Hear from Our Customers
A roof that’s been properly replaced or repaired doesn’t just stop leaking — it stops costing you money in ways you might not even track yet. No more water stains appearing after a heavy March storm. No more second-guessing whether that soft spot near the chimney is getting worse. You just know your home is covered, and that matters a lot when you’re protecting something worth $700,000 or more.
Ramsey’s position in the Ramapo Valley means your roof takes a different kind of beating than homes further east in Bergen County. The valley channels wind during storm systems, snowfall tends to be heavier up here than in the flatlands, and the freeze-thaw cycling from late November through March puts real mechanical stress on shingles, flashing, and underlayment. This is especially true for homes built in the 1950s, 60s, and 70s that make up a significant portion of Ramsey’s housing stock. A roof that was installed without proper ice-and-water shield or adequate ventilation isn’t just aging — it’s failing in slow motion.
When the work is done correctly, with the right materials and a crew that understands what northern Bergen County actually demands, you stop thinking about your roof. That’s the goal. Not a dramatic transformation — just a home that’s protected, a warranty that’s real, and a contractor who picks up the phone if something comes up six months later.
We’ve been doing exterior work across Bergen County for over 17 years. That’s not a number thrown out to sound impressive — it means we’ve been through enough nor’easters, enough insurance claims, and enough Bergen County building inspections to know exactly what this area demands. Ramsey homeowners aren’t dealing with generic New Jersey weather. You’re dealing with Ramapo Valley conditions, and that distinction matters when a crew is deciding how to detail your flashing or spec your underlayment.
We’re family-owned and operated, which means there’s no franchise playbook and no rotating cast of subcontractors you’ve never met. You get transparent pricing from the start — what’s quoted is what you pay. And because we also handle gutters and siding, you’re not stuck coordinating three different contractors when your exterior needs more than just a new roof. One company, one point of contact, one standard of work across the whole job.
It starts with a free inspection — no charge, no obligation. A lot of Ramsey homeowners aren’t sure whether they need a repair or a full replacement when they call, and that’s completely normal. The inspection is diagnostic, not a sales visit. You’ll get a clear read on what the roof actually needs, with specific findings explained in plain language. If a targeted repair is the right call, that’s what you’ll hear.
If a full replacement makes more sense, the next step is a detailed estimate that covers materials, labor, and timeline — with no line items that appear later as surprises. We handle the Ramsey Borough building permit, which runs $175 for a residential roofing project under the borough’s municipal code. You don’t need to navigate the Building Department or schedule your own inspections. That’s handled as part of the job.
Once work begins, our crew manages everything from tear-off to final cleanup. Ramsey’s commuter-heavy households don’t have time to babysit a job site, and you shouldn’t have to. Progress is communicated clearly, the timeline is respected, and when the job is done, the yard looks the way it did before the crew arrived — minus the old roof. Final walkthrough, documentation for your warranty, and you’re done.
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We cover the full scope of residential roofing in Ramsey — full replacements, targeted roof repairs, flat roofing systems including TPO and EPDM, and metal roofing installation. Metal roofing has been growing fast among Bergen County homeowners, and it makes particular sense in Ramsey. A standing seam or metal shingle system sheds snow efficiently, handles the wind uplift that Ramapo Valley storms generate, and carries a service life of 40 to 70 years. For a home valued at $800,000 or more, the long-term math is hard to argue with.
For homeowners dealing with specific problem areas — a flashing failure around a dormer, a few cracked shingles after a hail event, a flat roof section that’s holding water — roof repair work in Ramsey doesn’t have to mean a compromise on quality. We handle repairs with the same materials and standards as a full replacement, not a patch-and-move-on approach.
Because we also install and repair gutters and siding, we can address the full exterior picture in one project. That matters in Ramsey, where aging homes often have interconnected issues — a gutter system that’s pulling away from the fascia, or a siding section that’s letting water in at the roofline. Manufacturer certifications mean the roofing work qualifies for extended manufacturer-backed warranties, giving you protection that doesn’t depend solely on any single contractor’s future availability.
Yes — Ramsey Borough requires a building permit for residential roofing work. Under the borough’s municipal code, Chapter 13, the permit fee for a residential roof or siding project is $175. The permit process includes a code official inspection to verify that the installation meets New Jersey’s Uniform Construction Code requirements, which cover underlayment, ice-and-water shield placement, flashing details, ventilation, and fastener standards.
