Roofing in Revere, MA
Revere is an ocean town. It's home to America's oldest public beach, and its roofs live with something most of our service area doesn't: the full force of the Atlantic. Wind comes off the water harder here, salt rides in on the air, and nor'easters that inland towns merely weather can genuinely punish a coastal roof. The Mighty Dog Roofing of North Boston team works Revere constantly, and we roof it the way a shoreline city needs to be roofed.
It's also a city in motion. Along Revere Beach and around Wonderland, a wave of new apartment buildings has gone up over the past decade and more are rising now, while the neighborhoods behind the boulevard hold mid-century capes and ranches, older beach cottages, and triple-deckers. Ownership here splits roughly down the middle — about half the city's households own their homes and half rent — so we work for longtime homeowners and property owners alike. Below is how we think about roofing in this specific city, and what we'd want you to know before you spend a dollar.
Note: We serve Revere as part of our North Boston service area. We don't keep a separate Revere storefront — but Revere is a short drive, and we're in its neighborhoods constantly.
Neighborhoods and ZIP codes we serve in Revere
Revere runs on a single ZIP code — 02151 — and we cover the whole city, waterfront to west side:
- Revere Beach and Waterfront Square (the Wonderland district)
- Beachmont — the “capital of Revere,” right on the water
- Point of Pines — the peninsula at the north end
- Oak Island and Riverside
- Shirley Avenue and the beach neighborhoods
- West Revere and Franklin Park
- Northgate and the Bell Circle area
- The Suffolk Downs redevelopment area along the Boston line
Wherever your roof is in the city — a beachfront condo, a cape in West Revere, or a three-decker off Broadway — give us the address and we'll come look.
Built for the coast: wind and salt air
This is the section that matters most in Revere, because the ocean changes what a roof has to survive.
Wind. Oceanfront and near-oceanfront roofs face the strongest, most sustained winds in the region. Revere sits in one of the higher wind-design zones around Boston, and its coastal history is a list of storms that proved it — the Blizzard of 1978 with its 66 mph gusts and record surge, the January 2018 “bomb cyclone,” and the Blizzard of 2026, one of the snowiest Boston-area seasons in years. Gusts that an inland roof shrugs off will find the edge of a tab or a lifted shingle here and start peeling. Old 3-tab shingles are the first to fail — wind gets under a tab and tears whole shingles off in full pieces. The hip and ridge cap shingles are just as vulnerable: they sit right on the peaks and edges, fully in the wind, so high winds lift and blow them off too — which opens up the ridge, one of the worst places for a roof to start leaking. The fix is a modern laminate/architectural shingle rated for high winds, paired with proper high-wind ridge caps and installed the way the coast demands: enhanced nailing patterns, firmly sealed starter courses at the eaves and rakes, secure hip and ridge, and edge metal fastened tight against uplift. On the coast, how the roof is installed matters as much as what's on it.
Salt air. The ocean doesn't just bring wind — it brings salt. Salt spray and humid coastal air accelerate corrosion on every metal part of a roof: flashing, drip edge, fasteners, gutters, and vent hoods. On a coastal roof these metal details often wear out before the shingle field does, which is why we favor corrosion-resistant materials and pay closer attention to the flashing and fasteners than an inland job would ever require. A shingle roof is only as watertight as the metal tying it to the walls, chimneys, and valleys — and near the water, that metal is under constant attack.
Low-lying exposure. Parts of Revere — Point of Pines, low stretches of Beachmont and Oak Island — sit low and flood during big coastal storms. Roofing isn't flood protection, but coastal exposure is a good reason to keep the whole top of the building tight: sound flashing, clear drainage, and no weak seams for wind-driven rain to exploit.
A shorefront that's still being built
Revere Beach and Waterfront Square make up one of the fastest-growing neighborhoods in Greater Boston. A transformation that's been underway for over a decade is still going: new apartment buildings around the Wonderland station, a beachfront hotel, and the 161-acre Suffolk Downs redevelopment on the Boston line, where major work is now underway.
Nearly all of that new construction wears a flat, low-slope membrane roof — frequently topped with rooftop pools, decks, and amenity terraces — and every one of those roofs faces the harshest wind-and-salt exposure in the city. That's exactly the kind of low-slope membrane and roof-deck work we do on the commercial and multifamily side. And the boom cuts both ways: for all the new towers, most of Revere is still established neighborhoods of older homes whose roofs need the same coastal-grade attention. We work both ends of that — the brand-new flat roof and the forty-year-old cape two streets back.
