Hear from Our Customers
You stop worrying every time it rains. No more water pooling near your foundation or dripping behind the fascia board. No more wondering if that small leak is about to become a big problem.
When your gutter system works the way it should, water goes exactly where it’s supposed to—away from your home. Your basement stays dry. Your landscaping doesn’t erode. Your siding doesn’t rot from constant moisture exposure.
The difference between a quick patch job and professional gutter repair in Sagaponack, NY comes down to this: one fixes what you can see, the other fixes what’s actually broken. We check the pitch, inspect every joint and seam, test downspout flow, and look for the early signs most people miss. That’s how you get repairs that last 10-15 years instead of failing next season.
We’ve spent over 30 years handling gutter repairs throughout Suffolk County. We’re a family-owned business, which means we’re not sending out crews who’ve never seen a nor’easter or don’t understand what coastal weather does to your home.
We know Sagaponack. We know the salt air eats through aluminum faster here than inland. We know your trees drop leaves starting in October and don’t stop until January. We know that when a storm rolls through, your gutters either handle it or your basement floods.
Every repair we do comes with a comprehensive warranty—both workmanship and materials. We’re licensed and insured in Suffolk County, and we’ve been around long enough that you can trust we’ll be here to honor that warranty if you ever need us.
First, we come out and inspect your entire gutter system—not just the spot that’s leaking. Most gutter problems are symptoms of something else. A leak at the corner usually means the pitch is wrong or a hanger failed. Water overflowing in one section often points to a clog or sag somewhere upstream.
We check everything: the slope of your gutters, the condition of your fascia board, how your downspouts are draining, whether joints are sealed properly. Then we explain exactly what’s wrong, what needs fixing, and what it’ll cost. No surprises, no upselling unnecessary work.
Once you approve the estimate, we schedule the repair. Most gutter leak repairs and seam fixes take a few hours. Larger jobs—like reattaching sections, replacing fascia, or fixing storm damage—might take a day. We use quality materials that hold up to Long Island weather, test everything before we leave, and clean up completely when we’re done.
If you’ve got an emergency—like storm damage or a gutter leaking into your house—we respond within 24 hours, often same-day. We’ll stop the immediate damage first, then schedule follow-up work for the permanent fix.
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We handle everything from minor leaks to complete system failures. That includes fixing sagging gutters, sealing leaking joints and seams, repairing or replacing damaged fascia boards, reattaching loose downspouts, patching holes and rust damage, adjusting pitch and slope issues, and replacing broken hangers or brackets.
For Sagaponack homes specifically, we also deal with the coastal challenges you face. Salt air corrosion eats through standard materials faster than it should. Heavy storms overwhelm undersized or poorly pitched systems. Ice dams form when debris blocks drainage during freeze-thaw cycles.
Most common gutter repairs—like fixing a leak, adjusting pitch, or replacing hangers—run between $75 and $300. Larger repairs involving fascia board replacement or extensive storm damage typically cost $400 to $900, depending on severity and accessibility. You’ll know the exact cost before any work starts.
The average home insurance claim for water damage is nearly $7,000. And here’s the thing: if your gutters overflow and cause foundation damage, most insurance companies consider that neglect—meaning they won’t cover it. A $200 gutter repair now beats an $8,000 foundation repair that comes out of your pocket.
Most gutter leak repairs in Sagaponack cost between $75 and $300, depending on what’s causing the leak and where it’s located. A simple seam repair or joint seal might be on the lower end. Fixing a leak that’s caused by damaged fascia or requires replacing a section of gutter will cost more.
The exact price depends on a few factors: how accessible the leak is, whether the fascia board behind it is rotted and needs replacement, if the pitch needs adjusting, and what materials we’re working with. Seamless gutters are easier to repair than sectional systems with multiple joints.
Here’s what matters more than the repair cost: what happens if you don’t fix it. Foundation repairs from water damage average $8,000 to $15,000 in this area. Basement waterproofing runs $3,000 to $10,000. A leaking gutter that seems manageable today can turn into structural damage that costs exponentially more to fix later. We give you a free estimate upfront so you know exactly what you’re paying before we start.
A properly done gutter repair should last 10 to 15 years when it’s completed with quality materials and correct techniques. That’s assuming you maintain your gutters—keeping them clean, checking them after major storms, and addressing small issues before they become big ones.
