Hear from Our Customers
When your roof is done right, you stop thinking about it. No water stains creeping across the ceiling after a hard rain. No lifted shingles after a winter storm rolls through. No wondering whether that soft spot near the chimney is going to turn into something expensive.
Woodbridge sits at the intersection of three waterways — the Arthur Kill, the Raritan River, and the Rahway River — and the moisture exposure that comes with that geography is real. Homes near Keasbey, Sewaren, and Port Reading deal with ambient humidity and wind-driven rain that accelerates wear on underlayment and flashing faster than most inland townships ever see. A roof installed without that context in mind won’t last as long as it should.
Then there’s the housing stock itself. If you’re in Iselin or Fords, there’s a good chance your home was built somewhere between the 1940s and 1960s. That’s a lot of years, and even a previously replaced roof in that age range may be approaching the end of its current cycle. Getting an honest read on where things actually stand — from a contractor who isn’t trying to sell you something you don’t need — is where this starts.
We’ve been doing exterior work across Middlesex County for over 17 years, with deep roots in Woodbridge and the surrounding neighborhoods. That means we’ve seen what happens to roofs in Colonia after a bad winter, what the waterfront homes in Sewaren deal with season after season, and what it looks like when a Woodbridge homeowner gets handed a vague estimate and a contractor who stops returning calls after the deposit clears. We’ve been cleaning up those situations for a long time.
We’re family-owned, which means our name is on every job. We’re licensed, insured, and certified by major shingle manufacturers — and those certifications aren’t just credentials on a wall. They unlock extended manufacturer warranties that most contractors in this market simply can’t offer you.
We don’t subcontract your roof to whoever’s available. The crew that shows up is the crew that’s accountable. And when the job is done, we’re still reachable — for warranty questions, follow-up inspections, or whatever comes next.
It starts with a free roof inspection. You don’t pay anything to find out what’s actually going on up there. We come out, assess the full condition of your roof — shingles, flashing, underlayment, decking, drainage — and give you a straight answer. If it needs a repair, we’ll tell you that. If it needs a replacement, we’ll show you exactly why. If it’s fine for another few years, that’s what you’ll hear.
From there, you get a written estimate that reflects the actual scope of work. No line items that appear on the final invoice but not the quote. Woodbridge Township requires a building permit for roof replacement work, and we pull that permit on your behalf — because an unpermitted roof can create real problems when you go to sell or file an insurance claim. That’s not a detail we skip.
Once the job is scheduled, we work efficiently and clean up completely when we’re done. Most residential roof replacements in Woodbridge are completed within one to two days depending on scope and weather. You’ll know the timeline before we start, and if anything changes, you’ll hear from us — not find out when you get home.
Ready to get started?
Asphalt shingles are still the most common choice, and for good reason — they perform well, they’re cost-effective, and when installed correctly with proper ice and water shield at the eaves and valleys, they hold up to New Jersey’s freeze-thaw cycles far better than a budget install ever will. For most homes in Avenel, Fords, or Woodbridge Proper, a manufacturer-certified asphalt shingle roof is the right call.
But if you’re in Colonia, or you’re just done with the cycle of replacing shingles every 20-odd years, metal roofing is worth a real conversation. Metal roofs last 40 to 70 years, handle wind uplift better than asphalt in storm conditions, and resist the kind of moisture intrusion that’s a chronic concern for homes near the Arthur Kill. For waterfront-adjacent neighborhoods in Woodbridge, the durability gap between metal and standard shingles is even more pronounced. We install both, and we’ll tell you honestly which one makes sense for your home and your budget.
Beyond the roof itself, we also handle gutters and siding — which matters when you’re dealing with an older home where multiple exterior systems are aging at the same time. One contractor, one accountable point of contact, no finger-pointing between trades when a question comes up at the wall-to-roof line.
Yes — Woodbridge Township requires a building permit for roof replacement work, and this isn’t something to skip. The permit process runs through the township’s Construction Code Department, and once approved, an invoice is issued before the permit is officially released. It adds a step, but it’s there for a reason: it ensures the work is inspected and documented, which protects you legally and financially.
The practical reason this matters most is when you sell your home or file an insurance claim. An unpermitted roof replacement can surface during a title search or an insurance review, and at that point your options get complicated fast. We pull the permit on your behalf as part of the job — it’s not an add-on, it’s part of doing the work correctly. If a contractor tells you permits aren’t necessary or suggests skipping it to save time, that’s a red flag worth taking seriously.
