Marlboro, NJ
NJ Roofing · Roof Replacement & Repair
Marlboro is a 41,000-resident Monmouth County township — one of the largest by population in central NJ. Housing stock is overwhelmingly 1980s–2000s suburban Colonial and Contemporary on quarter-acre to half-acre lots, with substantial newer 2010s townhome and condo development. Most of our Marlboro work is second-cycle architectural-shingle replacement.
Robertsville, Wickatunk, and Morganville are historic villages within the township with older housing. Highway exposure along Route 9 + Route 79 adds wind funneling.
What We Work On in Marlboro
Predominantly 1980s–2000s Colonial, Tudor, and Contemporary on quarter-acre to half-acre lots throughout. Robertsville + Wickatunk + Morganville historic villages: 1800s–1940s residential. Newer 2010s townhome + condo developments. Route 9 + Route 79 commercial corridors.
Common Marlboro Jobs
- Colonial second-cycle architectural-shingle replacement
- Townhome and condo community projects
- Historic-village cedar shake or sash restoration
- Storm-damage response
- Route 9 commercial flat-roof replacement
Marlboro's mix of large executive homes on open inland-Monmouth lots means wind is the main storm threat — and the steep, complex roofs on the township's bigger colonials make professional, fully-sealed flashing and ridge work especially important.
Neighborhoods we serve in Marlboro
ZIP codes: 07746
Services
Marlboro Roofing FAQ
Do you do the larger custom and executive homes in Marlboro?
Yes — Marlboro's 1990s-2010s developments include many large custom colonials with complex roof lines, and we handle the full range from architectural laminate to premium slate-look shingles like GAF Grand Sequoia. Every install is registered for the manufacturer warranty and backed by our lifetime workmanship coverage.
Should I upgrade to a better shingle when I replace my Marlboro roof?
On the larger homes it often makes sense. Stepping up from a standard architectural shingle to a heavier designer or impact-resistant line adds curb appeal and wind and impact resistance for a modest cost increase relative to the size of the job — we show you the options and the warranty differences before you decide.
My Marlboro roof keeps losing shingles in ordinary storms — why?
Repeated 40-50 mph gusts gradually break the thermal seal on shingles installed with a 4-nail pattern, so tabs start lifting in everyday storms. The fix is a 6-nail high-wind re-roof with polyurethane tab sealing, which we spec standard in Marlboro.