Hear from Our Customers
You’re not buying gutters because you love home maintenance. You’re buying them because water finds every crack, every seam, every weak point in your foundation when it’s not channeled away properly.
East Merrimack gets more rain than 82% of the country. Add heavy tree coverage and you’ve got a recipe for clogged gutters, overflowing water, and basement problems that cost thousands to fix. The right gutter system stops that before it starts.
Seamless gutter installation means fewer joints, fewer leak points, and a custom fit that actually works with your roofline. You get a system that handles New Hampshire’s wet autumns and brutal winters without constant maintenance. No more climbing ladders every weekend. No more worrying about ice dams tearing your gutters off the house in February.
We started as a home remodeling contractor in Massachusetts, and we’ve been serving the Merrimack Valley ever since. We’re an Owens Corning Preferred Contractor, which means we meet strict requirements that most companies don’t bother with.
Our BuildZoom score puts us in the top 8% of over 139,000 licensed contractors in Massachusetts. That’s not luck. That’s showing up, doing the work right, and not cutting corners when it costs more to do it properly.
We know New Hampshire weather. Wet leaves in fall, ice in winter, pollen and pine needles in spring. Your gutters need to handle all of it, and we build them that way from the start.
First, someone comes out to look at your house. Not to sell you, but to measure and figure out what you actually need. We check your roofline, calculate water flow, and identify problem areas where water’s already causing issues.
Then we fabricate your gutters on-site. We’re not installing pre-cut sections that leak at every joint. We’re creating continuous runs custom-cut to your exact measurements. That’s what “seamless” actually means.
Installation typically takes one day. We use heavier-gauge materials than most contractors, space hangers closer together, and size downspouts based on your roof’s square footage and New Hampshire’s rainfall patterns. You’re not getting a one-size-fits-all system. You’re getting gutters engineered for your specific house and this specific climate.
We clean up when we’re done. You get gutters that work, and you don’t spend your weekend dealing with the aftermath.
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You’re getting aluminum gutters that last 20 to 30 years without rusting. If you want copper, we do that too—it lasts 50 to 100 years and looks better as it ages. Most people go with aluminum because it’s cost-effective and performs exactly how you need it to.
Gutter guard installation is separate, but it’s worth considering if you’ve got oak trees dropping leaves or maples dropping seeds. Guards don’t eliminate maintenance completely, but they cut it way down. In New Hampshire, they also help prevent ice dams by keeping debris out of the system so melted snow can drain properly.
We size downspouts larger than standard when your roof area or tree coverage requires it. We space hangers closer in areas that get heavy snow loads. These aren’t upsells. They’re adjustments based on what actually happens to houses in East Merrimack during winter.
You also get gutters that improve your home’s value. Buyers notice seamless gutters because they look cleaner and they know it means less maintenance. It’s a small detail that signals the house has been taken care of properly.
Most gutter installations finish in one day. We show up in the morning, fabricate your seamless gutters on-site, install them, test the water flow, and clean up before we leave.
The timeline depends on your house size and complexity. A straightforward ranch takes less time than a two-story colonial with multiple roof valleys. But even complicated jobs rarely stretch past a single day.
We don’t leave your house half-finished. You’re not waiting days between fabrication and installation, and you’re not dealing with an open worksite overnight. One crew handles everything from start to finish so there’s no coordination headaches on your end.
Yes, and here’s why that matters in this climate specifically. Sectional gutters have joints every ten feet. Each joint is a potential leak point, and New Hampshire’s freeze-thaw cycles destroy those seals faster than in milder climates.
Seamless gutters eliminate most of those leak points. You get one continuous piece with joints only at corners and downspouts. That means fewer places for ice to form, fewer spots where debris catches and clogs the system, and a lot less maintenance over the gutter’s lifespan.
The upfront cost is slightly higher than sectional gutters, but you save money on repairs and you’re not replacing them as often. In a climate that swings from 90 degrees in summer to below zero in winter, seamless construction just lasts longer. Most homeowners who’ve dealt with sectional gutters failing during a bad winter don’t make that mistake twice.
Most residential homes use 5-inch gutters, but that’s not always the right answer. Your roof’s square footage, pitch, and the amount of rain East Merrimack gets all factor into proper sizing.
If you’ve got a steep roof or a large surface area, you might need 6-inch gutters to handle the water volume during heavy storms. Undersized gutters overflow, which defeats the entire purpose of having them. We calculate this during the estimate so you’re not guessing.
Downspout size matters just as much. Standard downspouts are 2×3 inches, but we often go with 3×4 inches in New Hampshire because of snow melt and heavy spring rains. Larger downspouts move water away from your foundation faster, which is the whole point. We’re not trying to upsell you on bigger materials—we’re making sure the system actually works when you need it most.
Gutter guards help prevent ice dams, but they’re not a magic solution. Ice dams form when heat escapes through your roof, melts snow, and that water refreezes at the roof edge. Gutters full of debris make this worse because the ice has nowhere to go.
Quality gutter guards keep leaves, pine needles, and maple seeds out of your gutters so melted snow can drain properly. That reduces ice dam formation, but it doesn’t eliminate the root cause, which is usually attic insulation and ventilation issues.
If you’re getting ice dams every winter, guards are part of the solution. They work best when combined with proper attic insulation. We install guards that are engineered for New Hampshire winters—not the cheap mesh stuff that collapses under snow load. About 70% of homeowners install guards specifically to prevent clogs and flooding, and in this climate, that’s a smart move.
Most gutter installations in East Merrimack run between $1,200 and $3,500 depending on your house size, gutter material, and whether you’re adding guards. That’s for seamless aluminum gutters with proper hangers and downspouts sized correctly for New Hampshire weather.
Copper costs more—sometimes double—but it lasts 50 to 100 years and looks better over time. Most people choose aluminum because it performs well, doesn’t rust, and the cost makes sense for a 20 to 30 year lifespan.
We don’t give quotes over the phone because every house is different. Roof complexity, the number of corners, tree coverage, and how many downspouts you need all affect the final price. We come out, measure everything, and give you an accurate number based on what your specific house requires. No surprises, no “starting at” pricing that doubles when we show up.
Late spring through early fall is ideal for gutter installation in New Hampshire. The weather’s stable, materials seal properly, and you’re not working around snow or frozen ground.
That said, we install gutters year-round when needed. If your gutters fail in January and water’s pouring into your basement, waiting until May isn’t an option. We just have to work around weather conditions and sometimes that adds a day to the timeline.
The smartest time to install is before you need them desperately. If your current gutters are sagging, pulling away from the house, or leaking at the seams, don’t wait for a major storm to force the issue. Replacing them before they fail completely means you’re choosing the timing instead of reacting to an emergency. You’ll get better scheduling options and you won’t be dealing with water damage while you wait for an opening.
Other Services we provide in East Merrimack