Revere's homes: cottages, capes, and the older stock
Behind the beach, Revere's housing is a mix. There are converted summer cottages near the water, mid-century capes and ranches, raised ranches and garrisons, New Englanders and Victorians, and the two- and three-family homes common across the North Shore. Much of it went up in the mid-20th century, newer on average than neighboring Chelsea or Somerville but plenty old enough that decking, flashing, and ventilation deserve a real look before any work is quoted. Old framing isn't always square, and decades of coastal weather leave their mark. We plan for that instead of being surprised by it.
A note on older and historic homes. Revere isn't defined by strict local historic districts the way some neighboring cities are, but it does have a Historical Commission, and rules can change. If your home is one of the older or historically notable ones, it's worth a quick check with the city before visible exterior work — and we'll help you figure out whether any review applies.
About slate. A few of Revere's oldest homes still wear original slate. We want to be straight with you: slate is rare here, and it is not our specialty. Genuine slate work — matching salvaged tiles, replacing a slate field, or rebuilding ornamental detailing — is a craft of its own. If your roof is slate and slate is the right answer, we'll tell you so and point you toward a dedicated slate specialist rather than pretend it's in our wheelhouse. Where it makes sense, we're glad to talk through asphalt as a practical alternative — but that's a conversation, not a default.
Asphalt shingle roofs, installed as a complete system
Most Revere homes are best served by a quality asphalt shingle roof — and near the coast, by one built and installed to stand up to wind. We're an Owens Corning Platinum Preferred Contractor, which is the top tier of their contractor network and the reason we can install — and stand behind — the complete Owens Corning roofing system rather than a pile of loose parts.
That distinction matters even more on the shore. A roof doesn't fail because the shingles were cheap; it usually fails at the edges, the valleys, and the penetrations — the exact places wind and salt go to work first. Installing the full system means every layer is doing its job:
- Synthetic underlayment across the deck as a secondary water barrier
- Leak barriers (ice-and-water membrane) at the eaves and in the valleys — where wind-driven rain and ice dams push water backward
- Starter shingles sealed along the eaves and rakes so coastal wind can't get under the first course
- Shingles — modern laminate/architectural shingles rated for high winds, which lie flat and hold their line
- Hip and ridge caps finished to match and fastened against uplift
- Ventilation — balanced intake and exhaust so the attic breathes, which keeps the roof from cooking itself from below and feeding ice dams from above
Installed as a system, the components are also what make the manufacturer warranty coverage meaningful. Installed piecemeal, you've just got shingles.
Flat and low-slope roofing (EPDM and modified bitumen)
Flat roofs are a bigger part of the picture in Revere than in most towns — on the multifamily homes with a flat rubber roof over a porch or addition, and across the growing stock of new low-slope buildings along the beach.
A flat rubber (EPDM) roof is simpler in principle and less forgiving in practice, because water doesn't run off; it sits and waits for a weak point. On the coast, wind adds a second front: uplift pulls at the membrane's edges and the parapet flashing that keeps a flat roof watertight. The usual culprits:
- Seams and flashing. Where the rubber laps itself or meets a wall, a chimney, or a railing post is where most flat roofs let go first — and coastal wind works those edges hard.
- Ponding. Standing water that never drains accelerates aging and finds the smallest gap — a real risk on Revere's low-lying blocks.
- Parapets, edges, and drains. On a full flat roof, secure edge metal and clear scuppers or drains are what keep wind and water from getting under the membrane. Salt-corroded fasteners and aged flashing are common failure points here.
- Foot traffic and roof decks. If the flat roof doubles as a deck — increasingly common on Revere's new beachfront buildings — every footstep, planter, and dragged chair works against the membrane.
- Animals. A warm attic under a rubber roof is exactly what a raccoon looks for, and they'll claw at a membrane to get in — worth checking for as part of a flat-roof inspection, though on the coast it's a smaller concern than wind and salt.
Modified bitumen: our two-ply low-slope system
Beyond EPDM, we also install a two-ply modified bitumen system on low-slope roofs — a TopShield base ply (PlyBase) covered with a granulated cap sheet. It goes down as a self-adhered, peel-and-stick membrane, so there's no torch, kettle, or hot asphalt anywhere near your house — a cleaner, lower-risk install. The base ply seals to the deck and the cap sheet takes the weather and the sun, giving you a tough, two-layer membrane for porches, additions, and larger low-slope sections alike. Whether EPDM rubber or a modified-bitumen cap sheet is the better fit depends on the roof, and we'll walk you through the choice.
