Hear from Our Customers
You’re not just covering your walls. You’re stopping water from rotting your sheathing, keeping energy costs down when winter hits 26°F, and adding real value when you eventually sell.
Quality siding installation in Patchogue, NY means your exterior can handle the temperature swings from January freezes to July heat without cracking or buckling. That’s the difference between replacing panels every few years and forgetting about them for decades.
The return matters too. New siding typically brings back 75-85% of what you spend when you sell. And if you choose insulated options, your heating and cooling bills drop enough that you’ll notice. Some insurance companies even cut your premiums when you upgrade to storm-resistant materials.
We operate right here in Suffolk County. We’ve seen what Nor’easters and summer storms do to homes that weren’t sided correctly the first time.
Being fully licensed and insured isn’t just paperwork. It means you’re protected if something goes wrong, and it means we’re accountable to standards that fly-by-night crews ignore. We’ve built our reputation in Patchogue by showing up when we say we will and finishing jobs without the usual contractor excuses.
When you call 631-707-0172, you’re talking to people who understand that 111 days of precipitation per year means your siding needs to be installed watertight. No gaps. No shortcuts.
First, we come look at what you’re dealing with. That means checking for damage you can see and damage you can’t—rot behind the old siding, moisture in the sheathing, flashing that’s letting water through.
Then we talk about materials. Vinyl costs less upfront and needs almost no maintenance. Fiber cement costs more but lasts longer and handles impact better. We’ll tell you what makes sense for your budget and how long you plan to stay in the house.
Installation starts with stripping the old siding and fixing any underlying problems. If your sheathing is damaged, we replace it. If your house wrap is torn, we redo it. Then we install the new siding with proper overlap, sealed seams, and correct fastening so it doesn’t blow off when the next storm rolls through.
The whole process typically takes a week to ten days for an average home, depending on size and weather. We clean up daily and make sure your property looks better than when we started.
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Every siding project includes a full inspection of your existing exterior. We’re looking for structural issues, water damage, and anything that’ll cause problems down the road if we just cover it up.
You get material options that make sense for Patchogue’s climate. That means siding rated for high winds, resistant to salt air if you’re near the water, and capable of handling the freeze-thaw cycles we get every winter. Most homes here run between $14,000 and $24,000 for a complete siding replacement on a 2,000 square foot house, depending on materials and complexity.
We also handle the details most homeowners don’t think about until it’s too late. Proper flashing around windows and doors. Ventilation that prevents moisture buildup. Trim work that actually keeps water out. And if you’re dealing with storm damage, we can work directly with your insurance company to document everything correctly.
If you need emergency repairs after a storm, we respond fast. Temporary protection goes up first to prevent further damage, then we assess what needs replacing versus what can be repaired.
Vinyl siding typically lasts 20-30 years here if it’s installed correctly. Fiber cement can push 50 years or more. But those numbers assume proper installation and regular maintenance.
Patchogue’s weather is tough on siding. You’ve got salt air if you’re near the water, which corrodes fasteners and degrades lower-quality materials. You’ve got 28 inches of snow and 48 inches of rain annually, which finds every gap and weak point. And you’ve got wind events that regularly hit 50-60 mph, which will rip off any siding that wasn’t fastened to manufacturer specs.
The biggest factor isn’t the material—it’s whether the contractor did it right. Siding that’s nailed too tight will buckle when temperatures swing. Siding without proper overlap will let water behind it. And siding installed without addressing the underlying moisture barriers will trap water and rot your sheathing. That’s why 85% of contractors go out of business within five years—they cut corners, problems show up later, and they’re gone.
Vinyl runs $7-12 per square foot installed in Patchogue. Fiber cement runs $12-18 per square foot. For a typical 2,000 square foot home, that’s roughly $14,000-$24,000 for vinyl versus $24,000-$36,000 for fiber cement.
But cost per square foot doesn’t tell the whole story. Vinyl needs replacement sooner—usually 20-30 years versus 50+ for fiber cement. Vinyl can crack in extreme cold and warp in extreme heat, both of which you get here. And vinyl doesn’t hold paint, so you’re stuck with the color you choose forever.
