Roof Replacement Cost in New Jersey (2026)
Roof replacement cost in New Jersey: estimate labor, shingles, tear-off, pitch, permit, and climate factors using BLS, FRED, local code, and NOAA data.
Roof replacement cost in New Jersey is modeled from the physical roof size, material tier, tear-off scope, roof pitch, labor market, asphalt roofing material index, permit/code burden, and climate exposure.
What you need to know
Roof replacement cost in New Jersey is modeled from the physical roof size, material tier, tear-off scope, roof pitch, labor market, asphalt roofing material index, permit/code burden, and climate exposure. For the default 1,800 square-foot roof, the standard estimate is about $21,957, with a modeled range of $18,005-$28,105 before hidden structural repairs. The premium-material scenario raises the midpoint to about $32,936 because material choice and tear-off complexity compound through the formula.
The New Jersey model uses BLS OEWS roofer labor data for occupation 47-2181, the FRED/BLS asphalt shingle and coating material PPI series PCU3241223241222, an official local permit/code source from New Jersey DCA, and NOAA/NCEI climate context. The state-specific drivers used in the prose are New Jersey coastal wind exposure affects roof material selection, inspection demand, or contractor scheduling., New Jersey dense permitting markets exposure affects roof material selection, inspection demand, or contractor scheduling., New Jersey high labor costs exposure affects roof material selection, inspection demand, or contractor scheduling.. Common material choices include architectural asphalt shingles, standing-seam metal.
This calculator is for planning and quote-checking, not replacing a contractor inspection. Roof decking damage, code upgrades, ventilation fixes, steep access, insurance claim rules, disposal fees, and local inspection requirements can move the invoice outside the modeled range. For adjacent planning, compare the Home calculators, the roof replacement cost guide, and how PennyCheck verifies data.
How roof replacement cost breaks down in New Jersey
A roof replacement invoice usually has five major buckets: labor, materials, tear-off and disposal, permit/code compliance, and contractor overhead. Labor is modeled from BLS OEWS roofer wage data for New Jersey; the current source record uses a mean hourly wage of $31.50 and employment of 4,200. Material cost is modeled from the asphalt roofing material PPI rather than a single retailer shelf price because shingles, underlayment, flashing, ridge cap, nails, drip edge, and ventilation components move together across distributors.
The default model uses 1,800 square feet at $7.60 per square foot before state multipliers. Labor index 1.29, material index 1.00, permit/code multiplier 1.02, climate multiplier 1.10, tear-off multiplier 1.08, and pitch multiplier 1.03 produce the $21,957 midpoint. Use the roof replacement cost guide for the national model, then compare household cash decisions with the emergency fund calculator.
What drives roofing cost in New Jersey
New Jersey's cost drivers include New Jersey coastal wind exposure affects roof material selection, inspection demand, or contractor scheduling.; New Jersey dense permitting markets exposure affects roof material selection, inspection demand, or contractor scheduling.; New Jersey high labor costs exposure affects roof material selection, inspection demand, or contractor scheduling.. These factors matter because a contractor quote is not just shingles times square footage. Wind, hail, snow load, wildfire exposure, salt air, humidity, roof access, dump fees, local code requirements, and labor availability can all affect the number of crew hours and the material system specified for the job.
Climate is handled as a multiplier rather than a direct dollar fee. NOAA/NCEI context lists coastal wind, dense permitting markets, high labor costs as the primary drivers for this state, with a high risk level in the model. That does not mean every house faces the same risk; it means statewide climate context is material enough to adjust the planning estimate before a contractor inspects the property.
For broader planning, compare this project with paint project costs, financing assumptions in the compound interest calculator, and mortgage affordability using the home affordability calculator.
Permit and quote review for New Jersey roof projects
New Jersey DCA is the official representative jurisdiction used for permit context. New Jersey DCA is used as an official representative local permitting example for New Jersey. The model treats re-roof permit cost and review burden as local authority specific rather than a statewide guarantee. Inspection stages can include dry-in, deck/sheathing, flashing, in-progress, or final inspections depending on New Jersey DCA scope and local building department practice. Roofing permit rules are controlled by the local building department in New Jersey; check the city or county building authority before starting work. The calculator uses this source as a representative official example because roofing permits are usually administered by the city, county, or local building department. That local structure is why the model avoids a single statewide permit claim and instead treats permit/code requirements as a planning multiplier.
