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HomeCost GuidesRoofer Cost › Jersey City, NJ

🏠 Cost Guide · Jersey City, NJ

Average Roofer Cost in Jersey City, NJ (2026)

A roofer in Jersey City charges $72/hour for a standard service call — that's +14% above the US median of $63/hour. The differential reflects the NJ cost-of-living composite of 113.9 (US average = 100) applied to BLS OEWS national mean wage data for SOC 47-2181.

Roofer project costs in Jersey City, NJ

ProjectTimeTypical costRange
Roof inspection + written report 1–2 hours $144 $118 – $173
Single leak repair (small area, replace ~10 shingles) half day $425 $348 – $510
Shingle replacement (storm spot repair, ~1 square) half day $679 $557 – $815
Step-flashing replacement around chimney or skylight 1 day $683 $560 – $820
Seamless aluminum gutter install (150 ln ft) 1 day $1,973 $1,618 – $2,368
Tear-off + asphalt re-roof (1700 sq ft, mid-grade) 2–3 days $12,069 $9,896 – $14,482
Standing-seam metal roof (1700 sq ft) 3–5 days $21,141 $17,336 – $25,369
Synthetic underlayment + ice-shield refresh 1 day $1,977 $1,621 – $2,372
Skylight replacement (one fixed unit) 1 day $1,093 $896 – $1,312

Sources: BLS OEWS May 2024 (SOC 47-2181), MERIC State Cost of Living Index 113.9 for NJ, NAHB Construction Cost Survey 2024.

How Jersey City compares

At an effective contractor rate of $72/hour, Jersey City sits meaningfully above the national median for roofer work. Homeowners here will see higher-than-average prices on labor-intensive jobs (re-pipes, panel upgrades, full system replacements) where labor is the bulk of the cost. Materials-heavy jobs (water-heater swaps, furnace replacements, large appliance installs) will track somewhat above the national figure because regional materials inflation in NJ runs about 14% above the US benchmark.

What the work involves

A residential roofer either performs targeted repair (lifted shingles, popped nails, failed flashing, single-leak diagnosis) or a full tear-off and replacement. A reputable contractor will start with a multi-point inspection: shingle condition (granule loss, curling, cracking), flashing integrity around chimneys/sidewalls/penetrations, ridge and soffit ventilation, attic moisture signs, and decking condition (you don't know about rotten plywood until tear-off). Asphalt shingle is the dominant material in 80% of US homes; metal and tile dominate in storm-prone or arid markets. All re-roofs require a permit and at least one mid-roof inspection by the local AHJ in most jurisdictions, and OSHA 1926.501 requires fall protection for any work at heights above 6 feet — a non-negotiable safety/insurance issue.

Six questions to ask any roofer in NJ

  1. Are you a manufacturer-certified installer (GAF Master Elite, Owens Corning Platinum, CertainTeed Select)? Certification is required for the long manufacturer warranties.
  2. What's the workmanship warranty (separate from the manufacturer's shingle warranty), and is it transferable?
  3. How do you handle decking that's rotten under the old shingles — is it a per-sheet add, and what's the unit price?
  4. Will you tear off the old roof completely (single-layer install only), or are you proposing an overlay?
  5. Are ice & water shield, drip edge, and proper underlayment included to current code in my climate zone?
  6. What's the projected weather window, and what happens if a storm hits mid-job?
Door-to-door storm-chaser pitches, "we just did your neighbor's roof" without proof, asking for full payment up front, no permit pulled, or the company refusing to provide its state contractor license number.

Featured roofers in Jersey City

Summit Roofers

📍 3504 Pine Pkwy, Jersey City, NJ 07311
★ 4.2 / 5 · 358 reviews · 33 yrs
✓ Licensed 24/7

First Choice Roofers

📍 931 Sunset Dr, Jersey City, NJ 07310
★ 3.8 / 5 · 67 reviews · 8 yrs
✓ Licensed 24/7

See all Roofers in Jersey City →

By ZIP code in Jersey City

Seasonal roofing checklist

Spring

  • After the last freeze, walk the perimeter and look for shingle granules collected at downspouts — heavy granule loss is the early sign of asphalt shingle wear.
  • Inspect attic decking for any new daylight, dark stains, or musty smell; small leaks show up in the attic months before they show up on the ceiling.
  • Trim any branches now overhanging the roof to at least 10 feet of clearance to prevent abrasion and squirrel access.
  • Check pipe-boot rubber collars — UV cracks them every 8–10 years and they're a top-three leak source.

Fall

  • Clean gutters and downspouts thoroughly after leaf-drop; clogged gutters cause ice damming and fascia rot all winter.
  • Inspect and re-seal flashing around chimneys, skylights, and sidewall transitions before freeze-thaw cycles begin.
  • Schedule any needed repairs now — most reputable roofers stop scheduling work in deep winter except for emergency tarp-and-patch.
  • Verify attic ventilation (soffit + ridge) is unobstructed; poor venting is the #1 cause of premature shingle failure in the south and ice dams in the north.

Winter

  • After heavy snow, rake the bottom 3–4 feet of the roof from the ground (snow rake) to prevent ice dam formation at the eave.
  • Watch interior ceilings for new water stains during the first thaw — that's the moment any compromised flashing or shingle reveals itself.
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