A complete guide for NJ homeowners — from getting quotes to inspecting the final job.
A proper NJ roof replacement includes full tear-off, new underlayment, ice and water shield at eaves and valleys, drip edge, ridge cap, flashing, and clean disposal. Any contractor skipping these steps is cutting corners — and you're the one left with the consequences.
Answers to what NJ homeowners ask most often before replacing a roof.
Most residential roof replacements in NJ are completed in one day by an experienced crew. Larger homes (3,000+ sq ft), steep pitches, or significant decking damage may require two days. If a contractor tells you it will take a week, they are either understaffed or scheduling in a way that allows workers to come and go at will — not a sign of organized, accountable work.
In most NJ municipalities, a permit is required for a full roof replacement. Your contractor should pull the permit — not ask you to. A permit triggers an inspection that verifies proper installation of ice and water shield, drip edge, and nail patterns. A contractor who skips permits is skipping the verification that protects you. Check with your specific municipality, as requirements vary.
Ice and water shield is a self-adhering waterproof membrane applied to the roof deck at the eaves, valleys, and around penetrations before underlayment and shingles. NJ building code requires it at all eaves and valleys. It is the primary defense against ice damming in winter and wind-driven rain during storms. Any contractor who doesn't include it by default is either unaware of code or actively cutting corners.
Always a full tear-off in NJ. Roofing over existing shingles (called a lay-over) hides the deck condition, prevents proper ice and water shield installation, adds excessive weight to your roof structure, and voids most manufacturer warranties. It almost always fails sooner. NJ code limits roofs to two layers total, and most NJ homes are already at the limit — meaning a lay-over isn't even legal in many cases.
Ask for the contractor's NJ Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) license number, then verify it at the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs website (nj.gov/dca). The license lookup is free and takes about 30 seconds. If a contractor claims to be licensed but won't give you the number on the spot, they are not licensed. Best Crew's license is NJ HIC #13VH12304900 — verifiable at any time.
You should receive two warranties: a manufacturer's material warranty (covering the shingles themselves — typically 25 years to lifetime) and a workmanship warranty from the contractor (typically 5–10 years for a certified installer). The workmanship warranty is what matters most for leaks, since most leaks in the first several years are installation errors, not material failures. Both should be in writing with specific coverage terms.
Best Crew Construction is a direct-to-crew NJ roofing contractor — no sales rep, no subcontractors. One crew handles your roof from first call to final cleanup. NJ HIC #13VH12304900.
Or call us: (732) 503-8133 · info@TheBestCrewConstruction.com