Whether the flat roof is your whole roof or just the porch out back, we inspect, repair, and fully replace flat and low-slope roofs — and we'll look at yours as part of any visit to your property.
Winter, snow, and ice dams
The coast gets the wind; the whole city gets the winter.
Ice dams. When snow on an upper roof melts, runs down to the cold eave, and refreezes, it builds a dam of ice that forces meltwater backward — up and under the shingles, where it finds the seams and drips into the rooms below. The leak shows up at the edge of the roof and along the gutters, which is exactly why eave leak barriers matter so much. The Blizzard of 2026 and the freeze-thaw that came with it made textbook ice-dam conditions across Greater Boston.
Snow load. Heavy, wet snow stacked on an aging or under-ventilated roof is a stress test, and flat roofs feel it most: the snow doesn't slide off, it sits, and meltwater ponds where the membrane is weakest.
Freeze-thaw. The daily cycle of melting and refreezing works open every small gap it can find — around flashing, in aging sealant, at the edges of a flat roof — a little more each year. On the coast, salt-weakened metal gives way faster.
Our roofing services in Revere
- Roof repair and leak investigation — leaks, storm and wind damage, failed flashing, missing shingles, problem valleys, and nail pops. When the source of a leak isn't obvious, we track it down before we patch it — figuring out where the water actually gets in is often the hard part.
- Roof replacement — full tear-off and a complete Owens Corning system, built for coastal wind and sized for your home.
- Chimney flashing repair — the flashing and step flashing where a masonry chimney meets the roof is one of the most common leak points on older homes. We repair and reseal these details to stop the leaks that start there.
- Roof inspection — free, drone-assisted, with a written report and photos you keep, whether or not you hire us.
- Storm and emergency response — fast tarping and stabilization after wind, ice, or a fallen branch.
- Roof snow clearing — after heavy snowfall, we can remove built-up snow from the roof to reduce the load it places on the structure.
- Flat and low-slope EPDM — repair and full replacement, from porch and deck roofs to full membrane roofs, including parapet flashing, edge metal, and drainage.
- Beyond the roof — siding, replacement windows, gutters, and skylights (installation, replacement, and leak repair), so the whole exterior works together and the water goes where it should.
Commercial and industrial roofing
Revere's shorefront building boom and its commercial corridors mean a lot of flat, low-slope roofing — and we handle commercial and industrial roofs across the North Boston area:
- Membrane roof systems — EPDM and other commercial membrane systems suited to low-slope commercial and multifamily roofs.
- Drainage and ponding fixes — correcting the standing-water problems that quietly destroy flat roofs, a particular concern on Revere's low-lying sites.
- Inspections and maintenance programs — scheduled care that catches small failures before they become interior damage and downtime.
- Emergency response — rapid stabilization to protect the building and what's inside it.
Optional extended warranty (commercial only). On a full commercial EPDM installation, the property owner can optionally add an RPI full-system warranty — 40 years on the EPDM membrane and 20 years on labor and accessories. It's an add-on, entirely the owner's call, and we'll lay out the cost and terms so you can decide. Please note this warranty applies to commercial roofs only — it is not available on one-family residential flat roofs.
Siding Replacement and Repair Services
Looking to make a statement and be the envy of your neighbors? Refresh the look of your home with new siding. Increasing your home's curb appeal will only help increase its resale value, an investment worth making. Protect your home from the weather elements while improving your insulation and reducing roof maintenance issues for the longevity of your exterior.
Types of Siding
- James Hardie fiber cement
- Vinyl
- Red cedar shakes and shingles
- Red cedar clapboards
Window Installation Services
Your windows can be the statement of your exterior's beauty. High-efficiency new and replacement windows with industry-leading warranties can add function, comfortability, and energy savings to your home, increasing the resale value. Walking into a bright space with many windows will give your family and guests a comfortable and cheery environment to enjoy. Be sure to keep the energy rating documentation for your new windows to share with prospective buyers. Mighty Dog professionals will consult with you for the best options for your Revere Massachusetts home. Let us do the homework for you.
