Bristol Township, Bucks County, PA

Roofing, Siding & Windows in Bristol Township, PA
— Quoted in 15 Minutes.

Bristol Township is the only First-Class municipality in Bucks County — a form of government the township adopted in 2012, with a City Manager/Council structure, that no other Bucks County municipality carries. The housing that makes up most of the work is the Levittown and Fairless Hills sections Levitt built section by section in the 1950s after U.S. Steel opened Fairless Works next door in Falls Township; a section was built and roofed on one calendar, so failures arrive together and quotes benefit from knowing which section. Drop the address; we pull the aerial of your specific lot, build the plan in 3D and walk the written number with you on a 15-minute Zoom — no salesman dispatched to your street.

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About Bristol Township, PA

Bucks County's Only
First-Class Township.

53,9622024 Est. Population
1692Incorporated
1950sLevittown Era

Bristol Township was officially incorporated in 1692 as Buckingham Township and renamed Bristol in 1702 — the first recorded settlement here was a Dutch family in 1625, generations before the Delaware Canal opened through the township in 1831. The township's own account explains the housing: it was farm country until World War II, and then in the 1950s, once U.S. Steel's Fairless Works opened in neighboring Falls Township, William J. Levitt built the Levittown community that now spans parts of Bristol, Falls, Middletown and Tullytown. The subcounty estimates place the township at 54,310 residents in 2020 and 53,962 in 2024 — second only to Bensalem in the county, a gap that opened because Falls Township kept the Fairless Works industrial site and Bristol kept the Levittown residential streets. The township also notes it is the county's only First-Class municipality, governed since 2012 by a City Manager/Council form. For exterior work the takeaway is plain: most of these homes are 1950s mass-built stock on a second generation of owners, and they age in waves across a section.

What Shapes Exterior Work in Bristol Township

A 1950s Township on the Delaware.

The township sits in Lower Bucks on the river the Lenni Lenape called the Great River, threaded by Mill Creek, the Neshaminy and Queen Anne Creek and by the Delaware Canal that is now a National Historic Landmark. That setting, plus the wave-built Levittown and Fairless Hills housing, sets the terms for every exterior job here:

  • Roofing in waves: a Levittown or Fairless Hills section was built and roofed on the same calendar, so its roofs reach the end of their lives together — we spec a full tear-off, decking repair and venting rather than patching one slope of a 70-year-old deck.
  • Original cladding: seven decades on, many of these homes still carry mid-century siding under later overlays; we plan removal and a properly insulated replacement, not a wrap over the old.
  • Delaware Canal corridor and creek drainage: the Delaware Canal — a National Historic Landmark running through the township — and its feeder watercourses (Mill Creek, the Neshaminy, Queen Anne Creek) place low-lying Bristol parcels directly inside mapped floodplain zones; we check your specific lot against that map before any roofing or siding is specified.
  • 70-year roofs on a river-fronting township: Levittown decks laid in the 1950s on Lower-Bucks Delaware-frontage ground have had seven decades of winter freeze-thaw and summer storm rain working against them; every underlayment and flashing call in our spec is calibrated to that actual age, not a generic replacement schedule.

Knowing a section was built all at once is the advantage: it lets us scope your home against its neighbors before the aerial even loads.

Where We Work in & Around Bristol Township

From 19007 to the Levittown ZIPs.

Bristol Township carries the Bristol 19007 ZIP at its 2501 Bath Road municipal building and the 19054-19057 Levittown ZIPs across its sections, and it is its own school district — the Bristol Township School District. It borders Falls, Middletown and Bensalem townships and Tullytown borough. We quote and install across the township and pull the permit through the Building / Planning Department at 2501 Bath Road:

19007 19054 19055 19056 19057 Falls Township Middletown Township Tullytown Borough

East to Bensalem, north to Falls and Middletown where the Levittown sections cross township lines — every address in Bucks County is quoted by sending us the lot, not by sending us to the lot.

Services in Bristol Township, PA

Exterior Work for a Levittown-Era Township.

