Hear from Our Customers
When your gutters work the way they should, water flows exactly where it needs to go—away from your foundation, away from your basement, away from the siding you just painted. You stop worrying every time the forecast shows rain.
North Bay Shore gets more rainfall than most of the country, and with all the trees around here, your gutters take a beating. When they fail, you’re looking at basement flooding, foundation cracks, and rotted fascia boards that cost thousands to fix.
A proper gutter repair handles the root cause—whether that’s a leaking seam, a sagging section, or a downspout that’s barely hanging on. You get a system that can handle the 40-50 inches of annual rainfall we see here, plus the freeze-thaw cycles and coastal salt air that wear everything down faster than you’d expect.
We specialize in exterior work across Suffolk County, and we’ve seen what North Bay Shore weather does to gutter systems. The coastal conditions here aren’t kind to metal—salt air accelerates corrosion, heavy storms dump debris, and winter ice creates problems most DIY fixes can’t solve.
We’re a family-run operation, which means when you call, you’re talking to people who actually do the work. No runaround, no pressure tactics. We show up, assess what’s broken, tell you what it’ll take to fix it, and get it done right.
You’re not hiring a national chain that doesn’t know the area. You’re hiring people who understand that a gutter system in North Bay Shore needs to handle more than average rainfall and that aluminum holds up better against salt air than most other materials.
First, we inspect the entire system—not just the spot that’s leaking. A lot of times, the visible problem is just a symptom of something else going on. We check the fascia boards, the hangers, the seams, the downspouts, and the pitch to make sure water’s actually flowing toward the outlets.
Once we know what’s wrong, we explain it in plain terms. If you’ve got a sagging gutter, we’ll tell you whether it needs new hangers or if the fascia board behind it is rotted and needs replacement first. If there’s a leak at a seam or corner, we’ll show you why it’s happening and what we’ll do to seal it permanently.
Then we fix it. That might mean resealing joints, replacing sections, reattaching downspouts, or installing new fascia boards if the wood’s compromised. We use heavy-gauge aluminum that won’t rust out in a few years, and we make sure everything’s sloped correctly so water doesn’t pool.
Before we leave, we test the system. We want to see water flowing cleanly through the downspouts with no overflow, no drips, and no stress on the hangers.
Ready to get started?
Every gutter repair in North Bay Shore starts with a full system inspection because you can’t fix what you haven’t diagnosed. We clear out debris, check for rust holes, test the seams, and examine the fascia boards for rot or water damage.
If you’ve got a leaking gutter joint, we reseal it with commercial-grade sealant that holds up in freeze-thaw cycles. If a section is sagging, we install new hidden hangers spaced correctly to support the weight of water during heavy rain. For holes or rust damage, we patch or replace the affected section depending on severity.
Storm damage gutter repair is common here. When a nor’easter rolls through and tears a downspout off or collapses a section under the weight of ice, we respond fast. Emergency gutter repair means we’re available when the damage happens—not three weeks later when your basement’s already flooded.
We also handle fascia board repair and replacement, because a gutter is only as strong as what it’s attached to. If the wood behind your gutter is soft or rotting, no amount of rehanging will fix the problem. We replace compromised boards and make sure the new gutter system has solid backing.
Most gutter repairs in North Bay Shore run between $150 and $1,200 depending on what’s broken and how much of the system is affected. A simple reseal of a leaking seam might cost $150 to $300. Fixing sagging gutters with new hangers typically falls in the $300 to $600 range for an average home.
If you need fascia board replacement along with the gutter repair, that adds to the cost because we’re dealing with carpentry work in addition to the gutter fix. Storm damage repairs vary widely—a torn-off downspout is a quick fix, but a collapsed section that damaged the fascia and soffit will cost more.
The key is getting it fixed before a small problem becomes a big one. A $400 repair today beats a $5,000 foundation repair next year when water’s been pooling against your basement wall all winter.
Gutter leaks at corners and seams happen when the sealant breaks down or when the metal expands and contracts enough to open gaps. In North Bay Shore, freeze-thaw cycles are brutal on gutter seams—water gets in, freezes, expands, and cracks the seal. Do that a few dozen times over a winter and you’ve got a leak.
Coastal salt air also degrades sealant faster than it would inland. The same joint that might last 15 years in a drier climate can fail in 8-10 years here. Add in the stress from heavy rainfall and debris sitting in the gutters, and you’ve got the perfect recipe for seam failure.
Fixing a leaking gutter joint means cleaning the area completely, removing old sealant, and applying a high-quality product that’s designed for exterior use and temperature fluctuations. If the metal itself is corroded or warped at the joint, we replace that section instead of trying to patch it.
Most sagging gutters can be fixed without full replacement as long as the gutter itself isn’t damaged and the fascia board is solid. Sagging usually happens because the hangers are spaced too far apart, they’ve pulled loose, or the fascia wood has rotted and can’t hold them anymore.
We reattach or add new hidden hangers every 18-24 inches, which is closer than a lot of original installations. That spacing keeps the gutter from sagging even when it’s full of water during a heavy storm. If the fascia board is rotted, we replace that first—there’s no point rehanging a gutter on wood that won’t hold.
If the gutter itself is bent, rusted through, or pulled apart at the seams, replacement makes more sense than trying to salvage it. But in most cases where the metal is still in good shape, fixing sagging gutters is straightforward and a lot cheaper than installing a whole new system.
We prioritize emergency gutter repair calls, especially after major storms when gutters are torn off or downspouts are damaged and water’s pouring straight down your foundation. Response time depends on the severity of the storm and how many calls we’re handling, but we do our best to get someone out within 24-48 hours.
Storm damage in North Bay Shore is usually from high winds, heavy ice, or large branches coming down. When a gutter section collapses or a downspout gets ripped away, you need it fixed before the next rain—not next week. We understand that, and we keep materials on hand so we’re not waiting on special orders.
If the damage is severe and we can’t complete the full repair immediately, we’ll at least get a temporary fix in place to redirect water away from your foundation until we can come back and do the permanent work.
Yes, fascia board repair is part of what we do because you can’t properly fix gutters without addressing the wood they’re attached to. When we inspect your gutter system, we’re checking the fascia for soft spots, rot, water damage, and structural integrity. If the board is compromised, we replace it before we rehang or repair the gutters.
Fascia damage usually happens when gutters have been leaking or overflowing for a while and water’s been running down the back of the board. Wood rot spreads, so even if only one section looks bad, we check the entire run to make sure we’re not missing hidden damage.
We match the new fascia to your existing trim and make sure it’s properly sealed and painted so it holds up against North Bay Shore’s weather. A gutter is only as good as what’s behind it, so this step isn’t optional—it’s part of doing the job right.
A properly done gutter repair in North Bay Shore should last 10-15 years or more, assuming you’re keeping the gutters clean and the system isn’t taking repeated storm damage. Coastal conditions do shorten the lifespan compared to inland areas—salt air is corrosive, and the freeze-thaw cycle is harder on seals and joints.
The quality of materials matters. We use heavy-gauge aluminum and commercial-grade sealants specifically because they hold up better in this environment. Cheap fixes with hardware store caulk might last a season or two, but they’ll fail when you need them most.
Regular maintenance helps too. If you’re clearing debris a couple times a year and checking for early signs of problems, repairs last longer because small issues get caught before they turn into big ones. But even with perfect maintenance, coastal weather is tough on gutters—it’s just the reality of living near the water.
Other Services we provide in North Bay Shore