Seamless Gutter Installation in Burnet
K-style and half-round gutters formed on-site to your home’s exact dimensions. Aluminum and copper options.
Burnet, TX • Burnet County
Seamless gutters fabricated on-site, leaf-protection systems, and reliable cleaning. Protect your foundation.
Burnet — the county seat and the official Bluebonnet Capital of Texas — has a mix of stone-and-beam historic homes near the courthouse square and newer Hill Country builds spreading east toward Bertram and west toward Inks Lake.
The Ashe juniper (cedar) that dominates the hillsides around Burnet drops needles and blue berries into gutters all winter, and the older stone homes with their wide eaves and shallow pitches need aggressive gutter pitching to keep water away from limestone walls that wick moisture if a downspout fails. We work the Highway 29 corridor from Inks Lake State Park east to Bertram, and we know which older Burnet homes need fascia repair before new gutters can hang properly.
K-style and half-round gutters formed on-site to your home’s exact dimensions. Aluminum and copper options.
Stainless mesh, surface-tension, and reverse-curve guards. The right system for your tree cover and budget.
Twice-yearly residential gutter cleaning — debris removal, downspout flushing, and inspection.
Sagging sections, separated joints, leaks, missing fasteners, and damaged downspouts. Fix it right instead of replacing.
Properly sized downspouts, splash blocks, and underground drains that route water away from your foundation.
Damaged soffit and fascia repair before new gutters go up. Catch hidden water damage before it spreads.
Not if installed properly — but they will if installed wrong. Older Burnet homes often have soft pine or rotting fascia behind decades of paint and trim that needs to be replaced before any new gutter goes up. We always inspect fascia and soffit before quoting and do the carpentry repair as part of the install when needed. Limestone walls behind gutters are vulnerable to wicked moisture if a downspout fails, so we pitch and route every gutter to keep water at least six feet out from the foundation.
Twice a year minimum for any Burnet home surrounded by Ashe juniper (cedar) — once in late fall after the live oak and pecan leaves are down, and once in late winter before the spring storm season hits. Cedar drops needles and berries continuously from October through February, and the mix of sticky berry residue and needles makes a paste that water can’t move through. Homes with heavy cedar coverage benefit from a third midwinter cleaning or stainless micro-mesh guards.
Thank you. We’ll be in touch with a detailed estimate.
Need us sooner? Email info@highlandlakesgutters.com.