Do General Contractors Handle Siding? What Howell Township Homeowners Should Know

Home / Do General Contractors Handle Siding? What Howell Township Homeowners Should Know

Hook: You’ve got siding problems, you’ve got a “guy” (a general contractor), and you’ve got one big question: Can a general contractor handle siding… or should you hire a siding specialist?

Sneak Peek: Yes—general contractors can handle siding, and sometimes it’s the smartest move. But it depends on the scope, who’s actually doing the install (their crew vs. a subcontractor), and how the job is managed. Here’s how Howell Township homeowners can decide without guessing.

Story: A homeowner in town once told me, “My GC said siding is easy. It’s just panels.” Two weeks later, the panels were on… and water was getting behind the trim because flashing was basically an afterthought. The repair wasn’t fun. Siding isn’t rocket science, but it’s also not “just panels.” The details are the whole job.

So… do general contractors do siding?

They can. Many general contractors in New Jersey either:

  • Install siding with their own crew (if they have experienced exterior installers), or
  • Subcontract the siding to a siding-specific crew they manage.

The key is not the title “general contractor.” The key is who’s actually installing and how the work is detailed, supervised, and warranted.

When hiring a general contractor for siding makes sense

1) Your project includes more than siding

If your job includes multiple trades—like window replacements, structural repairs, framing, rot remediation, new trim carpentry, or even a small addition—a GC can be a great “project quarterback.” One schedule. One point of contact. Less chaos.

2) You want one contract and one warranty conversation

Some homeowners prefer dealing with one company accountable for the full scope. That can reduce finger-pointing if something goes sideways.

3) The GC has a proven siding crew (or a reliable sub they’ve used for years)

Experience matters more than labels. If the GC can show recent siding jobs and explain their water-management details clearly, you’re in a good place.

When a siding specialist is usually the better choice

1) Your job is mostly siding + trim detail

If you’re not rebuilding anything major and your main goal is a clean, durable siding system, a specialist often has tighter processes—especially for flashing, transitions, corners, and finishing details.

2) You’re choosing a premium material that’s installation-sensitive

Fiber cement, specialty profiles, and “architectural” looks typically demand more expertise. If the installer isn’t used to that system, mistakes show up fast (and they’re expensive to correct).

3) You want deeper product knowledge

A siding-first contractor usually knows the “real life” differences between product lines—how they hold color, how they behave with temperature swings, and what details tend to fail if installed sloppy.

The biggest risk: unclear responsibility when subs are involved

If a GC subs out the siding, ask this directly:

  • Who is my contract with? (the GC or the siding sub?)
  • Who provides the workmanship warranty?
  • Who handles punch-list fixes?
  • Who is onsite supervising day-to-day?

Subcontracting isn’t bad. It’s normal. The problem is when accountability is fuzzy and everyone blames everyone later.

What to ask a general contractor before hiring them for siding

  1. Is siding installed by your crew or a subcontractor?
  2. How do you handle housewrap and flashing? (If they can’t explain this clearly, pause.)
  3. What’s included around windows/doors? (trim, flashing tape, caulk strategy, drip caps)
  4. How do you price and document rot/sheathing repairs?
  5. What’s the workmanship warranty? And who honors it?
  6. Can I see 2–3 recent local siding jobs?
  7. What brand/product line are you quoting exactly?

A simple decision rule for Howell Township homeowners

  • Choose a GC if you’re bundling multiple exterior trades and want one manager.
  • Choose a siding specialist if siding performance and clean detailing is the main goal—and especially if you’re going premium materials.
  • Either way: demand a written scope that includes water-management details (wrap + flashing + trim plan). That’s where good jobs live.

Conclusion

Call to Action: A general contractor can absolutely handle siding—if they have the right crew (or sub), a tight scope, and real attention to moisture control. If you’re getting estimates now, use the questions above and don’t be shy about asking for specifics. Your siding isn’t just curb appeal. It’s your home’s raincoat.

If you want quick answers to common siding questions (materials, timing, maintenance, and what to expect), visit our New Jersey siding FAQ.

For general consumer tips on hiring home improvement contractors and reading contracts, you can also review guidance from the New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs.