Hear from Our Customers
When your gutters do their job, water goes where it’s supposed to—away from your house. No more foundation cracks widening every time it rains. No more rotted fascia boards that cost thousands to replace. No more basement flooding or landscape erosion eating away at your property value.
You stop climbing ladders every weekend trying to patch problems that keep coming back. You stop worrying every time a storm rolls through Long Island. Your home stays dry, your foundation stays solid, and you get your weekends back.
That’s what proper gutter repair in Huntington Station, NY actually delivers. Not a temporary patch job, but a real fix that holds up against coastal winds, nor’easters, and everything else this area throws at your home.
SkyLuxe Construction isn’t new to Huntington Station. We’ve spent four decades repairing gutters, fascia, and siding across Suffolk County—which means we’ve seen what Long Island weather does to homes here.
We know how coastal humidity rots fascia behind perfectly good-looking gutters. We know how those mature oak and maple trees dump debris that clogs your system twice as fast as other areas. We’ve responded to emergency calls after storms dropped 10 inches of rain in a single night.
That local knowledge matters when you’re trusting someone to protect your biggest investment. We’re not learning on your house—we already know what works here.
First, we inspect your entire gutter system—not just the obvious problem spots. We’re looking for cracks, detachment points, improper pitch, fascia damage, and any storm damage that might not be visible from the ground. This takes about 30 minutes and it’s thorough.
Then we tell you exactly what’s wrong and what it’ll cost to fix. No vague estimates or surprise charges later. If your gutters are leaking at the corners, we’ll show you why and explain the repair. If your fascia is rotted behind the gutter, we’ll tell you that too—because fixing the gutter without addressing the fascia just means you’ll be calling someone back in six months.
We handle everything from gutter leak repair and seam sealing to reattaching downspouts and replacing sections damaged by storms. If you’ve got sagging gutters, we realign and re-hang them properly. If you need fascia board repair or replacement, we do that at the same time so everything’s actually fixed—not just patched.
The work usually takes a day, depending on the scope. When we’re done, your gutters move water away from your house the way they’re supposed to.
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We repair gutter leaks at joints and seams, fix sagging sections that aren’t draining properly, and reattach downspouts that have pulled away from your house. If storm damage has bent or broken sections, we replace those with materials that match your existing system—aluminum and vinyl hold up best in Suffolk County’s climate.
Fascia repair is often part of the job because water damage doesn’t stop at the gutter. If your fascia boards are rotted or pulling away, we replace them before rehanging your gutters. Skipping this step is how you end up with gutters that fall off again in the next windstorm.
For homes surrounded by trees—and that’s most of Huntington Station—we also install gutter guards that actually work. This cuts your cleaning schedule from four times a year down to maybe once. Less maintenance, fewer clogs, and no more spending your Saturdays on a ladder.
We also handle emergency gutter repair when storms hit. Long Island gets nor’easters, heavy winds, and sudden downpours that can rip gutters right off your house. When that happens, you need someone who can respond fast—before water starts pouring into your foundation or basement.
Most gutter repairs in Huntington Station run between $200 and $750, depending on what’s actually broken. A simple gutter leak repair at one seam might cost $150 to $250. Fixing sagging gutters that need realignment and rehanging usually runs $300 to $500 for a typical section.
If you need fascia board replacement along with the gutter work, add another $200 to $400 per section—but that’s still cheaper than ignoring it and dealing with structural damage later. Storm damage repairs vary based on how much of the system got hit, but expect $400 to $900 for moderate damage.
The real cost isn’t the repair—it’s what happens if you don’t fix it. Foundation repairs start around $4,000. Basement waterproofing runs $3,000 to $8,000. Rotted framing behind your siding? You’re looking at serious money. Spending a few hundred now beats spending thousands later.
Gutter seams leak because the sealant breaks down over time—especially with Long Island’s freeze-thaw cycles and coastal humidity. The metal expands and contracts with temperature changes, and eventually the caulk cracks. Water gets in, and now you’ve got a leak.
Corner joints take the most stress because that’s where water flow changes direction. Add in debris buildup that holds moisture against the seam, and you’re accelerating the deterioration. Aluminum gutters are particularly prone to this after 10 to 15 years.
The fix is resealing with proper gutter sealant—not the cheap stuff from a hardware store that’ll fail again in a year. We clean the joint completely, let it dry, and use commercial-grade sealant that actually holds up. For seams that have separated or warped, we sometimes add rivets or replace the section entirely if the metal’s compromised.
Yes, but the real question is why they’re pulling away—because that tells us how to fix them permanently. Usually it’s one of three things: the fascia board is rotted and can’t hold the fasteners anymore, the hangers are spaced too far apart, or the gutters are clogged and the weight of standing water has pulled everything loose.
If your fascia is rotted, we replace that first. Rehanging gutters to bad wood is pointless—they’ll just pull away again. If the hangers are the problem, we add more at proper intervals (every 24 inches is standard here) and use the right fasteners for your fascia type.
For gutters that have pulled away because of clogs and weight, we clean the system, check for proper pitch, and rehang with new hangers. Sometimes the gutter itself is bent from the stress, and in those cases we replace that section. The goal is fixing the root cause, not just screwing it back up there temporarily.
If the damage is isolated—a few leaking seams, one sagging section, a detached downspout—repair makes sense. You’re looking at a fraction of replacement cost and you get a few more years out of the system.
But if you’ve got rust holes in multiple spots, cracks running along the bottom, or more than 30% of the system is damaged, replacement is usually smarter. At that point you’re throwing money at a system that’s going to keep failing. Aluminum gutters typically last 20 years in this climate. Steel gutters rust out faster, especially near the coast.
Here’s the test: if we’re repairing the same gutters for the third time in two years, they’re done. If the fascia behind them is rotted in multiple places, the gutters probably let water behind them for years—and now both need replacing. We’ll tell you honestly which situation you’re in, because doing a repair that’ll fail in six months doesn’t help either of us.
Yes. When storms rip through Huntington Station and take your gutters with them, we respond quickly—because every hour that water’s pouring off your roof into your foundation is doing damage.
Storm damage gutter repair usually means reattaching sections that got torn loose, replacing bent or broken pieces, and making sure your downspouts are still directing water away from the house. After heavy wind or hail damage, we inspect the entire system because what looks fine from the ground might have stress cracks or loose hangers that’ll fail in the next storm.
We keep common materials in stock so we’re not waiting on special orders while water destroys your foundation. Most emergency repairs are done within 24 to 48 hours of your call. If the damage is severe and we need to do temporary fixes to stop immediate water intrusion, we handle that first and schedule the full repair right after.
If the water’s getting in because your gutters are overflowing, leaking, or dumping water right next to your foundation—yes, fixing them stops that. But if water’s already been leaking behind your siding or into your walls for months, you might have damage that needs addressing beyond just the gutters.
When gutters leak at the fascia or overflow constantly, water runs down your siding and finds its way into seams, around windows, and eventually into your walls. If your fascia is rotted, that’s a sign water’s been getting where it shouldn’t. We check for that during the inspection because fixing the gutter without addressing what it already damaged just leaves you with a dry gutter and a wet house.
The good news is most water intrusion issues stop once the gutters are actually working. Water goes into the gutter, through the downspout, and away from your house—like it’s supposed to. No more basement seepage after rainstorms. No more water stains on your foundation. Your house stays dry.
Other Services we provide in Huntington Station