Soffit, Fascia & Gutter Repair in White Plains
White Plains' role as Westchester's commercial and administrative center brings a residential population that spans the city's older residential streets — Mamaroneck Avenue corridor, Battle Hill, Highlands — and the newer development toward the north and east. The older residential areas west of downtown have housing from the 1920s through the 1940s where wood soffit and fascia has been maintained through paint cycles but is now at the stage where paint no longer compensates for the underlying moisture infiltration that decades of freeze-thaw cycling has worked through the board.
White Plains experiences enough winter cold for ice dam formation on most years — not at the intensity of the lake-effect cities upstate, but enough to drive meltwater behind a fascia board that has any open joint. The most reliable inspection timing in White Plains is April to June, before summer rain season and before fall's first freeze. That window gives you both the post-winter damage picture and enough lead time to schedule work before the next heating season.
What We Fix in White Plains
🏠 Soffit Repair & Replacement Loose or missing panels, rotted nailing channels, vented panel upgrades, gap sealing.
🪵 Fascia Board Repair & Capping Rotted board replacement, aluminum fascia wrap to prevent future moisture damage.
🌧️ Gutter Repair & Replacement Re-hang, reseal, section replacement, downspout redirection, full replacement.
🧊 Ice Dam Damage Repair Eave damage from freeze-thaw cycling, fascia infiltration, soffit moisture remediation.
🛡️ Gutter Guards Micro-mesh guard installation to reduce cleaning frequency and protect fascia.
🔍 Free Inspection Ladder-level assessment of soffit, fascia, and gutter condition. No charge, no obligation.
Common Questions from White Plains Homeowners
How serious is water staining near an exterior wall ceiling?
Very — and the stain often appears weeks after the event that caused it. Water entering through the eave from a failing soffit or ice dam infiltration travels along rafter framing before pooling at a low point on the ceiling. By the time the stain is visible, the entry point may have been active for an entire winter season. The inspection starts at the roofline and traces back to the source.
Can soffit and fascia work be done in winter?
In New York, winter repairs are possible in mild windows but most contractors prefer above-freezing temperatures for proper material setting and safe ladder work. Spring (March–May) is the ideal window — winter damage is fully visible, work schedules are still available, and the repair is completed before summer humidity season starts. Emergency repairs in winter are handled case-by-case.
How much does aluminum fascia wrap cost?
Aluminum fascia capping (wrapping existing wood fascia with aluminum coil stock) typically adds $8–$18 per linear foot in New York. It eliminates the repainting cycle, protects the wood from direct moisture contact, and lasts significantly longer than paint in NY's climate. Most contractors recommend it when replacing fascia sections on homes where the surrounding boards are still structurally sound.
Will animals enter through a damaged soffit in New York?
Yes — squirrels, starlings, and occasional raccoons use any opening in a soffit system as an attic access point. A gap the diameter of a quarter is enough for a gray squirrel. Once inside, animals damage insulation, create secondary entry points, and generate noise that's detectable in the eave area during early morning hours. Any open soffit gap should be treated as an animal exclusion concern, not just a cosmetic issue.
My soffit looks fine from the ground. Do I still need an inspection?
Yes, if you've noticed other warning signs: gutters overflowing, staining near exterior walls, or sounds from the eaves. Soffit and fascia deterioration in New York's climate often looks fine from ground level until a section detaches or an animal entry opens up. The inspection from the ladder costs nothing and takes 20 minutes. It's the only reliable way to know the actual condition.