Types of Windows
- Single Hung
- Double Hung
- Slider
- Picture
- Patio Door
- Casement
Gutter Installation Services
Gutters can be mostly functional or the envy of your neighbors. Either way, Mighty Dog Roofing is the company you can trust with your gutter repair & installation needs. We can install the right type of gutter with comprehensive warranty coverage to meet your needs, from seamless aluminum gutters with baked-on enamel finish to custom copper gutters and downspouts. It is your choice, but our Mighty Dog Pledge gives you peace of mind by making sure we safely and effectively move rainwater from your Revere Massachusetts home's exterior.
We will accurately assess your gutter project needs and the current system for any repairs or updates that might be warranted. Our expert project managers will review the bigger picture around the perimeter of your home, which could lead to potential issues such as the trees surrounding your home and any drainage issues we see around your foundation.
Types of Gutters
- Aluminum Seamless Gutters
- Copper Gutters
Gutter guard and flashing installation
Revere's coastal storms bring heavy, wind-driven rain, and gutters only protect the house if they can move that water fast. When gutters clog and overflow, water spills over the back edge onto the fascia and runs down the siding — and in salt air, that constant moisture is exactly what rots wood and corrodes metal. Gutter guards keep debris out and the gutters flowing, so a downpour drains instead of backing up. We can add them to your existing gutters or install them as part of a new gutter system.
We also install gutter flashing — aluminum flashing set behind the drip edge and over the gutter, so runoff is carried over the back edge and into the gutter instead of slipping behind it. That's what keeps the wooden fascia and soffit boards from staying wet and rotting out — a problem that only accelerates in Revere's damp, salty coastal air when that flashing is missing or has failed.
From first call to final inspection
We keep the process the same every time so there are no surprises:
- Inspect. We come out and look at the whole roof — including the flat sections, flashing, and penetrations — and document what we find.
- Measure. We take precise measurements so the estimate reflects your actual roof, not a guess.
- Estimate, in writing. We provide a complete written estimate and review it with you. Nothing moves forward until you've signed off on it.
- Permits. We apply for the required Revere building permits, including the coastal wind-design requirements that apply near the shore.
- Schedule. We set a date that works around the weather and your life.
- Install. Our crew installs the complete system, protects your property, and cleans up the site.
- Final walkthrough and city inspection. We walk the finished roof with you and file for the city's final inspection so the job is closed out properly.
Protecting your property during a roof replacement
A roof replacement is a messy job, and how a crew handles that says a lot about them. Before we start, we take steps to protect the area around your house and shield your deck, patio furniture, and AC unit from falling debris. When the work is done, we remove the debris and run a magnetic sweep across your driveway, lawn, and walkways to pick up stray roofing nails.
Why Revere chooses us
- We know the coast. Wind uplift, salt-air corrosion, and the way an oceanfront roof has to be detailed — this is what sets a Revere roof apart, and it's how we build them.
- We work the whole city. New low-slope membrane roofs along the beach and forty-year-old capes in West Revere alike.
- Owens Corning Platinum Preferred Contractor — the top tier of Owens Corning's network, installing the complete system with high-wind-rated shingles.
- Licensed and insured, with the documentation to prove it before we set foot on your roof.
- Free, no-pressure inspections — drone-assisted, with a written report and photos you keep.
- The Mighty Watchdog Warranty standing behind our work.
- Financing available, so a sudden roof problem doesn't have to become a financial emergency.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a new roof cost in Revere?
There's no honest flat number, because price follows the roof: its size and pitch, how many layers have to come off, the condition of the decking underneath, the number of valleys and penetrations, and whether there's a flat section in the mix. A coastal roof may also call for higher-wind-rated materials and extra attention to flashing, which factors in. What we can tell you is that our estimate is all-in, with no surprises tacked on later. Our estimate includes: all the materials needed to complete the project, labor, all permits, dumpster and disposal to the landfill. The right way to get a real figure is a free inspection and a written estimate — and we'd rather quote your actual roof than throw out a number that changes the day we get up there.
Are you licensed and insured?
Yes. Mighty Dog Roofing of North Boston is fully licensed and insured — Massachusetts licensing, general liability coverage, and workers' compensation.
What warranty do you offer?
Your roof is covered on two levels. The materials carry the manufacturer's warranty from Owens Corning, whose complete system we're certified to install as a Platinum Preferred Contractor. On top of that, our own Mighty Watchdog Warranty covers our workmanship for five years: if a leak develops because of how the roof was installed, we come back and make it right — labor, materials, and disposal all included, at no cost to you. Put simply, the manufacturer stands behind the shingles, and we stand behind the installation.