Fiber cement handles impact better, which matters when hail or wind-blown debris hits your house. It’s not flammable, so some insurance companies discount your premiums. And it can be painted, so you can change colors down the road without replacing everything. The upfront cost is higher, but the total cost of ownership over 30-40 years often favors fiber cement, especially if you’re planning to stay in the house long-term.
You can replace siding in winter in Patchogue, but there are limitations. Most manufacturers specify minimum installation temperatures—usually around 40°F for vinyl and 50°F for fiber cement. Below those temperatures, materials become brittle and don’t seal properly.
That said, if you’ve got storm damage or a section that’s letting water in, waiting until spring isn’t always an option. We can do emergency repairs and temporary protection in any weather, then schedule the full replacement when temperatures cooperate.
The bigger issue in winter isn’t cold—it’s moisture. If your sheathing is wet when we install new siding, you’re trapping that moisture. It needs time to dry out, which doesn’t happen well in January. We’ll assess the situation and tell you honestly whether it makes sense to proceed or wait a few weeks. Sometimes the answer is to do temporary repairs now and proper replacement in spring. Sometimes we can move forward if conditions are right. It depends on what we find when we look at your specific situation.
If the damage is localized—a few cracked panels from hail, a section torn off by wind, or isolated rot around a window—repair usually makes sense. If you’re seeing problems in multiple areas, or if your siding is 20+ years old, replacement is probably the better move.
Here’s what we look for: warping or buckling across large sections means the installation was done wrong or the material is failing. Rot or soft spots in the sheathing behind the siding means water has been getting in for a while. Mold or mildew inside your walls means moisture is trapped. Significantly higher energy bills mean your siding isn’t insulating anymore. And if you’re repainting or doing major maintenance every few years, you’re throwing money at a problem that replacement would solve permanently.
The honest answer usually comes down to cost versus benefit. If repairs cost 40-50% of what replacement would cost, and your siding is already past its midpoint lifespan, replacement makes more sense. You’re not just fixing today’s problem—you’re preventing the next ten years of problems. We’ll walk you through both options with actual numbers so you can make the call that fits your situation and budget.
Yes. We document damage, provide detailed estimates, and work directly with adjusters to make sure your claim covers what actually needs to be done.
Insurance companies want to pay for the minimum repair that brings your house back to pre-loss condition. That’s their job. Our job is to make sure the estimate includes everything that’s actually damaged—not just the obvious stuff. That means checking for impact damage to sheathing, compromised moisture barriers, and secondary damage that happened because water got in through the initial breach.
We take photos, measurements, and notes that support your claim. We explain to the adjuster why certain repairs are necessary, not optional. And we provide an estimate that breaks down labor and materials in the format insurance companies expect. Most adjusters in Suffolk County know us, which helps move things along.
The process typically takes 2-4 weeks from initial damage to approved claim, depending on how backed up the insurance company is. We can do emergency temporary repairs immediately to prevent further damage—those are usually covered separately under your policy. Then once the claim is approved, we schedule the full repair or replacement. If you’re dealing with storm damage right now, call us at 631-707-0172 and we’ll walk you through exactly what needs to happen next.
Fiber cement or high-grade vinyl with corrosion-resistant fasteners. Salt air destroys standard materials faster than most homeowners expect.
If you’re within a mile of the water, you’re dealing with salt spray that corrodes metal fasteners, degrades cheaper vinyl formulations, and accelerates weathering on any organic materials. Standard vinyl siding will fade and become brittle faster. Wood siding will rot faster unless you’re religious about maintenance. And if the contractor used regular steel nails instead of stainless or hot-dipped galvanized fasteners, those will rust out and your siding will start pulling away from the house.
Fiber cement handles salt air better than almost anything else. It doesn’t corrode, doesn’t rot, and doesn’t support mold growth. The paint finish is designed for coastal environments and holds up well. The downside is cost—it’s the most expensive common option. High-grade vinyl with UV inhibitors and impact resistance is the next best choice. It costs less than fiber cement, lasts 20-25 years in coastal conditions if installed properly, and needs almost no maintenance.
Whatever material you choose, the fasteners matter as much as the siding itself. We use stainless steel or hot-dipped galvanized fasteners on every coastal job. It costs a bit more upfront, but it’s the difference between siding that stays attached for decades and siding that starts failing in 5-10 years.
Other Services we provide in Patchogue