Roofing · Groveland, MA

Roofing in Groveland, Massachusetts

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50 contractors serving Groveland — including 1 based in town.

Contractors serving Groveland

Roofing in Groveland — what to know

Insurance & rebates

On a Groveland roof, winter weather and insurance are the controlling cost factors. The cool northern Merrimack Valley climate produces ice dams along eaves and over older additions, and nor'easters and ice storms generate the most common wind- and storm-damage claims. Massachusetts carriers commonly decline to renew on roofs past roughly 20 years without an inspection, and a worn roof can force a replacement to keep coverage. Photograph storm damage with the date and get a roofer's written assessment before filing.

Groveland buys electricity from the Groveland Electric Light Department, a municipal light plant, so the household is not eligible for Mass Save. That's an important catch: the attic insulation and air-sealing that prevents ice dams is subsidized through Mass Save in most towns, but Groveland residents pay full price. Plan that ice-dam-prevention work into the re-roof budget rather than expecting a rebate.

Permits in Groveland

Groveland requires a building permit for roof replacement through the town Building Department, and Massachusetts code requires an ice-and-water shield at the eaves and valleys to resist ice dams. Most asphalt jobs are full tear-offs to the deck, which lets the roofer inspect and replace any rotted sheathing before re-roofing — common on the town's older homes and additions. Owners of antique homes near the center should ask whether any local historic considerations apply before changing roof material or profile. Reputable roofers pull the permit and schedule the required inspections.

Typical project cost

Roofing costs in Groveland run near the Merrimack Valley suburban average, modestly below the Boston ring. A full asphalt-shingle tear-off and replacement generally runs $8,000–$23,000 depending on size, pitch, and layers removed; a flat or low-slope EPDM rubber section runs about $7,000–$16,000. Standing-seam metal runs roughly $20,000–$44,000. Steep, multi-gable older roofs with dormers and additions land toward the upper end of the asphalt range because of the extra flashing and labor.

About Groveland homes

Groveland is an Essex County town of about 6,700 across roughly 2,650 housing units, set along the Merrimack River near Haverhill and Georgetown. The median home age sits near 58 years, with a mix of older farmhouses and riverside homes near the center and a substantial share of post-war and later single-family neighborhoods spreading outward.

That blend shapes the roofing here. Older homes carry steeper, more complex roofs with dormers and additions, while the mid-century and newer subdivisions run conventional asphalt-shingle layouts. Groveland sits in the northern Merrimack Valley near the New Hampshire line, catching full New England winters, so heavy snow load, freeze-thaw cycling, and shaded slopes that hold ice push a steady stream of ice-dam and flashing repairs.

Common questions — Roofing in Groveland

Can I get a Mass Save rebate for roofing work in Groveland?
No on both counts. Mass Save never funds roofing, and Groveland is served by the Groveland Electric Light Department, a municipal light plant, so the household isn't Mass Save eligible at all — including the insulation and air-sealing that prevents ice dams elsewhere.
Why does my Groveland roof keep getting ice dams?
The cool northern Merrimack Valley climate brings heavy snow and freeze-thaw cycles, and ice dams form when attic heat melts snow that refreezes at cold eaves. Better attic insulation usually solves it, but since Groveland isn't Mass Save eligible, you'll pay full price for that work.
Do I need a permit to replace my roof in Groveland?
Yes. The Groveland Building Department requires a permit, and the work must include ice-and-water shield at the eaves and valleys under Massachusetts code. Most roofers pull the permit and schedule inspections as part of the project.
Will my insurer drop me for an old roof in Groveland?
It's common. Many Massachusetts carriers won't renew on a roof past about 20 years without an inspection, and some require replacement. Replacing an aging roof keeps coverage in place and can trim your premium.
A nor'easter damaged my roof — what should I do first?
Photograph the damage with the date, then get a Groveland-area roofer's written assessment before filing a claim. Wind and ice-storm damage are the most common roofing claims in the northern Merrimack Valley.