Water in Your Basement After Heavy Rain? Your Gutters May Be the Real Problem

by | Jul 8, 2026 | Gutter Replacement, New Jersey, Roof Damage | 0 comments

This week’s storms dumped 2 to 4+ inches of rain on northern New Jersey — enough to put a Flood Watch over eastern Bergen, Essex, and Passaic counties and send water into basements from Hackensack to Montclair to Wayne. If you spent Monday night with a wet-vac, your first instinct is probably to blame the foundation or the sump pump. But in a surprising number of the homes we inspect, the water isn’t coming up from the ground — it’s coming down off the roof, in the wrong place.

The Math Nobody Thinks About

A typical 2,000-square-foot roof sheds roughly 1,200 gallons of water in a 1-inch rainstorm. In Monday’s 3–4 inch downpour, that’s 4,000–5,000 gallons your gutters and downspouts were supposed to carry safely away from the house. When gutters are clogged with spring seed pods, shingle grit, or last fall’s leaves, all of that water pours over the edge and lands in a line right beside your foundation. The soil saturates, hydrostatic pressure builds, and water finds its way through foundation walls, window wells, and floor cracks. The basement leak was real — but the cause was 25 feet up.

Telltale signs it’s a gutter problem, not a foundation problem: water appears only during or right after heavy rain; damp spots line up below gutter runs or a downspout; you see “tiger striping” (dirty vertical streaks) on the outside of the gutters; soil is eroded or mulch splashed against the siding under the roof edge; or you can see plants sprouting out of the gutter itself.

The Hidden Culprit in Older Northern NJ Homes: Built-In Gutters

Many pre-1950s homes in towns like Ridgewood, Montclair, Paterson, Hackensack, and Bloomfield don’t have the aluminum gutters you see from the street. They have built-in gutters (also called Yankee gutters or box gutters) — troughs constructed into the roof edge or cornice itself and lined with metal. From the curb, the roofline looks clean. That’s exactly the problem: out of sight, out of mind.

When a built-in gutter clogs or its liner rusts, splits, or pulls apart at a seam, the water doesn’t overflow harmlessly onto the lawn. It soaks into the structure — down through the cornice, inside the wall cavity, along the foundation, and into the basement. We’ve inspected homes where a “mystery basement leak” turned out to be a failed Yankee gutter liner quietly rotting the roof edge for years. Because the damage is hidden, it often isn’t discovered until there’s interior staining, peeling paint on an exterior soffit, or a musty basement corner that never dries out.

If your home is 70+ years old and you’re not sure what kind of gutters it has, that alone is worth an inspection.

What to Do After This Week’s Rain

First, walk the perimeter while it’s still fresh. Look for overflow marks, sagging gutter sections, disconnected downspouts, and downspouts that dump water within a few feet of the foundation (extensions should carry water 4–6 feet away, minimum). Inside, note exactly where and when water appeared — that pattern is diagnostic gold for an inspector.

Second, don’t get on a ladder after a storm to scoop leaves yourself — wet debris is heavy, ladders on soft ground are dangerous, and a visual check from the ground misses the things that matter (seam failures, pitch problems, liner condition, fascia rot).

Third, get it looked at before the next storm. Simple Roofing provides free roofing and gutter inspections throughout Passaic, Bergen, and Essex counties. We check gutter pitch and capacity, downspout routing, built-in gutter liners, fascia and soffit condition, and the roof edge itself — and we’ll tell you honestly whether your basement water is a gutter fix, a roofing issue, or something for a foundation contractor. If the fix is as simple as re-routing a downspout, we’ll say so.

A note on cost: cleaning and minor repairs are cheap insurance. Replacing a failed gutter run costs a fraction of what chronic water intrusion does to a foundation, framing, or a finished basement. If your gutters are at end of life, see our guide to new gutter costs in New Jersey.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can clogged gutters really cause basement flooding?

Yes — it’s one of the most common causes we see. Overflowing gutters concentrate thousands of gallons of roof runoff right against the foundation. Soil saturates, and water follows gravity into the basement. If leaks only happen during heavy rain, gutters are the first thing to check.

What are built-in (Yankee) gutters, and how do I know if I have them?

Built-in gutters are troughs constructed into the roof edge or cornice, common on northern NJ homes built before about 1950. If you don’t see gutters hanging from your roofline but water still channels off the roof edge, you likely have them. Their metal liners fail with age — and the failure is hidden inside the structure.

How often should gutters be cleaned in New Jersey?

At least twice a year — late spring (seed pods, maple “helicopters”) and late fall (leaves) — plus after any major storm. Homes under mature trees in towns like Ridgewood or Montclair often need three to four cleanings a year.

Is a gutter inspection really free?

Yes. Simple Roofing’s roofing and gutter inspections are free, with no obligation. We document what we find with photos and give you a straight answer about what needs attention now versus what can wait.

Water in Your Basement This Week? Get Answers Before the Next Storm

Find out if your gutters are the cause — free, with no obligation. Get a Free Roof & Gutter Inspection or call/text (201) 429-9607. Serving Wayne, Hackensack, Paterson, Montclair, Ridgewood, and all of Passaic, Bergen & Essex counties. Learn more about our gutter services.