For most residential homes in Woodbridge, a full roof replacement runs somewhere between $15,000 and $27,000, with the majority of homeowners landing around $20,000 to $22,000. Where you fall in that range depends on the size and pitch of your roof, the material you choose, the condition of the decking underneath, and whether any flashing or structural repairs are needed once the old roof comes off.
Neighborhood plays a role too. A larger home in Colonia is going to be a different scope than a mid-century ranch in Iselin or Fords. The best way to get a number that actually means something is a free, in-person inspection — not a square footage estimate over the phone. That’s how you get a real quote, not a ballpark that shifts once the crew is on your roof. We provide written estimates before any work begins, and the price you’re quoted is the price you pay.
This is the question most homeowners in Woodbridge are actually asking when they call, and the honest answer is: it depends on the age of the roof, the extent of the damage, and where the damage is located. A single section of lifted or missing shingles after a storm is often a legitimate repair. Flashing failure around a chimney or skylight is usually a repair. But if your roof is 20-plus years old and you’re seeing granule loss in the gutters, soft spots when you walk the surface, or daylight through the attic, those are signs the system as a whole is failing — and patching it buys you time, not a solution.
In Woodbridge, a lot of the mid-century homes in Iselin and Fords have already been through at least one replacement cycle. If the current roof is aging and showing multiple issues in different areas, replacement is usually the more cost-effective path over a two-to-three year horizon. A free inspection gives you an honest read on which category you’re actually in — without anyone trying to push you toward the larger job if it isn’t warranted.
For most Woodbridge homeowners, a quality architectural asphalt shingle — installed with proper underlayment and ice and water shield at the eaves, valleys, and around all penetrations — is going to perform well through New Jersey winters. The freeze-thaw cycle is the real stress test here: water gets under compromised shingles, freezes, expands, and creates the kind of damage that shows up as a leak months later. The quality of the installation matters as much as the shingle itself.
For homes closer to the waterfront — Sewaren, Port Reading, sections of Keasbey near the Raritan River — metal roofing is increasingly worth considering. Salt air and sustained moisture exposure shorten the effective lifespan of asphalt shingles in ways that aren’t always obvious until the damage is already done. A metal roof in those conditions will outperform asphalt by decades. It costs more upfront, but when you’re eliminating two or three future replacement cycles, the math changes. We’ll walk you through both options and give you a straight comparison based on your specific home and location.
Yes, and you shouldn’t have to fight anyone to get that answer. Not every roofing job is a full tear-off and replacement, and a contractor worth hiring will tell you that directly. If you’ve got a localized leak, a few damaged shingles from a recent storm, or flashing that’s pulled away from a wall or chimney, that’s a repair — and it should be scoped and priced as one.
The concern most homeowners have is being told they need a full replacement when a repair would genuinely solve the problem. The way to avoid that is to get an inspection from a licensed contractor who isn’t compensated differently based on the size of the job they recommend. We handle small roof repairs in Woodbridge the same way we handle full replacements: free inspection, written estimate, honest scope. If a repair is the right answer, that’s what you’ll get. If the roof is far enough gone that a repair is just delaying the inevitable, we’ll show you exactly why so you can make the call yourself.
Woodbridge is bordered by the Arthur Kill to the east, the Raritan River to the south, and the Rahway River to the north — and that geography creates real, ongoing exposure for roofing systems that most inland New Jersey towns don’t deal with to the same degree. The township maintains an active Floodplain Management program specifically because storm impact here is a documented, recurring issue, not a once-in-a-decade event.
For your roof, the practical effects show up in a few ways. Wind-driven rain during nor’easters puts pressure on flashing seals, ridge caps, and any penetration point that wasn’t installed to a high standard. Ambient humidity near tidal waterways accelerates the breakdown of underlayment and wood decking over time — meaning a roof in Sewaren or Port Reading may show meaningful wear several years earlier than a comparable roof in a more sheltered inland neighborhood. After any significant storm event, it’s worth having your roof looked at even if you don’t see obvious damage from the ground. Lifted flashing and compromised seals often don’t show up as visible leaks until the next heavy rain, and catching them early is always cheaper than addressing the water damage that follows.