Eavestrough questions, answered straight.
The same questions come up on most Niagara eavestrough calls. Here are the plain answers, including the ones that are different for Erie-facing properties versus inland St. Catharines homes.
Got a gutter question in St. Catharines? Start here.Questions Niagara homeowners ask about eavestroughs
How often should I clean my eavestroughs in St. Catharines?
For most St. Catharines homes, twice a year: once in late spring after the maple keys finish dropping, and once in late fall once the leaves are fully down. Homes under big mature maples, backs onto greenspace, or near the Glenridge escarpment where tree cover is heavy should treat twice as the floor, not the maximum. Homes with few trees and easy ground-level access can sometimes manage with a single fall clean.
When is the best time of year to clean eavestroughs in Niagara?
The fall clean is the important one, and the timing trick is to wait until the leaves have fully finished dropping, usually mid-to-late November in St. Catharines. Too early and the leaves keep falling into a freshly cleaned gutter; too late and the first freeze packs wet leaves into ice at the gutter lip. The spring clean is more flexible, anytime from May into June once the maple keys are done.
Why are my gutters full of debris when I have no trees on the property?
This is the Erie wind question, and it comes up most often on open lots in Port Colborne, Wainfleet, Fort Erie, and other south Niagara communities that face Lake Erie directly. Prevailing westerly winds off the lake carry dead leaves, seed pods, and organic matter and deposit it onto every roof in their path regardless of what is on the ground below. Homes on open or lakefront lots with full Erie exposure see a heavy debris load by wind alone, and twice-a-year cleaning is the standard for these properties whether or not there is a single tree on the lot.
What happens to eavestroughs in a Niagara winter?
Niagara winters cycle above and below freezing repeatedly rather than staying at a sustained deep freeze. When wet leaves and debris are still in the gutter in late November and temperatures drop below zero, the material freezes at the gutter lip and creates an ice dam. Meltwater then backs up behind the dam and has nowhere to go except under the first shingle course, where it sits and works its way into the roof deck over the course of the winter. The late-fall clean before the first hard freeze is the prevention step. Once the material has frozen in place, the intervention window is closed until spring.
How much does eavestrough cleaning cost in St. Catharines?
Illustrative 2026 ranges for the St. Catharines market: a single-storey bungalow typically runs $149 to $189; a two-storey $219 to $289; a large or steep Glenridge-slope home $299 to $399. These are flat-rate by home size, not hourly. Full breakdown on the cost page.
Are gutter guards worth it in St. Catharines?
Sometimes. On a two-storey with heavy tree cover where the access cost is what drives the cleaning price, a quality mesh guard typically pays off over four to six years. On an easy single-storey with light tree cover, a twice-a-year cleaning plan is almost always the cheaper total-cost answer. On open Erie-facing lots in south Niagara with high wind-debris load, the payback period can compress to three to four years. The honest decision breakdown is on the gutter-guard decision page.
What happens if I never clean my eavestroughs?
A packed gutter overflows, and the water goes where you do not want it: down the fascia and soffit, against the foundation, and into the basement over time. Wet fascia rots, and a soffit-and-fascia repair costs many times the price of a cleaning. In winter, blocked gutters feed the ice dam cycle that backs meltwater under the shingles. On clay-soil lots in south Niagara the foundation risk is amplified because the clay has almost no lateral drainage capacity, so overflow water pools directly against the foundation wall instead of draining away into the lawn.
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