How to find a gutter cleaner in New Bedford, MA
Gutters are a $200/year service protecting a $10,000 fascia, $40,000 basement, and $80,000 foundation. The job is not just scooping leaves — it is verifying the whole drainage path moves water 6+ feet away from your house.

What to know before booking gutter cleaning in New Bedford
Over 80% of New Bedford's housing stock is classified as historic. Three-deckers dominate the North and South ends where the textile mills clustered, with Federal and Greek Revival homes downtown from the whaling era and Howland Mill Village mill-worker singles still standing. Many properties have original woodwork, slate roofs, and converted-mill loft inventory.
New Bedford fronts Buzzards Bay, so homes get direct salt spray, coastal humidity, and routine nor'easter exposure. The city has a hurricane barrier protecting downtown, but waterfront neighborhoods see recurring storm-driven flooding.
How we price it
These are the factors that move a quote up or down. Knowing them helps you share the right context upfront so we can quote your specific situation accurately — and so you can compare bids on apples-to-apples scope.
A ranch with eaves you can reach from a 12-ft step ladder is a different job from a colonial where the rear elevation requires a 28-ft extension ladder onto a slope. Two-story adds roughly 25% over single-story for identical footage; three-story or steep terrain doubles base rates. Walkable pitch (under 6:12) lets pros work from the roof — faster and safer than 100 ladder relocations.
Most pros price per linear foot of gutter, plus a per-downspout flush charge ($10–$20 each). A typical 2,000 sqft home has 150–200 lf of gutter and 4–8 downspouts. Underground drain extensions and buried PVC discharge lines add inspection time — and are where many "clean gutters" still flood the basement because the underground line is the actual clog. Mention them upfront so the pro can budget the time.
A property that was cleaned six months ago is a 90-minute job. One that has not been touched in three years has shingle grit, seedlings sprouting in the trough, and standing water that has rusted out the back of K-style sections. First-time customers under heavy tree cover often pay 50–100% more than the recurring rate until they catch up — that is real labor, not a markup.
Pine needles drop year-round and require 3–4 cleanings/year; oak catkins in spring plus leaf retention into January means 3 visits. Open suburban lots with one or two trees can get by with spring + late-fall (2 visits). The right cadence matches your canopy, not a generic calendar — ask the pro to recommend a schedule based on what they see overhead.
Resealing end caps, replacing one or two gutter hangers, reattaching a downspout strap, or pitch adjustment are usually $25–$75 add-ons during a cleaning visit. Doing them then is half the cost of dispatching a return trip. Fascia repair, ice dam remediation, and gutter replacement are separate jobs that warrant their own quote.
Most pros include a blower walk-off of the roof valleys and ridges since they are already up there. Ask whether it is bundled or itemized so you can compare quotes apples-to-apples — neither approach is wrong, but consistency between quotes makes the math easier.
Properties with installed guards still need annual service — micro-mesh accumulates a film of pollen, shingle grit, and pine pollen that water beads off rather than penetrates. Most guard manufacturers require annual servicing to maintain their warranty. Cleaning a guarded gutter takes longer because every panel has to be removed and replaced, which is reflected in the price.
Project sizes we handle
Three scopes that cover almost everything in this trade. We'll help you place your project on the right tier based on the property, what you've already tried, and how long you plan to stay.
Scoop all debris by hand, bag and remove from the property, flush every downspout with a hose, verify water exits at the discharge. Photo documentation before and after. Single-visit, no contract.
- Gutter scoop (plastic, no aluminum scratching)
- Tarps to protect plantings
- Garden hose with jet nozzle for flush
Best for: Recurring spring or fall maintenance on a home with moderate tree cover and no known drainage issues.
Everything in tier 1, plus full visual inspection of fascia, soffit, drip edge, hangers, and gutter pitch. Reseal seams and end caps with tripolymer sealant. Replace failed hangers and reattach loose downspout straps on the spot. Written report with photos of any issues found.
- Geocel 2300 or Sika polyurethane sealant (not silicone — silicone fails in UV)
- Hidden hangers (Spectra or Raytec) to replace nail-on or failed brackets
- Stainless steel hex-head screws for hanger fasteners
Best for: Older homes (20+ years), first visit on a new account, or any property where the gutters have not been formally inspected in 5+ years.
Cleaning + inspection + camera scope of any underground drain extensions, water flow testing at every downspout, splash block or extension installation to move water 6+ ft from foundation, and a written drainage plan. Includes ice dam risk assessment for New England properties — attic insulation R-value check, soffit/ridge vent inspection, recommendation memo.
- Borescope camera for underground PVC drains
- Flex-Drain or Amerimax solid downspout extensions
- Concrete splash blocks at every downspout discharge
- Heated gutter cable (self-regulating, UL-listed) for problem ice dam sections only
Best for: Recurring basement seepage, visible foundation cracks, finished basements, or any home that has had ice dam damage. Pays for itself the first time it prevents a flooded basement.
