Roofing
GAF vs. CertainTeed vs. Owens Corning: An NJ Roofer’s Honest Take
By Paragon Exteriors LLC · Updated April 9, 2026
The short answer, from someone who installs all three
For most New Jersey homes, GAF Timberline HDZ, CertainTeed Landmark, and Owens Corning Duration are close enough in quality that the crew nailing them down matters more than the brand on the wrapper. All three are architectural (dimensional) asphalt shingles, all three hit a 130 mph wind rating when installed correctly, and all three carry limited lifetime warranties. The real differences are the nailing design, the warranty fine print, color selection, and price — and at the Jersey Shore, how forgiving the shingle is when the wind gets under it.
How the three lines stack up
Here’s the honest comparison for the products we actually spec on Ocean and Monmouth County roofs in 2026:
| GAF Timberline HDZ | CertainTeed Landmark | Owens Corning Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Type | Architectural | Architectural | Architectural |
| Standout feature | LayerLock / StrikeZone nail area | Two-piece build, heavier felt | SureNail fabric nailing strip |
| Wind rating (installed) | Up to 130 mph | Up to 130 mph | Up to 130 mph |
| Color range | Wide | Widest | Wide |
| Relative material cost | Baseline | ~Even to slightly higher | ~Even to slightly higher |
| Best-warranty catch | Needs credentialed installer | Needs SureStart Plus / installer | Needs preferred contractor |
Notice the wind rating row: it’s identical. Anyone selling you one brand as “the only one that survives storms” is selling the logo, not the physics.
Where they genuinely differ
GAF Timberline HDZ — the volume standard
GAF is the most-installed shingle line in the country, and the HDZ generation added the StrikeZone nailing area — a wide, high-contrast target that makes it much harder for a crew to blow the nail placement. When six nails land in that zone, you get the 130 mph rating without a struggle. Because GAF supply is deep, HDZ is usually the easiest brand to source fast and match later for a repair — which matters when a nor’easter tears up half a slope and you need the same shingle next week.
CertainTeed Landmark — the heavyweight
Landmark is built as a genuine two-piece laminate, and it tends to feel and lay a touch heavier and richer on the roof. CertainTeed also runs the deepest color palette of the three, so if you’re matching a specific historic or HOA-approved look — think the older homes around Red Bank or a Manasquan Victorian — Landmark usually has the shade. The trade-off is that its strongest warranty terms hinge on the SureStart Plus coverage that a credentialed contractor registers.
Owens Corning Duration — the wind grabber
The Duration line’s SureNail strip is a woven fabric band right in the nailing zone. Practically, it gives the crew a wider margin for nail placement and grips the fastener better under uplift. On barrier-island and bayfront jobs — Long Beach Island, Ortley, the open exposures off Barnegat Bay — that extra forgiveness is a real coastal advantage, because the failure point in a wind event is almost always a fastener that was a hair too high or too low.
The part the brochures bury: warranty math
Every one of these brands advertises a “lifetime” limited warranty. Two things the glossy sheet won’t stress:
- The strong coverage is conditional. The longer non-prorated windows and the workmanship protection (the manufacturer covering installer error) only apply when the roof is installed to spec and registered by a contractor the manufacturer credentials. A premium shingle installed by an uncertified crew often drops to the base warranty — the weakest tier.
- Material warranties rarely cover the expensive part. Most claims aren’t about the shingle failing on its own; they’re about leaks from flashing, valleys, and ventilation. That’s workmanship, not material. So the contractor’s own workmanship warranty is the one that pays your real-world claims — get it in writing alongside the manufacturer’s.
This is why we tell homeowners not to over-index on brand tier. A mid-line shingle installed right outlasts a premium shingle installed wrong, every time.
What actually drives roof life at the Shore
At the Jersey Shore, the shingle brand is maybe the fourth-most important decision. Ahead of it:
- Fastening. Six nails in the correct zone. Non-negotiable within a few miles of the water.
- Edge and valley detail. Ice & water shield at eaves and valleys, sealed starter, and uplift-rated ridge cap keep wind-driven rain and salt spray out.
- Ventilation. Balanced intake and ridge exhaust so summer attic heat doesn’t cook shingles from below and shave years off any brand.
- Deck condition. New shingles over spongy plywood is money wasted.
Get those right and all three brands last their expected 25–30 years in NJ conditions. Get them wrong and the best shingle on the market fails early. For more on that curve, see how long a roof lasts in NJ and the best shingles for the Jersey Shore.
So which do we install?
Honestly? It depends on the roof and the homeowner:
- Fast turnaround or a repair-match concern → GAF Timberline HDZ, for supply depth and the foolproof nail zone.
- Exact color match or a heavier look → CertainTeed Landmark.
- Maximum wind exposure (barrier island, open bayfront) → Owens Corning Duration for the SureNail margin.
None of these choices is a mistake. The mistake is choosing the brand before you’ve vetted the crew. If a quote leads with the shingle logo but goes vague on nail count, underlayment, flashing, and who registers the warranty, that’s the tell — read how to choose a roofing contractor in NJ before you sign anything.
Get a straight recommendation for your roof
We install all three, so we’ve got no reason to push a brand that isn’t right for your exposure and budget. On a roof replacement, we’ll walk your roof, tell you which line fits, and quote it against whatever else you’re weighing — spec for spec. Chasing a leak instead? We do roof repair too, and we serve Toms River and the whole shore. Request a free itemized estimate or call 848-633-6440.