When reviewing quotes, compare scope line by line: tear-off layers, decking replacement allowance, underlayment type, ice-and-water shield or equivalent membrane, flashing replacement, ventilation, drip edge, disposal, permit handling, inspection scheduling, warranty length, and payment schedule. A lower bid can be reasonable if scope is truly smaller, but it can also omit details that become change orders.
Before requesting bids, measure the approximate roof size, note the material tier, decide whether premium materials are being compared, and ask whether the contractor includes permit handling. PennyCheck keeps those assumptions visible so a homeowner can compare contractor quotes against the same baseline.
Scope checklist before requesting New Jersey roofing bids
A useful bid request gives each contractor the same assumptions. Start with roof size, current material, desired material, number of existing layers, visible leaks, damaged decking, chimney or skylight details, gutter tie-ins, ventilation concerns, and whether insurance is involved. Ask each contractor to state whether the quote includes permit handling, inspection scheduling, disposal, starter strip, ridge cap, flashing, drip edge, underlayment, ice-and-water or equivalent membrane, ventilation, and warranty registration.
Also ask how change orders are priced. Decking replacement is the common swing item because the damaged area is often unknown until tear-off. Some bids include a small allowance; others bill per sheet. Access and staging can matter too: steep lots, multi-story homes, tight driveways, protected landscaping, and long debris-carry distances can increase crew time. The calculator cannot see those property-level details, so it uses the state model as the quote-review baseline and leaves inspection-specific items for contractor proposals.
Finally, compare quotes by system rather than headline price. A complete roofing system includes shingle or panel material, ventilation, underlayment, flashing, fasteners, edge metal, labor, disposal, permit handling, and warranty documentation. If two bids differ sharply, the missing scope is usually easier to find in those categories than in the total alone.
State-specific note
New Jersey roofing cost is state-specific because labor markets, climate exposure, permit practice, and common materials differ by location. New Jersey DCA is the official representative jurisdiction used for permit context. New Jersey DCA is used as an official representative local permitting example for New Jersey. The model treats re-roof permit cost and review burden as local authority specific rather than a statewide guarantee. Inspection stages can include dry-in, deck/sheathing, flashing, in-progress, or final inspections depending on New Jersey DCA scope and local building department practice. Roofing permit rules are controlled by the local building department in New Jersey; check the city or county building authority before starting work. Climate drivers in the model include coastal wind, dense permitting markets, high labor costs and are treated as high risk. The model uses those factors to adjust a common asphalt-shingle baseline rather than claiming a single statewide permit rule.
How we calculate this
PennyCheck calculates New Jersey roof replacement cost by multiplying roof size by a state-adjusted replacement cost per square foot, then applying labor, material, permit/code, climate-risk, tear-off, pitch, and material-tier multipliers. Labor uses BLS OEWS May 2025 State Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates for roofers, occupation 47-2181, with a mean hourly wage of $31.50. Material context uses FRED/BLS Asphalt Shingle and Coating Materials PPI, latest period 2026-04, index value 337.2. Permit and inspection context uses New Jersey DCA building permit guidance, and climate context uses NOAA/NCEI Billion-Dollar Disasters New Jersey Summary. The formula keeps hidden structural damage, decking replacement beyond the selected tear-off scope, financing, insurance deductibles, and contractor warranty upgrades outside the baseline because those depend on inspection findings and quote terms.
Key takeaways
- New Jersey BLS roofer mean hourly wage: $31.50.
- New Jersey primary roof-cost drivers: New Jersey coastal wind exposure affects roof material selection, inspection demand, or contractor scheduling., New Jersey dense permitting markets exposure affects roof material selection, inspection demand, or contractor scheduling., New Jersey high labor costs exposure affects roof material selection, inspection demand, or contractor scheduling..
- Permit treatment is local_authority_specific; requirements vary by local building department.
- Climate risk level in the model: high.
- Default 1,800 square-foot roof midpoint: $21,957.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do roof replacements need permits in New Jersey?
What drives roofing cost in New Jersey?
What roof materials are common in New Jersey?
How does roof size change the New Jersey estimate?
What is excluded from this New Jersey roofing estimate?
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</script>Data sources
- BLS OEWS May 2025 State Occupational Employment and Wage EstimatesVerified 2026-06-05
- FRED/BLS Asphalt Shingle and Coating Materials PPIVerified 2026-06-05
- New Jersey DCA building permit guidanceVerified 2026-06-05
- NOAA/NCEI Billion-Dollar Disasters New Jersey SummaryVerified 2026-06-05