What we reach for and why
The materials and techniques behind a job that lasts — so you know what's in the quote and why it's there.
5" is the residential default and handles roughly 5,500 sqft of roof area. 6" handles ~7,960 sqft and is the right call for steep pitches, large roof planes feeding one downspout, or properties with regular overflow. Upsizing to 6" adds $1–$2/lf to installation. Most overflow problems are sizing or downspout-count problems, not cleaning problems.
Seamless gutters are roll-formed on-site from a single coil — no seams except at corners and downspout outlets, which is where leaks always start. Sectional gutters (10-ft sections from a big-box store) have a seam every 10 ft, each one a future failure point. Seamless costs $8–$12/lf installed vs. $4–$8/lf sectional but the lifetime cost is far lower.
IRC R905.2.8.5 requires drip edge at all roof eaves and rakes — a metal flashing under the shingles and over the gutter that prevents wind-driven rain from running back behind the gutter and rotting the fascia. Many older RI/MA homes were built without it. A gutter apron is the wider version that drops further into the gutter trough; it is the better detail when retrofitting.
Stainless steel micro-mesh on an aluminum or PVC frame, screwed into the front lip of the gutter. Brands like Raptor, A-M Aluminum, and Frost King run $2–$5/lf in materials and a competent DIYer can install a full home in a weekend. Blocks pine needles, oak catkins, and shingle grit. Like all guard systems, it reduces cleaning frequency rather than eliminating it — plan on an annual brush-off.
Gutter Helmet, English Gutter, and similar use a curved hood that water clings to (surface tension) while debris is pushed off. Effective on pitches between 4:12 and 9:12; can struggle on steep roofs where water shoots over. Installed cost runs $25–$60/lf — a good match for the right roof geometry, but worth observing in a downpour before you commit.
Professionally installed micro-mesh or hood systems at $18–$45/lf installed. You are paying for the product, install, lifetime warranty, and service network — a real package that some homeowners value highly (especially if they will not be climbing ladders again). The DIY alternative is $400–$800 in micro-mesh you install yourself. Both are valid; the right choice depends on your budget, mobility, and how much you value the warranty.
The cheapest, highest-ROI gutter accessory. Water needs to exit at least 6 ft from the foundation to prevent basement seepage and frost heave. Solid 4-ft extensions ($8–$15 each), flip-up models for mowing access ($18–$25), or buried 4" SDR-35 PVC to daylight ($8–$15/lf installed). Splash blocks under each discharge to prevent erosion ($6–$15 each).
What to watch for
A short list of the things that actually matter for safety, code, and your peace of mind. Worth confirming with any pro before you sign — we expect these questions and we're happy you ask.
What else might come up
Most projects touch more than one trade. Here's where this one usually overlaps with others — so you can plan ahead instead of scrambling.
Gutters live on the fascia, which lives on the roof. A failing roof edge is the actual problem; cleaning the gutter is treating a symptom. Coordinate gutter replacement with roof work — adding drip edge during reroof is $1–$3/lf, retrofitting later is $5–$8/lf.
Ice dams are caused by heat escaping into the attic, melting snow on the roof, which refreezes at the cold eave. The three-part fix is clean gutters + R-49 attic insulation + soffit/ridge venting. Heated gutter cables can solve the immediate ice dam, but the durable fix is attic insulation and ventilation — if you can do both, do both.
Roof runoff is the #1 contributor to basement water issues. Before you commit to $4,000–$15,000 of interior drainage or exterior waterproofing, verify your gutters are sized, clean, and discharging at least 6 ft from the foundation. The upstream fix is often the cheaper and more durable one.
Standing water in clogged gutters breeds mosquitoes; wet fascia and soffit attract carpenter ants and termites. Most chronic perimeter pest problems are downstream of a moisture problem — and that moisture problem is often the gutter.
Once fascia rots, gutter hangers lose their grip and the entire run can pull off in a winter storm. Catch it early: a $300 fascia repair beats a $2,500 emergency replacement after the gutter comes down with a foot of ice in it.
A typical 150 lf single-story home runs $150–$200 per visit; a 200 lf two-story runs $250–$400. Gutter guard installation is a separate spend ($8–$12/lf micro-mesh DIY material, $18–$45/lf for full-service systems like LeafFilter or Gutter Helmet). New seamless aluminum gutter replacement is $8–$15/lf installed.
Story height drives 80% of the price spread — two-story work costs roughly 25% more than single-story for the same footage because of ladder repositioning and required fall protection. Tree cover sets your frequency (2x/yr suburban, 3–4x/yr under pines), and pitch above 8:12 adds another premium.
See what drives priceWhat we show up with
The equipment we bring is part of what separates a real job from a shortcut. Here's what to expect on a typical visit.
Conforms to the K-style trough shape and removes wet debris without scratching aluminum or damaging the front lip. Metal scoops gouge the inside of the gutter and create rust starting points.
