Do you serve Madisonville?
Yes. Madisonville is part of our regular service area. We send our own licensed crew — no subcontractors — and we cover all 8 siding materials at every location we serve.
How much does new siding cost in Louisiana?
Most residential siding replacements in southeast Louisiana run between $8,000 and $25,000 depending on home size, material choice, and condition of the existing installation. Vinyl is the most affordable option. Fiber cement costs more upfront but lasts significantly longer in this climate, which lowers the long-term cost per year. We give you a firm, itemized number after an on-site visit — not a range over the phone.
What's the best siding for Louisiana's climate?
Fiber cement — specifically James Hardie products — performs best in south Louisiana. It handles high humidity, heavy rainfall, UV exposure, and wind load better than vinyl or wood alternatives at the same price range. It won't warp in summer heat, doesn't absorb moisture, and holds its factory finish far longer than field-painted products. Vinyl is a solid budget option when installed with proper house wrap and nailing schedules. We'll recommend the right material for your home's specific exposure after we assess it in person.
How long does siding last in south Louisiana?
Fiber cement lasts 30 to 50 years in this climate when properly installed and maintained. Vinyl typically runs 15 to 25 years here — shorter than the manufacturer's stated lifespan because Gulf Coast humidity, UV intensity, and storm stress are harder on the material than dry northern climates. Wood requires the most maintenance and needs repainting or resealing every 5 to 7 years. Metal and concrete siding can exceed 50 years with minimal upkeep.
How do I know if my siding needs to be replaced vs. repaired?
Spot repairs make sense when damage is isolated to one section, the rest of the installation is structurally sound, and the material is less than 15 years old. Full replacement is usually the right call when you see widespread warping or buckling, cracking along multiple courses, paint peeling from the bottom up (a sign of water intrusion behind the panels), or visible mold and soft spots at the sheathing level. We assess both options honestly on every estimate and tell you which applies before quoting anything.
Can siding be installed over existing siding?
Technically yes, but we don't recommend it in most cases. Installing over old siding adds weight, hides existing moisture damage, and voids most manufacturer warranties including James Hardie's. It also creates an uneven surface that affects the finished appearance. The only scenario where it makes practical sense is thin foam-backed insulated vinyl over sound original vinyl. For any fiber cement installation, we always remove the existing material, inspect the sheathing, and replace the moisture barrier before hanging new panels.
What happens if water gets behind my siding?
Water behind siding is the most common source of structural damage we see in south Louisiana homes. Once it gets past the panels, it saturates the sheathing, promotes mold growth in the wall cavity, and eventually reaches the framing. By the time damage is visible on the exterior — paint peeling, soft spots, or discoloration — the interior damage is often already significant. The fix depends on how far the moisture has traveled. We open the wall section, assess the substrate, replace damaged sheathing, and install a continuous moisture barrier before hanging new material.
Does new siding increase home value?
Yes. Siding replacement consistently ranks among the highest ROI home improvement projects nationally, and in Louisiana the return is amplified because buyers in this market understand the cost of storm damage and deferred maintenance. A fiber cement replacement on an older home typically returns 70 to 80 cents on the dollar at resale. The bigger factor is that failing siding actively reduces value — appraisers discount for it, inspectors flag it, and buyers negotiate around it. Replacing it before listing removes that friction entirely.
How long does a siding project take?
Most residential jobs run 3 to 5 days depending on home size, material, and whether sheathing or wrap replacement is needed. Larger homes or those with significant substrate repair can run 7 to 10 days. We give you a written project timeline before work starts and we stick to it. You'll have one point of contact from first call to final walkthrough.
Do you pull permits?
Yes. We handle all permit applications on your behalf for every jurisdiction in our service area. You don't track anything — we manage the paperwork, coordinate inspections, and make sure the job closes out properly. This matters more than most homeowners realize: unpermitted siding work can complicate insurance claims and real estate transactions down the road.
What warranty do you offer?
We provide a written labor warranty on every installation. James Hardie products carry a 30-year non-prorated warranty on the siding and a 15-year warranty on the ColorPlus factory finish — both of which require installation by a certified installer like us to be valid. Vinyl and other material warranties vary by manufacturer. We walk you through exactly what's covered before the job starts, not after.
What siding materials do you install?
All 8: fiber cement, vinyl, metal, brick, concrete, insulated, stucco, and wood. Every material is installed by the same in-house licensed crew regardless of your zip code. We don't limit your options based on location or send different subcontractors for different materials.