Do you offer financing?
Yes. A roof usually isn't a planned purchase — it's something that goes wrong at an inconvenient time — so we offer financing to keep a sudden roof problem from becoming a financial emergency. We'll walk you through the options so you can spread the cost out and still get the work done when it needs doing.
How do I know if I need a new roof?
A few signs are worth watching for. From the ground, you might see shingles that are curling, buckling, or cracked, bald patches where the protective granules have worn away, or shingles gone missing after a storm. In the attic, daylight coming through the boards or damp, stained spots after rain point to a roof letting water in. And a roof that leaks in more than one place, or that you're patching again and again, is usually telling you it's near the end. Age matters too — once an asphalt roof is past about twenty years, it's worth a look. The honest way to know is a free inspection: we'll tell you whether you need a new roof or whether yours has years left in it.
Can you replace a roof in winter?
Yes — we work year-round. New England winters don't stop roofs from failing, so they don't stop us from fixing them; asphalt shingles can be installed safely in cold weather when the work is sequenced and detailed correctly. What we won't do is start a job we can't finish cleanly, so we watch the forecast and schedule around snow and storms. If your roof fails in February, you don't have to wait until spring.
Do you replace the flashing and drip edge when you install a new roof?
Yes. Because every roof we replace is a full tear-off down to the deck, we install new flashing and drip edge as part of the new system rather than reusing the old metal. Flashing — around chimneys, walls, valleys, and the roof edges — is where a large share of leaks begin, so putting new shingles over tired flashing would just build a new roof around an old problem. New roof, new flashing and edge metal.
My roof is near the beach — what's different about a coastal roof?
Two things, mainly: wind and salt. Oceanfront roofs face the region's strongest winds, so we install high-wind-rated architectural shingles with enhanced nailing, well-sealed starter courses, and edge metal fastened tight against uplift — the details that keep wind from getting under the roof and peeling it. And because salt air corrodes metal faster, we pay extra attention to flashing, drip edge, fasteners, and gutters, favoring corrosion-resistant materials. On the coast, a roof's weak points are its edges and its metal, and that's where the care goes.
Does salt air really affect my roof?
Yes — mostly the metal. Salt spray and humid coastal air accelerate corrosion of flashing, drip edge, fasteners, gutters, and vent hoods, and on a coastal roof those metal details often fail before the shingles do. It's a big reason a beachfront roof should be inspected on the details, not just the shingle field, and why the right materials matter more here.
How long does a new roof take to install?
In most cases, a roof replacement takes 1–2 days. The biggest variable is what we find once the old roof comes off: the condition of the sheathing underneath. If the decking is sound, we stay on schedule. If it needs substantial carpentry work — replacing rotted or soft sheathing before the new roof goes on — plan on about a day more. A few other things can stretch the timeline: the size and pitch of the roof, complex rooflines with lots of valleys and dormers, the number of chimneys and skylights to flash and seal around, and weather. We won't start a job we can't finish cleanly, so we watch the forecast and schedule around it.
How long does a roof last?
A quality architectural-shingle roof, properly installed and ventilated, can last decades. But here's the part people miss: the shingle field is rarely what fails first — the penetrations and accessories are, and on the coast that goes double for anything metal. Rubber pipe boots around plumbing vents typically fail in roughly 15–20 years, because that exposed rubber takes direct UV that the shingles are designed to shrug off. Chimney flashing is worth checking once a roof passes 20 years — sooner near salt air. And tree-branch damage and moss or algae growth can shorten the life of any roof regardless of age. The shingles are usually fine long after the little parts need attention.
If your roof is a flat EPDM rubber membrane rather than shingles, a well-installed one generally lasts about 20 to 30 years, with thicker membrane (60-mil versus 45-mil) and less ponding and foot traffic pushing you toward the upper end. And the pattern is the same as on a shingle roof: the field of the rubber usually outlasts the details around it. Seams, the flashing where the membrane meets walls and curbs, and the edge and parapet terminations are what tend to open up first — which coastal wind only accelerates.
How often should I have my roof inspected?
You do not need an annual inspection for most homes — the sensible rhythm is after any major storm, and otherwise about once every two years once the roof passes 15 years old. Revere is one place to lean toward the more frequent end, though: if you're right on the water, big nor'easters and constant salt exposure are hard on a roof, and a look after a major coastal storm is always worth it.
Should I repair my roof or replace it?