Same craftsmen, same materials, same warranties as any in-home contractor — without the in-home sales pitch.

Why Bristol Township Homeowners Choose D'Bros

Built for a Wave-Built Township.

We Read the Sections

When U.S. Steel's Fairless Works opened in Falls Township, Levitt went block by block across Bristol — the same crew, the same materials, the same calendar — so a whole neighborhood's roofing and siding arrives at end-of-life as a cohort. That pattern makes your Bristol Township scope faster to assemble: the aerial confirms the section, and the section tells us what condition your neighbors' roofs are already in.

One Permit Office: 2501 Bath Road

The Building / Planning Department issues the permit and lists fences, additions and renovations among the work that needs one. We file it, post it at the job site as the township requires, and carry the inspections so you do not.

First-Class Township, First-Class Quote Process

Bristol Township operates under a City Manager/Council form that it adopted in 2012 — a level of municipal governance no other Bucks County municipality holds — and it governs a First-Class township that runs its own school district, its own Building / Planning Department at 2501 Bath Road, and a permit board that requires posting at the job site. That institutional structure means one known permit path for every job, and our quote reflects the township's own fee schedule before you book a slot.

Bristol Township FAQ

Questions Bristol Township Homeowners Ask.

My Bristol Township home is in a Levittown or Fairless Hills section — does that help the quote?
Yes. The township's own history notes Levitt built Levittown across parts of Bristol, Falls, Middletown and Tullytown in the 1950s after U.S. Steel's Fairless Works opened next door. A section was built and roofed on one calendar, so we can scope your roof and siding against its built-as-one neighbors before the aerial even loads.
Does Bristol Township require a permit to be posted at the job site — and does that cover fences?
Yes on both counts. The Building / Planning Department at 2501 Bath Rd, Bristol, PA 19007 (215-785-3680) issues permits for new buildings, additions, fences, renovations and demolitions, and the township requires the permit physically posted at the site during the work. We pull the permit before the crew starts and keep it on the property throughout the job.
Why does my Bristol Township address show one of five different ZIPs — and which school district am I in?
Bristol Township is large enough to span five postal zones: 19007 at its Bath Road municipal building, and 19054, 19055, 19056 and 19057 across the Levittown and Fairless Hills sections. Despite the five ZIPs it operates a single school district — the Bristol Township School District — that serves the whole township. Whichever ZIP your address carries, the permit path and the quote process are the same.
Do the Delaware Canal corridor and Bristol Township's creek network put my lot in a floodplain zone?
Potentially, yes. The Delaware Canal — now a National Historic Landmark running through the township — and the watercourses that drain into it (Mill Creek, the Neshaminy, Queen Anne Creek) put a meaningful share of Bristol Township's lower parcels inside mapped floodplain boundaries. We pull the floodplain data for your specific address before specifying roofing or siding; moisture control and drainage detailing at the substrate level are written into the scope wherever the map calls for it.
Does getting a price mean a crew comes out to my Levittown or Fairless Hills home first?
No crew comes out for the quote. A Levittown section was built block by block on one calendar, so the aerial of your lot — combined with the public record of how Levitt built that section — gives us the roof geometry, wall runs and lot lines before any conversation starts. Tell us the Bristol Township address and what needs replacing; the written price is delivered on a 15-minute Zoom, and the first vehicle in your driveway after that belongs to the install crew.
Free · No Obligation · 15-Minute Quote

15-Min Quote in Bristol —
From Your Couch.

Fill out the form. Within 4 hours we'll text you to schedule your 15-min Zoom. We'll have a 3D visual plan of your Bristol home built before we get on the call.

  • 3D visual planning of your actual Bristol home, walked through together
  • Written quote in your inbox before the call ends
  • 100% financing available if you need it
  • Licensed & insured · NJ HIC Reg. #13VH10025100 · address used only for aerial measurement

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Takes 30 seconds. We'll have your aerial measurements ready before the Zoom.

No obligation. No pressure. No long sales pitch.

Bristol Homeowner? See the Design Before You Commit.