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PARAGON EXTERIORS LLC

Roofing

9 Signs You Need a New Roof (and 3 That Can Wait)

By Paragon Exteriors LLC · Updated March 2, 2026

The short answer

You need a new roof when the damage is spread across the whole surface, when the roof is past 20 years old, or when you are chasing the same leak for the second or third time. You need only a repair when the problem is isolated — a dozen shingles off after a storm, one bad pipe boot, a single flashing leak — on a roof that is otherwise sound and under about 15 years old. Age and how widespread the wear is are the two numbers that settle almost every case. Everything below is how a working roofer reads those two numbers.

First, know how old your roof actually is

Age is the single strongest predictor, so pin it down before you climb a ladder or call anyone. Check your closing documents, a permit record with your township, or the date on the last invoice in a kitchen drawer. Then compare it to how these materials really hold up at the Shore:

Roof typeRated lifeReal Jersey Shore life
3-tab asphalt (older builds)20–25 yrs15–20 yrs
Architectural asphalt25–30 yrs18–25 yrs
Standing-seam metal40–60 yrs35–50 yrs
Cedar shake25–40 yrs20–30 yrs

The “real” column runs shorter because Ocean and Monmouth County roofs take a beating inland roofs don’t: salt in the air, UV bouncing off the water, and the wind-flex of every nor’easter working the shingles loose. If you’re on a barrier island or right on the bay, assume the bottom of the range. For the full picture, see our guide on how long a roof lasts in NJ.

9 signs you need a new roof

These are the ones where a repair is throwing good money after bad. One in isolation may not be decisive — but when you see two or three together on a roof over 18 years old, the decision is basically made.

  1. Shingles curling or cupping across whole slopes. Edges lifting or centers dishing means the asphalt has dried out and lost its grip. Widespread curling is end-of-life, not a patch job.
  2. Bald spots where the granules are gone. Those granules are the shingle’s sunscreen. Dark, smooth patches mean the mat underneath is now baking in UV — and it accelerates from there.
  3. Granules filling your gutters. A coffee-can’s worth of black grit in the gutters is your roof shedding its surface. A little after a new install is normal; a steady stream from an older roof is not.
  4. A sagging or wavy roofline. Sight down the ridge. If it dips, waves, or bows, moisture has likely gotten into the decking or rafters. This is a structural warning, not cosmetic — do not sit on it.
  5. Daylight through the roof boards in the attic. If you can see light coming through the deck from inside, water is getting through the same gaps. Grab a flashlight on a sunny day and look up.
  6. Water stains that keep spreading. Brown rings on ceilings or attic rafters that grow after each rain mean the leak isn’t isolated — the roof is failing at multiple points faster than any single repair can keep up.
  7. You’re on your third repair in a few years. Two visits can be bad luck. A third means the roof itself is the problem, and you’ve now spent a chunk of a replacement on patches. See our repair-vs-replacement breakdown for the tipping-point math.
  8. Widespread missing shingles after storms. A nor’easter tearing off a patch is a repair. But if wind keeps stripping shingles because the whole field has gone brittle, each storm just finds the next weak spot.
  9. A soft, spongy deck underfoot. When a roofer walks your roof and it gives like a wet sponge, the plywood beneath has rotted. You can’t shingle over rot — the deck has to come off and be rebuilt.

3 signs that can wait (or just need a repair)

Not every problem is a five-figure problem. These are the ones where a good repair — or nothing at all yet — is the honest answer:

  • A few shingles off after one storm, on a newer roof. If the roof is under 15 years old and the rest of the field is flat and healthy, a targeted roof repair matched to your shingle color puts you right back to watertight for a few hundred dollars. Don’t let anyone talk you into a tear-off over one bad storm.
  • A single flashing or pipe-boot leak. Most leaks on otherwise-good roofs aren’t the shingles at all — they’re a cracked rubber pipe boot, a lifted step flashing at a wall, or a tired chimney seal. These are cheap, common, and fixable without touching the field.
  • Minor cosmetic algae streaks. Those black stains streaking down northern-facing slopes are airborne algae, not decay. They’re ugly, not urgent. A proper cleaning or new algae-resistant shingles at the next replacement handles it — no emergency here.

The repair-vs-replace math, in plain numbers

When the signs are mixed, run the money. Here’s the framework we actually use with homeowners:

Your situationSmart move
Roof under 15 yrs, damage in one spotRepair — $300–$1,200
Roof 15–20 yrs, first real leakRepair, but start budgeting
Roof 20+ yrs, wear across the surfaceReplace — $8,000–$18,000
Third repair in 3 yearsReplace — you’re funding it in pieces anyway
Active leak reaching the interiorReplace now — every week adds drywall and mold cost

The trap is spending $1,000 on a 22-year-old roof that needs another repair within two seasons. Across a 10-year window, a full roof replacement is almost always the cheaper path once a roof is old and leaking. For the full cost breakdown, see what a roof replacement really costs in NJ.

When to move fast vs. when to plan

Timing changes the price. If your roof is worn but still watertight — no active leaks — you usually have room to plan the job for spring or fall, which beats an emergency winter replacement on both scheduling and cost. But the moment water is reaching the deck or the ceiling, waiting stops saving money. A delayed leak in an Ocean County winter means freeze-thaw driving water deeper, rot spreading through the deck, and mold in the insulation — a roof bill that quietly becomes a roof-plus-interior bill.

Storm damage is its own clock. If a nor’easter or wind event caused the damage, document it fast with dated photos and check whether a homeowners insurance claim covers most of the replacement before you pay out of pocket.

Get a straight answer on your roof

If you’ve counted two or three signs above and you’re not sure which side of the line you’re on, that’s exactly the call worth making. Paragon Exteriors is family-run and NJ-licensed (HIC #13VH13814500), and we’ll tell you honestly whether you’re looking at a repair or a replacement — we do both, so we have no reason to oversell you one. We climb it, photograph it, and even drone-document it, then hand you an itemized estimate with no allowances or surprises across Toms River and the rest of Ocean and Monmouth County.

Request your free estimate or call 848-633-6440. If the number surprises you, financing can turn it into a monthly payment.

Frequently asked questions

How do I know if I need a new roof or just a repair?

If your roof is under 15 years old and the damage is confined to one area — a few missing shingles, one flashing leak — a repair is usually the right call. Replace when the roof is 20+ years old, shows wear across the whole surface (curling, bald granule loss, sagging), or when you are paying for a third repair in a few years. Age plus how widespread the damage is are the two deciding factors.

What does a roof that needs replacing look like from the ground?

From the driveway, look for shingles that curl up at the edges or lift, dark patchy areas where the protective granules have worn off, a roofline that dips or waves instead of running straight, and shingle grit collecting in your gutters. Any one of these across a large area — not just one slope — points to a roof near the end of its life.

How long does an asphalt shingle roof last at the Jersey Shore?

Architectural asphalt shingles are rated for 25–30 years, but coastal Ocean and Monmouth County roofs often reach 18–25 in practice. Salt air, UV, and repeated nor’easter wind cycling age shingles faster than the same roof would age inland. Homes right on the barrier islands sit at the low end of that range.

Can I wait a year to replace my roof?

Sometimes. A worn-but-watertight roof with no active leaks can often make it through another season, and planning the job for spring or fall usually beats an emergency winter replacement on both scheduling and price. But once water is reaching the deck or interior, waiting turns a roof bill into a roof-plus-drywall-plus-mold bill.

Talk to a real local expert

Tell us about your project — we respond fast, usually the same day.

No spam, no pressure. Or just call 848-633-6440.

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NJ HIC #13VH13814500 · Licensed & insured · Financing available