Gikas Roofing
30+ years
4.8 / 5.0
Why Choose Them
- A+ BBB Rating
- Hudson County specialist
- 400+ reviews
Service Areas
Jersey City, Hoboken, Bayonne, Secaucus, North Bergen
Find trusted roofing professionals serving Hoboken and surrounding areas.
30+ years
4.8 / 5.0
Jersey City, Hoboken, Bayonne, Secaucus, North Bergen
Typical repair range: $1,245 – $2,776
Typical replacement range: $14,466 – $20,423
Repair costs in Hoboken trend 1% below the New Jersey listed-city average.
Replacement pricing in Hoboken is 2% lower than the statewide listed-city midpoint.
Average local home value baseline used: $553,999
| Home Size | Estimated Replacement |
|---|---|
| 1,500 sq ft | $13,275 – $16,168 |
| 2,000 sq ft | $15,657 – $18,380 |
| 2,500 sq ft | $18,380 – $22,125 |
These recommendations are tuned to Hoboken's rainfall, hail profile, and climate pattern to improve durability and lifecycle value.
Most homeowners in Hoboken pay between $1,245 and $2,776 for common roof repairs, depending on roof type, access, and storm damage severity.
A full roof replacement in Hoboken commonly ranges from $14,466 to $20,423 for many homes, with larger or steeper roofs trending higher.
Hoboken has lower hail exposure, but wind and seasonal weather can still cause shingle and flashing damage over time.
Compare licensing, insurance, workmanship warranty terms, and recent nearby project references before selecting a contractor in Hoboken.
Hoboken currently has 1 roofers listed in our directory. That is 14% below the average for covered cities in New Jersey.
Signal is based on roofers listed on TheRooferFinder that explicitly include Hoboken in their service areas, not an estimate of all contractors in the broader market.
Use this page as your local planning hub: benchmark pricing, shortlist contractors, and move quickly after weather events. For larger projects, get at least two scope-aligned estimates so line items are directly comparable. If your property had recent storm exposure, prioritize inspection documentation before interior symptoms become structural issues.