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PARAGON EXTERIORS LLC

Windows & Doors

Window Replacement Cost in NJ: 2026 Pricing Guide

By Paragon Exteriors LLC · Updated April 10, 2026

What replacement windows cost in NJ right now

In 2026, most New Jersey homeowners pay $450 to $1,400 per window installed, and a typical 10-window house lands between $6,500 and $14,000. Standard double-hung vinyl inserts sit at the low end; fiberglass frames, large picture or bay units, and full-frame installs on older or coastal homes push the top. Those are real installed numbers — glass, labor, disposal, and flashing included — not the sticker price of the window alone.

Per-window pricing by material and type

Material is the first lever. Here is where the common choices fall in New Jersey, installed:

Window typeTypical installed price (each)Best for
Vinyl double-hung (insert)$450 – $850The NJ default — good value, low maintenance
Vinyl casement / awning$550 – $1,000Tight seal, good over kitchen sinks
Fiberglass double-hung$850 – $1,400Coastal exposure, tighter tolerances, longevity
Composite / clad-wood$1,000 – $1,800Historic looks, premium builds
Picture / large fixed$700 – $1,600Big glass, water views
Bay or bow (3–4 units)$2,500 – $5,500Living-room feature walls

Vinyl covers the large majority of Shore-area replacements and holds up fine when it is a quality frame with fusion-welded corners. Fiberglass costs more but expands and contracts less than vinyl in NJ’s freeze-thaw swings, which keeps seals tight over decades — worth it on the ocean side of a home that takes direct sun and salt.

The five things that actually move your price

1. Insert vs. full-frame. An insert (pocket) replacement drops a new window into the existing frame — faster, cheaper, less disruption. A full-frame replacement strips down to the rough opening and is the honest call when the old frame is rotted, out of square, or you have water intrusion. Full-frame adds roughly $150–$400 per window but is the only real fix when the frame itself has failed.

2. Size and style. Price scales with glass area and operating hardware. A big picture window or a casement with a crank costs more than a standard double-hung of the same width.

3. Glass package. Low-E coating and argon fill are standard and worth it in NJ. Triple-pane adds cost and helps most on north and weather-facing walls. Tempered glass is code-required near doors, floors, and wet areas, and it carries a premium.

4. Coastal wind and impact rating. Near the water, the spec matters more than the brand. Look for a design pressure (DP) rating of 50+ and impact-rated glass where the code or your exposure calls for it. On the barrier islands — LBI, Lavallette, Seaside — this is not optional.

5. Access and old-home surprises. Second and third stories, lead paint on pre-1978 homes, hidden rot, and out-of-square 1960s openings all add labor. A good estimator flags these before the crew shows up, not after.

Whole-house budgets by home type

HomeWindowsTypical 2026 range
2-bed ranch / cape (Holiday City, inland)8–10$5,000 – $10,000
3-bed colonial12–16$8,000 – $18,000
Larger or two-story coastal home18–25$14,000 – $32,000

If those numbers are a stretch all at once, phase the project. Replace the wind- and weather-facing windows and your worst drafts first — usually the north and ocean-facing walls — then finish the rest next season.

When replacement pays for itself

New windows are not primarily an energy play in New Jersey — they are a comfort, noise, and water-integrity play. That said, ENERGY STAR–rated units cut drafts and typically trim heating and cooling bills by a meaningful chunk on a leaky old house. The stronger financial argument at the Shore is protection: a failed or underspec’d window lets wind-driven rain into the wall, and rotted sheathing behind siding costs far more than the window ever did. If you are already opening up the exterior, coordinating new siding and windows in one pass saves on flashing and labor.

Consider replacement when you see: condensation between the panes (a failed seal — not fixable), sashes painted or swollen shut, visible frame rot, ice on the interior glass in winter, or drafts you can feel with a hand. Single-pane or early aluminum windows on a 1960s–80s Ocean County home are almost always past due.

How to compare window quotes without getting sold

The window business runs on high-pressure “today only” pricing. Cut through it:

  1. Match the spec, not just the number. Frame material, insert vs. full-frame, glass package (Low-E, argon, tempered), and DP rating have to line up before two prices mean anything.
  2. Get the per-window price. A lump-sum bid hides where the money goes. Itemized lets you phase or trim.
  3. Ask who installs. A great window installed badly leaks. Confirm it is the contractor’s own crew, and that they flash and seal the opening — not just foam-and-caulk.
  4. Verify license and insurance. Ours is NJ HIC #13VH13814500, and we are fully insured. Ask for the certificate.
  5. Ignore the countdown clock. A fair price is a fair price next week. Financing beats a rushed decision — we offer it so the job fits a monthly budget instead of a sales deadline.

For a related decision on the exterior envelope, our guide on vinyl vs. James Hardie siding walks through the same durability-vs-cost tradeoffs, and the siding cost guide covers coordinating the two.

Local notes: permits and the Shore

Most straight insert replacements in the same opening do not need a permit in New Jersey towns. You will need one for enlarging an opening, going full-frame, or adding an egress window — bedroom egress size and tempered-glass locations are enforced at inspection. We handle permit paperwork when a job requires it in Toms River, Brick, and across Ocean and Monmouth County, so you never chase the building department.

Get an itemized window quote

Ranges are for planning; your house deserves an exact, per-window number. Paragon Exteriors measures every opening, checks for hidden rot, and quotes in writing with the spec spelled out — no countdown clock. Request a free estimate or call 848-633-6440, and financing can turn the project into a predictable monthly payment.

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to replace windows in NJ in 2026?

Most New Jersey homeowners pay $450–$1,400 per window installed in 2026, with standard double-hung vinyl inserts near the low end and fiberglass, large picture, or full-frame coastal installs at the high end. A typical 10-window house runs roughly $6,500–$14,000.

Is it cheaper to replace all windows at once?

Yes, per window. Crews price in mobilization, setup, and disposal that get spread across the job, so doing 10 windows together usually costs 15–25% less each than doing three at a time. If budget is tight, phase by exposure — replace the weather-facing and worst-draft windows first.

Do I need a permit to replace windows in New Jersey?

A straight insert replacement in the same opening usually does not require a permit in most NJ towns. Enlarging an opening, changing to a full-frame install, or adding an egress window does. Bedroom egress and tempered-glass rules are enforced — a licensed contractor pulls the permit when one is needed.

What window rating should Jersey Shore homes use?

Within a few miles of the water, choose windows with a DP (design pressure) rating of 50 or higher and impact-rated glass where required. Salt air, wind-driven rain, and nor’easter gusts punish underspec’d windows — the upgrade is modest and it is what keeps water out of your walls.

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