Siding · Mattapoisett, MA

Siding in Mattapoisett, Massachusetts

Compare contractors serving Mattapoisett, Plymouth County — call them directly, or send one request and let qualified pros come to you.

50 contractors serving Mattapoisett — including 3 based in town.

Contractors serving Mattapoisett

Siding in Mattapoisett — what to know

Energy & rebates

Mattapoisett is in Eversource electric territory, so homeowners qualify for the full Mass Save program. Mass Save does not pay for siding, but it subsidizes the insulation and air-sealing you can add behind new cladding at 75% or more for Eversource customers, available after a free Home Energy Assessment.

For Mattapoisett's older village homes and exposed shorefront houses, the re-side is the best moment to tighten the wall. With the cladding off, adding a continuous house-wrap air barrier and insulation cuts the damp Buzzards Bay cold. The 0% Mass Save HEAT Loan can finance qualifying weatherization interest-free. Book the Home Energy Assessment before the siding crew starts, and have your contractor document insulation added so it pairs with the Mass Save rebates.

Permits in Mattapoisett

Massachusetts requires a building permit for re-siding, reviewed by the Mattapoisett building department. The historic village near the harbor may bring Historical Commission review for visible exterior changes, and shorefront properties sit within coastal floodplain and wetland jurisdictions, so re-siding there can involve Conservation Commission review and flood-zone standards. Homes built before 1978 are presumed to contain lead paint, triggering the federal Lead RRP rule and requiring a lead-safe certified firm — common in the old village. Asbestos-cement shingles need licensed abatement. Contractors pull the permit and flag district and flood issues up front.

Typical project cost

Mattapoisett siding costs run somewhat above the South Coast average because of the coastal exposure and historic village stock. A standard vinyl re-side generally runs $12,000–$25,000; insulated foam-backed vinyl runs roughly $16,000–$30,000. Fiber-cement (James Hardie), the durable pick for shorefront homes, lands at $20,000–$45,000 whole-house. Cedar costs more again with maintenance to match. Shorefront homes with flood-zone detailing or difficult access, and old village homes needing sheathing repair, push toward the high end of each band; simple inland layouts come in lower.

About Mattapoisett homes

Mattapoisett is a Plymouth County coastal town of about 6,510 residents across roughly 3,600 housing units, set on Buzzards Bay with a compact historic village near the harbor and shorefront neighborhoods that include a meaningful share of seasonal homes. The median home dates to around 1974, blending old village homes near the wharf with mid-century and later builds along the water and inland.

Proximity to Buzzards Bay shapes siding choices. Shorefront homes face salt air and wind-driven rain, pushing many owners toward fiber-cement or cedar over standard vinyl. The historic village homes near the harbor carry wood clapboard worth restoring. Inland streets away from the spray see more vinyl, where low upkeep and cost win out. The seasonal share means re-sides are often timed around the off-season.

Common questions — Siding in Mattapoisett

What siding holds up to Mattapoisett's Buzzards Bay exposure?
Fiber-cement (such as James Hardie) and cedar resist salt air and wind-driven rain better than standard vinyl on shorefront homes. Pair either with a robust house-wrap, since wind-driven moisture is the main threat near the bay.
Can Mass Save help with my Mattapoisett siding project?
Not the siding itself, but the insulation you add behind it can qualify. Mattapoisett is Eversource territory, so wall insulation and air-sealing during a re-side may earn Mass Save's 75%-plus weatherization rebates after a free Home Energy Assessment.
Do I need extra approvals to re-side a shorefront Mattapoisett home?
Often yes. Shorefront properties sit within coastal floodplain and wetland jurisdictions, so re-siding can involve Conservation Commission review and flood-zone standards. Confirm with the building department before work begins.
Do I need a permit to re-side my house in Mattapoisett?
Yes. The Mattapoisett building department requires a permit for re-siding, and contractors typically pull it as part of the job. Historic village homes may also need Historical Commission review for visible changes.
Is lead paint a concern on Mattapoisett's village homes?
Yes. Homes built before 1978 are presumed to contain lead paint, common in the old harbor village, so siding work disturbing old painted wood triggers the federal RRP rule. Use a lead-safe certified contractor.