Bolts to the top of an extension ladder and braces against the roof above the gutter. Keeps the ladder off the gutter itself (which crushes the lip) and provides lateral stability while working.
Long curved tube extension that lets the operator stand on the ground and blow dry leaves out of a single-story gutter. Useless for wet debris — it just makes a mess. Good for the dry-leaf cleanup after a major drop.
Curved aluminum tube extensions on a wet/dry vac let you suck out compacted wet leaves and standing water from the ground. Slower than scooping from a ladder but eliminates ladder time on single-story homes.
OSHA-compliant fall protection for work above 6 ft. Roof anchor screws into a rafter, harness clips to a self-retracting lanyard. Standard equipment on any two-story or steep-pitch work — confirm your pro has it on the truck.
Snaked down underground drain extensions and buried PVC to locate clogs, collapses, or root intrusion. The diagnostic tool that confirms whether an underground line is the actual source of a recurring drainage issue.
Standard garden hose for flushing downspouts and water-testing pitch. Pressure washers lift shingle granules, blow out gutter sealant, and force water under shingles — never appropriate for gutter work.
How a job goes
Site walkaround & access setup
Walk the perimeter, identify ladder placement, note plantings to tarp, locate every downspout including underground discharges. Set up roof anchors if required by height. Lay tarps under work zones to catch wet debris and protect landscape.
What you see: A pro circling your house with a clipboard or phone before any ladder goes up — scoping the job, not climbing immediately on arrival.
Hand-scoop debris
Plastic scoop and gloves, working section by section. Wet leaves, shingle grit, and seedlings into a bag or bucket. Debris is collected and removed from the property — not blown onto the lawn or left in piles on the driveway.
What you see: Steady, methodical work, ladder repositioned every 8–10 ft. Debris going into bags and out to the truck.
Downspout flush & water test
Hose run into the top of every downspout until water exits clear at the discharge. If a downspout is blocked, plumber's snake or disassembly at the elbow to clear. Walk-test water flow across each trough section to verify pitch — water should move toward the downspout, not pool.
What you see: Water running at every downspout discharge, the pro watching the flow and confirming it moves away from the foundation.
Visual inspection
Photograph fascia condition, drip edge presence, hanger spacing and security, sealant condition at end caps and seams. Flag rotted fascia, loose downspout straps, separation at the back of the gutter, or any drainage concern. No price quoted yet — just documented.
What you see: A pro taking photos and pointing things out so you can decide what to address now versus later.
Minor on-the-spot repairs
Reseal end caps with tripolymer sealant, replace failed hangers, reattach loose downspout straps, install or reposition splash blocks. Add-on charge is itemized — typically $25–$75 per repair. Major items (fascia replacement, gutter replacement, drip edge retrofit) are quoted separately for a return visit so you can think them through.
What you see: A small tool bag at the base of the ladder — sealant gun, screws, spare hangers — ready to handle the small stuff before it grows.
Cleanup & written report
All debris bagged and removed from the property. Tarps picked up, plantings checked for damage. Written summary with before/after photos delivered by email same day: condition of each elevation, any repairs made, any concerns flagged, recommended next service date based on tree cover.
What you see: A clean driveway and a same-day email with photos — the documentation that lets you track condition over time.
- Number of stories and approximate linear footage (or your home's footprint — pros can estimate from public assessor data)
- When the gutters were last cleaned, and roughly how heavy the debris will be
- Number of downspouts and whether any connect to underground drains or buried PVC
- Photo of any visible problem areas — staining, sagging, separation from fascia, plants growing in the trough
- Tree cover description — pines, oaks, mixed deciduous, or open lot
- Whether you have ever had a basement water issue, ice dam, or fascia rot
- Age of the gutters (original to the house? replaced when?)
- Whether you have gutter guards installed, and what brand if known
- Access notes — gates, parking, dogs, fragile plantings near the foundation
- Water staining on the soffit or fascia under the gutter
- A downspout that has come loose at the elbow or is dumping at the foundation
- Recurring basement moisture, especially after heavy rain
- Icicles longer than 6" or visible ice damming behind the gutter in winter
- Birds nesting in the gutter or downspout
Permits, timing, and what's local to New Bedford
Permits & regulations
The New Bedford Department of Inspectional Services issues all building permits. Properties in the local Bedford-Landing Waterfront Historic District require a Certificate of Appropriateness from the Historical Commission before any permit issues, and demolition of structures older than 75 years typically triggers Historical Commission review citywide.
Permit authority: New Bedford Department of Inspectional Services (https://www.newbedford-ma.gov/inspectional-services/)
What's local to New Bedford
Salt-air corrosion and aging mill-era plumbing/electrical drive most service calls — service-life expectations should be set accordingly.
Recent work in New Bedford
Before & After
Downspout Replacement Project: Before → After
Gutter Replacement, Fascia Repair, and Drainage Trenching: Before → After


What homeowners ask us
Other services we handle in New Bedford
Where else we serve
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