If the damage is localized — a few shingles, one bad flashing detail, a single leak — and the roof is otherwise sound and not too old, repair is the smart money. If the roof is near the end of its service life, leaking in more than one place, or you're patching the same areas repeatedly, you're spending good money to delay the inevitable, and replacement usually wins. We'll give you the honest read after we inspect, including when the answer is “this roof has years left in it.”
Can you roof over my existing shingles, or do you tear off?
We tear off. Mighty Dog Roofing of North Boston does not install new shingles over an existing roof — every replacement we do starts with a complete tear-off down to the deck. It's worth knowing where the code sits, because owners often ask: Massachusetts building code (780 CMR) allows a maximum of two layers of asphalt shingles, so if your home currently has a single layer, an overlay would technically be permitted. We don't do it anyway. A layover looks like it saves money on labor and disposal, but that's an illusion — you're not avoiding those costs, just pushing them down the road to whenever the roof finally comes off. And with a few years of inflation and rising material prices in between, that future tear-off almost always costs more than it would today. So there's no real saving. What a layover actually does is hide the deck — so no one can see or fix the rot, soft spots, or salt-worn flashing that Revere's coastal weather tends to leave behind. It also can't include a fresh, properly sealed edge and starter course, which is exactly what a coastal roof needs most.
My roof looks dull or dusty from the street — is that a problem?
It can be. That worn, dusty look is often granule loss — the protective mineral granules washing off the shingle and exposing the asphalt base underneath to direct UV. Once the asphalt is exposed, it dries out and degrades faster, so a roof that merely looks tired can be aging quicker than its years suggest. It's worth a look.
Do I need a permit to replace my roof in Revere?
Yes. A building permit is required to replace a roof in Revere, and we apply for it as part of the job. Near the coast, roofs also fall under higher wind-design requirements, which we build to — and if your home is older or historically notable, we'll flag any extra step early so it doesn't slow you down.
I own a rental property in Revere — how do I stay ahead of roof problems?
About half of Revere's homes are rented, so this comes up a lot. The key is not to wait for a tenant's phone call: have the roof looked at after any major coastal storm, and put it on a periodic schedule once it passes 15 years. We do drone-assisted inspections with a written report you can keep on file for the property, and we can coordinate around tenants. Catching a bad flashing detail early is a modest repair; finding it after months of leaking can mean damage across more than one unit.
Do you work on slate roofs?
Rarely, and it's not our focus. Slate is a specialized craft, and when slate is genuinely the right answer for your home we'll point you to a dedicated slate specialist rather than overreach. If you'd like, we can also talk through whether a quality asphalt system is a sensible alternative for your situation.
Why does my roof leak — and does the season matter?
The season is a clue to the cause. A roof that leaks during heavy rain, any time of year, usually has a flashing, shingle, or seam problem letting water in. A leak that shows up only in winter, without rain, is the classic sign of an ice dam — snow melts on the warmer upper roof, refreezes at the cold eave, and the ice pushes water back up under the shingles. Either way we find the source first, then fix it: for rain leaks that means the failed flashing or shingle detail, and for ice dams the fixes we handle are proper eave leak barriers and better attic ventilation to keep the roof deck cold and even.
Do you do emergency roof repairs?
Yes. After wind, ice, or a fallen branch opens up your roof, we respond quickly to tarp and stabilize it so the damage stops getting worse, then come back to do the permanent repair properly.
Do you do commercial or industrial roofing?
Yes — membrane systems (EPDM and other commercial membranes), drainage and ponding corrections, scheduled inspection and maintenance programs, and emergency response for commercial and industrial buildings in the Revere area, including the low-slope roofs on the beach's newer multifamily buildings.
Which Revere neighborhoods do you serve?
All of them — Revere Beach and Waterfront Square, Beachmont, Point of Pines, Oak Island, Riverside, Shirley Avenue, West Revere, Franklin Park, Northgate, and everywhere in between, across ZIP code 02151.
Book your free inspection
Call the Mighty Dog Roofing of North Boston team at (617) 934-4336, or use the form on this page to schedule a free, no-pressure, drone-assisted inspection with a written report you keep.
Mighty Dog Roofing of North Boston · (617) 934-4336 · Serving Revere and the North Boston area. Licensed and insured.
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"Mighty Dig Roofing did a great job on my roof. Amar, the owner was very professional, courteous and knowledgeable. I would highly recommend Mighty Dog Roofing and would hire again for future projects."David Blessing
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