What I Look For on Charleston Gutter Jobs
I have spent years working on gutters around Charleston, from raised homes near the marsh to older houses tucked under live oaks. I run a small crew, and most of my work comes from homeowners who are tired of water spilling over the same corner every hard rain. Charleston homes have their own habits, and I have learned to read them before I ever pull a ladder off the truck.
Charleston Rain Shows Weak Spots Fast
I do not have to wait long to see whether a gutter system is doing its job in this town. One summer storm can drop enough water to expose a bad pitch, a clogged outlet, or a downspout that was undersized from the start. I have stood under porch roofs and watched water sheet over the front edge like someone tipped a bucket from the second floor. That tells me more than a dry inspection ever could.
On many Charleston homes, the roof lines are broken up by porches, dormers, side additions, and old framing that has settled a little over time. I rarely assume a straight run is truly straight until I put a level on it. A half inch over 20 feet can matter when the rain is heavy and the outlet is small. Water always tells the truth.
I once checked a house off James Island where the owner thought the problem was one clogged corner. The gutter was clean, but the fascia had dipped enough that water was pooling in the middle before it ever reached the downspout. That repair took more care than a quick cleaning, because the wood behind the gutter had started to soften. A small sag had turned into a larger job.
Choosing Materials That Fit the House
I have installed plenty of aluminum gutters because they make sense for many homes here. They are light, clean-looking, and easier to shape on site for long runs. Still, I do not treat every job the same way, because a brick house downtown with a steep roof does not behave like a newer place in Mount Pleasant. The roof area, tree cover, fascia condition, and drainage path all matter.
Some homeowners ask me about copper because they like the look, especially on older homes with more character. I like copper too, but I am honest about the cost and the upkeep expectations before anyone gets excited. A customer last spring wanted copper on the front only and standard aluminum on the back, which made sense for the budget and the street view. That kind of mixed approach can work if the transitions are planned carefully.
For homeowners who want to compare local gutter services before they call a crew, I usually tell them to visit the website and pay attention to how clearly the company explains materials, cleanup, and scheduling. I would rather see a plain explanation than a sales pitch full of promises. A good gutter job is built from measurements, careful cuts, and a crew that respects the house. The flashy part matters less than the water path.
Size also matters more than some people think. I see 5-inch gutters on homes where a 6-inch system would handle the roof better, especially on long rear slopes that dump water into one area. Bigger is not always the answer, though, because the downspouts still need somewhere useful to send the water. I have moved downspouts by only 3 or 4 feet and solved years of splashback near a crawl space.
The Repairs I Do Not Ignore
Small gutter problems do not stay small in Charleston weather. Salt air, heavy rain, pine needles, oak leaves, and humidity all work on a system month after month. I pay close attention to loose spikes, separated miters, cracked sealant, and stains on the fascia. Those marks usually show where water has been hanging around too long.
I do not like patching the same failing joint over and over. If a corner has been sealed three times and still leaks, I look at the cut, the angle, and the support around it. Sometimes the metal is tired, and sometimes the gutter is being asked to carry too much water from two roof sections. A tube of sealant cannot fix bad layout.
One common repair I see is a downspout that ends too close to the foundation. It may look fine on a sunny day, but during a storm it can dump water right beside the crawl space vent or porch pier. I try to move that water at least several feet away when the yard allows it. Short extensions are cheap compared with rotten framing.
Gutter guards are another subject I handle carefully. I install them on some homes, but I do not pretend they make gutters disappear from your maintenance list. Live oak tassels and pine needles can sit on top of guards and slow the water down during a hard rain. I have seen guards help a lot, and I have seen the wrong style make a mess.
What I Check Before Storm Season
Before the rough weather months, I like to walk the full perimeter of a house and look from the ground first. I check for streaks on the face of the gutter, washed-out mulch, soil lines on siding, and places where water has carved a small trench below the roof edge. Those clues tell me where to set the ladder. I do not start by guessing.
Once I am up there, I check hangers about every 2 feet on most standard runs, though older work can vary. Loose hangers let the gutter flex, and that flex can change the pitch just enough to hold water. Standing water attracts debris and adds weight, which makes the next storm harder on the system. It becomes a slow cycle.
I also look at the roof edge. If shingles are too short, water can curl back behind the gutter instead of dropping into it. If the drip edge is missing or bent, the gutter may get blamed for a roof detail that was never right. I have had to tell more than one homeowner that the gutter was fine, but the water was sneaking behind it before it ever had a chance.
Cleaning is still part of the job, even with newer systems. I tell people with heavy tree cover to check their gutters more than once a year, especially after pollen season and again after the leaves come down. A house with two big oaks over the roof can fill faster than a house with no trees nearby. Shade feels nice in July, but gutters pay for it.
How I Think About Drainage After the Downspout
A gutter system does not end at the downspout elbow. I care just as much about where the water goes after it leaves the metal. In low parts of Charleston, a yard may already hold water after a tide, a storm, or a week of wet weather. Sending more roof water to the wrong spot only makes that worse.
I have worked on homes where the gutters were installed neatly, but every downspout dumped onto a narrow side yard with no slope. The system looked good from the street and still caused trouble after every storm. In those cases, I talk through extensions, splash blocks, buried lines, or grading changes depending on the property. I do not pretend one answer fits every yard.
There is also a neighborly side to drainage in tight Charleston lots. I try not to send water toward a fence line or another house if there is a better option. A few feet of adjustment can prevent hard feelings later. Good gutter work should solve one home’s problem without creating one next door.
I tell homeowners to watch their gutters during one real rain before they decide everything is fine. Stand under cover, look at the corners, and see where the water lands. If you see overflow, stains, sagging, or puddles near the foundation, do not wait for another season of storms to prove the same point. I have learned that Charleston gives plenty of warnings before water damage gets expensive.


