Roofing Contractor in Putnam County, NY

Roofing Contractor in Putnam County, NY

Roofing services across Putnam County, from the lakes to the Highlands.

Putnam is mostly trees, hills, and water, and the roofs here take a beating because of it. We have roofed the county’s lake communities and Highlands villages for years as part of our tri-state work, so we know what a wooded acre in Putnam Valley, a cottage on Lake Mahopac, or a 19th-century home in Cold Spring actually needs overhead. Whether you are replacing an aging asphalt roof, putting durable standing-seam metal on a home tucked into the woods, or restoring slate on a historic Highlands house, we help you choose the system that fits the home, the setting, and a climate that runs colder and snowier than the counties to the south. From architectural asphalt and metal to cedar, copper, and slate, every roof we install is built to last.

Roofing Since
1979
Google Rated
4.9
Homes Served
10k+
Residential Roofing Westchester County NY
Licensed & Insured

Trusted by homeowners since 1979

GAF

GAF

Certified Installer

Owens Corning

Owens Corning

Preferred

BBB

BBB

A+ Rating

Angi

Angi

Super Service Award

Licensed & Insured

Fully Licensed & Insured

Built for Putnam's Woods, Lakes, and Hudson Highlands

a person repairing the roof of a house

Putnam is not subdivisions and sidewalks. It is forest, ridgelines, reservoirs, and lakes, and the roof that survives here is not the same one you would put on a house in the open.

Drive the county and you pass wooded contemporaries on long gravel drives in Putnam Valley and Kent, lake cottages around Mahopac and Lake Carmel that were never built for year-round weather, and the 19th-century homes of Cold Spring, Nelsonville, and Garrison sitting in the Hudson Highlands. Each one sits under different trees, on a different slope, taking a different kind of winter.

A contractor who only roofs flat, open suburban lots will miss what a Putnam home is up against.

We work the other way. A lakefront cottage on Lake Mahopac is not a 19th-century home in Cold Spring. A wooded contemporary in Garrison is not a colonial in Brewster. The right roof starts with the home and the land around it, and we have spent decades roofing exactly these kinds of houses.

That is what Putnam asks for. That is A&J Reliable.

What Putnam does to a roof

What this means for your estimate

We do not price a roof off a photo. On a Putnam home we look at the attic ventilation, the decking under an old roof that may have been on since the house was seasonal, the flashing around additions, dormers, and chimneys, and how the surrounding trees and slope move water and debris across the roof. Permitting runs through your town building department, Carmel, Kent, Patterson, Philipstown, Putnam Valley, or Southeast, and the villages of Brewster, Cold Spring, and Nelsonville. If your home is in the Cold Spring historic district, the review board may weigh in on material and color, and we will tell you what is allowed before you choose. We handle the permitting as part of the job.

Four reasons Putnam homeowners trust us with their biggest investment.

More than forty-five years of roofing across New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut, including the wooded and Highlands homes that make Putnam its own kind of job.

We know the hard sites.

Steep Highlands roofs, lake cottages built for summers and now lived in all year, and homes set deep in the woods. We know the ventilation fixes, the snow-shedding systems, and the durable materials these settings actually call for.

We build relationships, not transactions.

In a county this tight-knit, word travels. Much of our work comes from homeowners we roofed before and the neighbors who saw it done right. That is the standard we hold to.

More than four decades of proof.

Thousands of tri-state homes since 1979. Read the testimonials, check the reviews, or look up at a roof you pass on the way into town. The record says more than any pitch.

Premium products, built to endure.

On remote and wooded homes, durability matters even more. We install only what we would put on our own homes: leading asphalt, metal, copper, and slate systems, chosen for looks, performance, and a long life with little fuss.

ROOFING MATERIALS — Five Systems, One Built for Your Home.

