What new siding costs, and which material holds up longest where you live.
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Adjust the inputs to match your home. Figures blend national pricing with Sterling's local cost index. They're guidance ranges, not quotes.
Tuned to Sterling labor and material pricing. Adjust to match your project.
The value default: low-maintenance, freeze-tolerant, widely installed.
Planning estimate, not a quote, your actual price varies by contractor, materials, and scope.
Adjusted for Sterling. Premium choices cost more up front but often last longer or perform better.
New siding is one of the strongest exterior upgrades for resale, typically recouping a large share of its cost while protecting the structure and cutting drafts.
A typical siding replacement here runs $6,300–$11,100. Get the tear-off, house-wrap, and trim spelled out line by line. Suspiciously low bids often reuse old wrap or skip flashing details.
Demand and weather move installer pricing through the year. These are modeled trends for Sterling; the actual timing and savings vary.
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Siding plus a good moisture barrier keeps wind-driven rain and snowmelt out of the wall cavity, where damage hides until it's expensive.
Repeated freezing and thawing cracks brittle or aging siding and lets water in. Modern materials are built to flex and shed water.
A re-side is the rare chance to add a layer of continuous insulation behind the cladding, trimming heating bills for decades.
New siding transforms the look of a home and consistently ranks among the top exterior projects for recouped value.
Cladding on the Georgia coast faces a relentless combination of salt air, subtropical UV, high humidity, and occasional hurricane-force wind. Fiber cement is the dominant choice in Brunswick for its resistance to moisture, salt corrosion, and impact; economy vinyl can warp and chalk quickly in the coastal heat.
Salt air is the silent enemy of Brunswick siding: it corrodes fasteners, eats at aluminum trim, and accelerates paint failure on wood. Fiber cement with stainless or hot-dipped galvanized fasteners and a premium factory finish is the regional standard for a reason. It handles the heat, the humidity, and the occasional tropical wind gust without warping, swelling, or delaminating the way cheaper cladding does in this climate.
A full re-side in Sterling typically requires a building permit; a licensed contractor pulls it for you.
Go deeper on costs, materials, and how to choose, then price it for your home above.
How the main siding materials compare on installed cost, lifespan, and durability, and which holds up best to wind, water, and freeze-thaw where you live.
Read guideCost guideSiding cost by material and wall area, the factors that move a quote, and how to read a re-side bid so the tear-off and weather barrier aren't quietly skipped.
Read guidePlanningHow to tell failing siding from a cosmetic issue: warping, rot, soft spots, peeling interior paint, and rising energy bills, and when a repair will do instead.
Read guideComparisonWhich siding survives wind-driven rain, freeze-thaw, heat, and wildfire. How vinyl, fiber cement, engineered wood, and steel hold up by climate, and which to avoid where.
Read guidePlanningHow long vinyl, fiber cement, engineered wood, and steel siding last, plus the washing, sealing, and repainting that helps each reach the top of its range.
Read guideHow we estimate: ranges combine national pricing with Sterling's local cost index and the options you choose. They're modeled for planning and may differ from contractor quotes. Always get an on-site assessment before you commit.