This isn’t a bureaucratic formality. Unpermitted roofing work can create real problems when you go to sell your home — it has to be disclosed, and buyers and their attorneys will flag it. It can also affect your ability to file an insurance claim if damage occurs later. We pull the permit and manage the inspection scheduling as a standard part of every Ramsey project. You don’t have to make a single call to the Ramsey Building Department at 201-825-3400 — that’s already handled.
For most residential homes in Ramsey, a full roof replacement falls somewhere in the range of $15,000 to $27,000 depending on the size of the roof, the pitch, the material selected, and what’s found during tear-off. Bergen County projects tend to run at or above the national average given local labor costs and the quality of materials required for northern New Jersey’s climate demands.
The specific number for your home depends on factors that can only be assessed in person — which is exactly why the free inspection matters. You’ll get a specific, written estimate based on your actual roof, not a ballpark pulled from a square footage calculator. What you’re quoted is what you pay. There are no line items added after the fact, and no pressure to upgrade materials you don’t need. The estimate gives you a real number to make a real decision with.
The honest answer is that it depends on the age of the roof, the scope of the damage, and whether the underlying structure has been compromised. A few missing or cracked shingles after a storm — especially the kind of wind event that moves through the Ramapo Valley during a nor’easter — often means a targeted repair is the right call. If the roof is 20 or 25 years old and showing widespread granule loss, sagging, or repeated leak points, a replacement usually makes more financial sense than continuing to repair a system that’s past its service life.
The free inspection is designed to answer exactly this question. The findings are explained in plain terms — what’s damaged, where, and why — so you can make an informed decision without feeling pushed in either direction. For Ramsey homes built in the mid-20th century, it’s not uncommon to find that a roof looks passable from the street but has underlayment and ventilation issues that make it a poor candidate for another round of repairs. That’s the kind of detail that only shows up in a real inspection.
Architectural asphalt shingles are still the most common choice in Bergen County, and a quality architectural shingle — especially one installed by a certified contractor using manufacturer-specified underlayment and ice-and-water shield — performs well in Ramsey’s climate when it’s installed correctly. The key variables are the ice-and-water shield coverage at the eaves and valleys (critical for preventing ice dam infiltration during Ramsey’s freeze-thaw cycles) and proper attic ventilation, which affects both shingle longevity and energy performance year-round.
Metal roofing is increasingly popular among Ramsey homeowners, and for good reason. It sheds snow load efficiently — an important factor given how much heavier snowfall tends to be in the Ramapo Valley compared to communities further east in the county — and it handles wind uplift significantly better than standard shingles. A properly installed metal roof carries a service life of 40 to 70 years and can reduce heating and cooling costs meaningfully over time. For a home in the $700,000 to $900,000 range, the long-term value proposition is strong. The right material for your home depends on your budget, your timeline, and your specific roof geometry, all of which get covered during the inspection and estimate process.
In most cases, yes — if the damage was caused by a covered peril like wind, hail, or a falling tree, your homeowners insurance policy should cover roof damage subject to your deductible and policy terms. Wind and hail together account for more than half of all residential roofing insurance claims nationally. Ramsey’s exposure to nor’easters and the wind-channeling effect of the Ramapo Valley means storm-related roof damage is a genuine, recurring reality for homeowners here, not a rare event.
What matters most is how the damage is documented. A thorough inspection with detailed photos and written findings gives your insurance adjuster something concrete to work with. We can walk through the inspection findings with you and help you understand what’s documented before you file a claim. That’s a more honest approach that protects you from filing a claim that gets denied because the documentation wasn’t there to support it.
Because most Ramsey homeowners calling a roofing contractor aren’t sure what they’re dealing with yet. You’ve noticed something — a stain on a ceiling, a shingle in the yard after a storm, a gutter that’s pulling away — and you need an honest read before you can make any kind of decision. Charging $150 to $300 for that first conversation creates a barrier that doesn’t serve anyone well, and it tends to reward contractors who are more interested in getting a foot in the door than in giving you accurate information.
The free inspection works because we’re confident enough in the quality of our work and the accuracy of our assessments that we don’t need to charge you to prove it. Ramsey homeowners protecting homes valued well above the national average deserve a first step that’s low-risk and genuinely informative. If the inspection shows your roof has five good years left, you’ll hear that. If it shows something that needs attention now, you’ll see exactly why. That kind of straightforward approach is what builds the kind of reputation that grows through word of mouth in a community like Ramsey.