No two Putnam homes are the same. A lakefront cottage on Lake Mahopac, a 19th-century home in Cold Spring, and a wooded contemporary in Garrison ask for very different roofs, budgets, and upkeep. So we help you choose the system that fits both the home and the way you live in it.

Asphalt Roofing Shingles

20-30 Year Lifespan

Architectural asphalt shingles cover most Putnam homes, and for good reason. They handle cold, snowy winters well, come in a wide range of colors and profiles, and offer the best long-term value for most homeowners. Algae-resistant shingles are worth a serious look here, where shade and moisture invite the green streaks you see on so many wooded-lot roofs.

Metal Roofing

50+ Year Lifespan

Standing-seam metal is a natural fit for Putnam. It sheds snow instead of holding it, stands up to wind on exposed ridges, and lasts for decades with little maintenance, which matters on a home set back in the woods. It also suits the contemporary and lake homes scattered across the county.

Slate & Synthetic Slate

Exceptional Longevity

The historic homes of Cold Spring and Garrison hold some genuinely fine slate roofs. We restore natural slate where the history is worth keeping and install premium synthetic slate where homeowners want the same look with less weight and maintenance. Both reward the right home with decades of beauty.

Copper Roofing

100+ Year Lifespan

Nothing makes a statement like copper. Favored on historic homes and architectural accents in the Highlands villages, it weathers into a rich patina that only improves with age. Homeowners choose copper for character and craftsmanship as much as protection.

Cedar Roofing

Naturally Insulating

Cedar suits Putnam’s rustic and wooded homes like little else, weathering into a soft silver-gray that belongs among the trees. For homeowners who want warmth, texture, and real curb appeal, it remains one of the most beautiful roofs available.

Which Roofing Material Is Right for Your Home?

The best roof is rarely the most expensive one. It is the one that suits your home, fits your plans, and holds up to Putnam winters and the trees around you. Our specialists will walk you through the options so you can decide with confidence.

OUR PROCESS — Four steps from first call to final inspection.

Since 1979, every Putnam project has followed the same proven path. No surprises, no shortcuts, no contractor games.

1. Free Roof Inspection

We check the roof, the attic, and the ventilation to find the real problem, not just the symptom.

2. Review Your Custom Quote

A quote built for your specific home and project, written in plain language.

3. Installation

Specialist crews, premium materials, and your property protected from start to finish.

4. Final Inspection

We do not leave until it is right, and we follow up after.

TOWNS WE SERVE IN PUTNAM

Decades of roofing across the county, from the lake communities to the Highlands. We know how the tree canopy works on a north slope, how a hard winter punishes an under-ventilated lake cottage, and which building department to call before the job starts. Find your town below.

See the work, then call us.

FAQ (Putnam-specific)

My house is surrounded by trees and the roof is always mossy and covered in debris. Can you help?

Yes, and it is the most common issue we see in Putnam. Shade and constant moisture on wooded lots grow moss and algae and pack the valleys with debris. We clean it properly, can install algae-resistant shingles or metal, and set up the roof and gutters to shed what the trees drop.

Almost always attic ventilation and insulation, not the shingles, and Putnam’s higher elevation and heavier snow make it worse than down-county. We fix the cause, not just the leak it leaves behind.

Often, yes. Many homes around Lake Mahopac, Lake Carmel, and Lake Peekskill were built seasonally and later lived in all year without the ventilation or insulation to handle winter. We assess what is actually up there and bring it up to a four-season standard.

Yes. We have roofed Putnam’s rural homes, lake communities, and Highlands villages for years as part of our tri-state work. A long driveway or a wooded acre is not a problem.

It can. The Cold Spring historic district has a review board that can weigh in on roofing material and color, and slate or metal is often the right call on these older Highlands homes. We will tell you what is allowed before you settle on a product.

Architectural shingles run about 20 years, metal a century or more, and copper and slate longer still. In Putnam’s cold, snowy winters, and with so much shade and moisture from the trees, proper installation and ventilation drive how long you actually get.