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Gutters do a quiet job until they stop. Then you notice water sheeting off the roof, streaks down the siding, or a puddle sitting against the foundation after a storm. In St. Louis that water has to go somewhere, and our clay-heavy soil holds it right against the house. Left alone, overflowing gutters push water into the fascia, the basement, and the roof edge where it does the most damage.
A roofer starts by walking the whole run, not just the spot you pointed at. We check the pitch so water actually flows to the downspouts, look for pulled spikes and loose hangers, and find the seams and end caps that have started to leak. We flush the downspouts to see if the clog is up top or buried at the elbow. Then we tell you plainly what needs a repair and what needs replacing, so there are no surprises when the job's done.
St. Louis throws a lot at a gutter. Spring hail and heavy downpours, then months of oak and sycamore leaves in older neighborhoods like Tower Grove, Webster Groves, and Kirkwood. The big trees that make those blocks beautiful also fill gutters fast. Guards cut down how often you're up on a ladder and keep debris from damming up water during the next hard rain.
We handle repairs, resealing, rehanging, and new gutter runs, plus guard installation matched to your roof and the trees around it. We'll also point out fascia or soffit rot if we spot it while we're up there, since that's usually the reason a gutter started sagging in the first place.
When to call us
Water spilling over the front edge during rain instead of running to the downspout
A gutter section pulling away from the fascia or visibly sagging
Streaks or peeling paint on the siding under the gutter line
Pooling water or erosion right against the foundation after a storm
Plants or seedlings sprouting out of the gutter
Downspouts that stay dry while the gutters overflow
Gutter repair & guards jobs we handle in St. Louis
Full walk of every gutter run to check pitch, hangers, and seams
Flushing and clearing downspouts to find where the clog sits
Resealing leaking seams and end caps, rehanging loose sections
New gutter runs sized and pitched for the roof's water load
Guard installation matched to your roofline and nearby trees
A look at the fascia and soffit behind the gutter for hidden rot
Not sure which one you need? Call and describe what's going on. We'll confirm the scope and give you a free, no-obligation quote before any work starts.
Common questions
Will gutter guards mean I never clean my gutters again?
No. Guards keep out leaves, twigs, and roof grit so water flows freely, and they cut cleaning down to once a year or less for most homes. Fine grit and shingle sand can still collect over time, so an occasional check keeps them working. On heavily wooded blocks like Tower Grove or Dogtown they make the biggest difference.
Can you repair one bad section, or do I need all new gutters?
Often a single section is the problem: a pulled hanger, a leaking seam, or a wrong pitch sending water the wrong way. We'll show you what we find and repair what's fixable. We only recommend replacing a full run when the metal is corroded through or the pitch can't be corrected.
My gutter is sagging. Is that just the gutter or something bigger?
A sag usually means the hangers let go or the fascia board behind them has softened from water. We check both. If the wood is rotted, new gutters alone won't hold, so we address the fascia first. Catching it early keeps water out of the roof edge and the walls.
How fast can you come out?
Usually the same day you call, especially if water is running toward your foundation or into the house. We serve the whole metro, from Clayton and University City to Florissant, Chesterfield, and Ferguson.