The lifespan depends on what we’re fixing and what caused the problem in the first place. If we’re sealing a leaking seam and the rest of your system is in good shape, that repair should last as long as the gutters themselves. If we’re fixing a sag caused by broken hangers, those new hangers will hold for years as long as the fascia board is solid.
What shortens repair lifespan is ignoring the underlying cause. If your gutters keep clogging because of tree coverage and you never clean them, even the best repair will fail faster. If ice dams form every winter because your attic insulation is inadequate, that’s going to stress the system. We address the root problem, not just the visible symptom—that’s how you get repairs that actually last.
It depends on the extent of the damage. Most storm damage to gutters is repairable—bent sections can be straightened, torn seams can be resealed, and pulled-away hangers can be reattached. We assess the damage and give you an honest answer about whether repair makes sense or if replacement is the smarter move.
If a nor’easter ripped a section loose but the rest of your system is intact, we’ll repair that section and reinforce the mounting. If hail dented your gutters but they’re still functional and not leaking, you might not need to do anything. If the entire system is compromised—multiple sections damaged, fascia boards rotted, structural issues—replacement might be more cost-effective long-term.
We handle emergency gutter repair in Sagaponack within 24 hours of your call, often same-day during business hours. For storm damage, we focus on stopping immediate water intrusion first—getting your system functional temporarily so you’re protected while we schedule the permanent repair. You’ll get a clear explanation of what’s damaged, what can be fixed, what should be replaced, and what each option costs.
Corner leaks usually happen because the sealant has failed, the joint has separated from expansion and contraction, or the gutter has sagged and pulled the seam apart. Seams leak for similar reasons—old sealant breaks down, especially with UV exposure and temperature swings we get on Long Island.
The real issue is often what caused the sealant to fail in the first place. If your gutters are clogged, water sits in them longer than it should. That constant moisture exposure breaks down sealant faster. If the pitch is wrong, water pools instead of draining, putting pressure on joints and seams. If hangers have failed and the gutter is sagging, that movement stresses every connection point.
Fixing a leaking gutter joint or corner isn’t just about resealing it—though that’s part of it. We figure out why it failed, fix that underlying problem, then reseal the joint properly with materials that hold up to coastal weather. Otherwise you’re just buying yourself a few months before it leaks again. Most homeowners who try DIY gutter repairs end up calling us six months later because the leak came back worse than before.
Yes, fascia board repair is part of what we do—and it’s often necessary when you’re fixing gutter problems. If your gutters have been leaking for a while, there’s a good chance the fascia behind them is rotted or damaged. You can’t mount gutters securely to rotted wood, so replacing that fascia is essential for a repair that lasts.
We inspect the fascia during every gutter repair estimate. If it’s solid, we work with what’s there. If it’s compromised, we’ll replace the damaged sections before reattaching your gutters. Fascia board replacement costs more than a simple gutter repair, but it’s not optional—trying to skip it means your gutters will pull away again within a year.
The process is straightforward: we remove the damaged fascia, check the rafter tails behind it for rot (and address that if needed), install new fascia board, prime and paint it to match your trim, then remount your gutters properly. It adds time and cost to the job, but it’s the only way to do it right. Most gutter and fascia repair projects in Sagaponack take one to two days depending on how much fascia needs replacing.
We respond to emergency gutter service calls in Sagaponack within 24 hours, and during business hours we’re often there same-day. If your gutter is leaking into your house, a downspout tore off during a storm, or you’ve got water pouring over and flooding your foundation, that’s an emergency—and we treat it like one.
Our priority in an emergency is stopping the immediate damage. We’ll get your gutter system functional temporarily so water isn’t actively destroying your home, then we’ll schedule follow-up work for the permanent repair. Sometimes that temporary fix involves reattaching a section, sealing a major leak, or redirecting a downspout. Sometimes it means tarping or channeling water away until we can do the full repair.
Emergency gutter repair costs more than scheduled work—that’s standard across the industry because we’re dropping everything to help you right now. But the cost is still far less than the water damage you’ll face if you wait. After a major storm, we’re usually slammed with calls, so response time can stretch to 24-48 hours. If you can safely do anything to minimize damage in the meantime—like moving downspouts away from the foundation or placing buckets under active leaks—that helps until we arrive.
Other Services we provide in Sagaponack