In Piscataway, where a large share of homes were built between the 1950s and 1980s, it’s genuinely common to find roofs that look okay from the street but have underlying issues that only show up on a close inspection. You deserve to know what you’re actually dealing with before making a $15,000 to $25,000 decision.
For most single-family homes in Piscataway, a full asphalt shingle roof replacement typically falls somewhere between $15,000 and $27,000, with the average landing around $20,000 to $22,000. The range depends on the size and pitch of the roof, the condition of the decking underneath, the shingle material and grade you choose, and whether there are additional elements like skylights, chimneys, or complex valleys that require extra flashing work.
Metal roofing costs more upfront — generally 1.5 to 2 times the cost of asphalt — but the lifespan difference is significant. For a homeowner in a 1975-era colonial in Quibbletown or North Stelton who plans to stay in the home long-term, the math on metal roofing can work out favorably over time. The best way to get an accurate number for your specific home is to schedule a free estimate — there’s no charge, no obligation, and you’ll walk away knowing exactly what the work would cost.
Under the New Jersey Uniform Construction Code, straightforward re-roofing on a detached one- or two-family home — replacing like-for-like shingles on an existing structure — can qualify as ordinary maintenance, which may not require a permit. Piscataway Township’s Building Division, located at 505 Sidney Road, enforces the NJ UCC, and the township’s own FAQ lists this type of roofing work under ordinary maintenance exemptions.
That said, the line between ordinary maintenance and work that requires a permit depends on the specifics. If the decking needs to be replaced, if there are structural changes involved, or if the property is a multi-family building, a permit is required. Working without a required permit carries a $2,000 penalty and can result in the work being required to be removed. We know exactly when a permit is needed and handle that process correctly — you don’t have to figure it out yourself.
Piscataway sits in a part of central New Jersey that gets hit regularly by nor’easters and severe thunderstorms. The National Weather Service has issued storm warnings for Middlesex County citing wind gusts up to 60 mph — the kind that tears shingles loose, lifts flashing, and deposits tree debris across entire roof surfaces. The wooded residential areas of Piscataway, including neighborhoods like Hidden Woods, are especially vulnerable because falling branches and accumulated debris accelerate wear and can cause direct puncture damage.
After a significant storm, the most common issues are missing or displaced shingles, damaged flashing around chimneys and vents, granule loss from hail impact, and clogged or detached gutters. Hail damage is particularly easy to underestimate — even a moderate hail event can knock the protective granule coating off asphalt shingles without leaving obvious visible marks, shortening the roof’s remaining lifespan by years. If you’ve had a major storm come through, a post-storm inspection is worth scheduling before the damage compounds.
Standard three-tab asphalt shingles — the type installed on many Piscataway homes built in the 1970s and 1980s — have a lifespan of roughly 20 to 25 years. Architectural or dimensional shingles, which became the more common choice from the 1990s onward, typically last 25 to 30 years under normal conditions. Metal roofing, installed correctly, can last 40 to 70 years.
New Jersey’s climate is harder on roofs than many homeowners realize. The freeze-thaw cycling through the Raritan Valley every winter stresses shingles and flashing repeatedly. Summer heat and UV exposure break down asphalt over time. Nor’easters and severe thunderstorms create acute damage events on top of that ongoing wear. A roof that might last 30 years in a milder climate often reaches the end of its useful life closer to 25 years in central New Jersey. If your home was built in the 1980s or 1990s and hasn’t had a roof replacement, it’s worth getting an inspection to understand where things stand.
The free inspection isn’t a gimmick to get in the door — it’s a practical response to a real problem Piscataway homeowners face. Most people with an aging roof genuinely don’t know whether they need a repair or a replacement, and finding out has historically meant paying a contractor $150 to $300 just to show up and look. That cost creates a barrier to getting accurate information, which means homeowners either delay the call or make decisions based on guesswork.
Removing that barrier makes sense for a community like Piscataway, where a large share of homes are 30 to 50 years old and the roofing questions are real and pressing. An honest inspection that costs you nothing gives you the information you need to make a confident decision — whether that ends up being a small repair, a full replacement, or simply the peace of mind of knowing the roof is in better shape than you thought. We’ve been in the central New Jersey market long enough to know that a straightforward, no-cost answer builds more trust than any sales tactic ever could.