Replace Sun-Worn Gutters With a System That Lasts
When patching stops paying off, we tear out tired, cracked, or undersized gutters and replace them with a seamless system engineered for how Arizona actually weathers.
Every gutter system reaches a point where repairs cost more than they are worth. Years of desert sun leave aluminum faded and brittle, seams that have been resealed one too many times, and runs that sag no matter how many hangers you add. At that stage, gutter replacement is the smart move — a clean tear-out and a fresh, properly sized system that protects your home for the next couple of decades.
We start by removing the old gutters and downspouts entirely and inspecting the fascia and roof edge underneath. It is common to find hidden damage — rot, rust stains, or fascia that has taken on water because the old system failed. Catching that now, with the gutters off, is far cheaper than discovering it later.
Then we install seamless aluminum formed on site to the exact length of each roofline, sized and pitched for peak monsoon runoff. Many replacements are also a chance to fix the original design's mistakes — adding downspouts where water used to back up, upsizing to 6-inch gutters on large roofs, and re-routing outlets away from walkways and landscaping.
You end up with more than new gutters. You get a system that corrects what went wrong the first time — quieter in a storm, and dramatically less likely to overflow.
What's included
What the desert does to an aging gutter system.
Arizona sun is relentless in a way that most gutter materials were never really built for. Intense year-round UV chalks and fades finishes, while the daily heat cycle — scorching afternoons, cool nights — expands and contracts the metal thousands of times a year. Over a decade or two, that fatigue shows up as cracked seams, warped runs, and fasteners that no longer hold.
Undersized systems are the other common culprit. Homes built or re-gutter with generic 5-inch runs and too few downspouts simply cannot move monsoon volume, so they overflow year after year until the fascia behind them suffers. Replacement is the chance to right-size the whole system, not just refresh it.
If your gutters are pulling away from the house, streaked with rust, cracking at the corners, or overflowing every storm despite cleaning, they are telling you it is time. We will give you a straight assessment — repair if it makes sense, replace when it genuinely does.
Gutter Replacement cost in Arizona.
Replacement combines removal, haul-off, and new seamless installation. Pricing is per linear foot and depends on home height and how much the design needs improving:
| Scope | Typical range |
|---|---|
| Replacement — single story | $7 – $11 / linear ft |
| Replacement — two story | $10 – $15 / linear ft |
| Upgrade to 6-inch oversized system | +$2 – $4 / linear ft |
| Added downspouts & re-routing | $45 – $95 each |
Includes tear-out and haul-off of the old system. We confirm your exact number in a free written estimate after measuring and inspecting the fascia.
From first call to final flow test.
Call & assess
Tell us about your home and roofline. We measure and recommend the right approach.
Written estimate
A clear quote with labor, materials, and timeline — no obligation, no pressure.
The work
We protect your property, form and fit on site, and keep the area tidy throughout.
Flow test & walk
We test drainage, walk the finished system with you, and clean up before we leave.
What homeowners ask us most.
How long do gutters last in Arizona?
Quality seamless aluminum typically lasts 20 years or more, even in the desert, when it is properly installed and occasionally maintained. Cheaper sectional gutters or poorly pitched systems fail much sooner — often within 8 to 12 years — because sun fatigue and standing grit find every weak seam. If yours are approaching two decades or were never installed well, replacement usually makes sense.
Should I repair or just replace?
If damage is isolated to one or two spots, repair is the economical choice. But once you are resealing the same seams repeatedly, adding hangers to runs that keep sagging, or the finish is cracked and faded across the whole system, you are spending good money on a losing battle. At that point a full replacement costs less over time and actually solves the problem. We give you an honest call after inspecting it.
Will you check the fascia behind the old gutters?
Always. Removing the old system is the one time the fascia and roof edge are fully exposed, so we inspect for rot, rust, and water damage that a failing gutter often causes. If we find an issue, we show you and discuss options before installing new gutters over it — because hanging fresh gutters on compromised fascia just hides a growing problem.
Can replacement fix a system that always overflows?
Yes, and that is one of the best reasons to replace rather than patch. Chronic overflow usually means the original gutters were undersized or had too few downspouts for the roof. During replacement we recalculate your roof runoff and right-size everything — often upsizing to 6-inch gutters and adding outlets — so the new system handles monsoon storms the old one never could.
What do you do with the old gutters?
We remove and haul off the entire old system as part of the job, and aluminum is recycled wherever possible. You are not left with a pile of old metal to deal with — cleanup and disposal are included in the written price.