
Fascia rot in Cottonwood Creek is almost always downstream of a drainage problem — an overflowing or leaking gutter that's been sending water somewhere it shouldn't for a while.
How much does it cost to replace soffits and fascia? Cost depends on how much of the board and panel needs replacing and whether the damage is localized or spans a longer run, so we assess extent on-site rather than quoting a flat number. Because most fascia damage we see in Cottonwood Creek traces back to a gutter that's been overflowing or leaking against the same spot repeatedly, we check the gutter's condition at the same time so the repair actually holds instead of failing again from the same root cause.
Does homeowners insurance cover soffit and fascia? Typically only when the cause is a sudden covered event like wind or storm damage — slow rot from an ongoing drainage issue is usually classified as a maintenance item rather than an insurable loss, which is one more reason catching it early matters.
Repair tied back to the drainage cause, not just the visible damage.
We check whether an overflowing gutter is the reason the wood failed.
Repair scoped to how far the damage actually extends.
Vented soffit repaired to restore proper attic airflow, not just patched over.
New or repaired fascia paired with a properly re-hung gutter above it.
Straight answers — no clicking around.
Cottonwood Creek is one of ten neighborhoods in our coverage area.
Call Richardson Gutter Installation for a free on-site diagnosis.
(888) 555-0123