Seamless Gutters
Custom-formed aluminum and steel gutters with proper slope and downspout placement for Oklahoma homes.
Gutters do something critical: they take the water that hits your roof and move it away from your foundation, siding, and landscaping in a controlled path. When they fail — whether from age, blockage, or undersizing — the water goes somewhere else, usually somewhere it causes damage over time.
Aero Precision Roofing forms and installs seamless aluminum and steel gutters for residential and commercial properties across Cleveland, Tulsa, Owasso, Stillwater, and Bartlesville. We form each run on-site using a truck-mounted machine, which means the gutter that goes on your house is cut to your exact length with no field joints.
Getting the Installation Details Right
Gutter performance depends more on the installation than the product. Two things fail most often: slope and downspout placement.
Slope matters because a gutter with no pitch pools water between downspouts. Standing water adds weight, encourages oxidation, and becomes a breeding ground for mosquitoes. We run every gutter with a minimum 1/16-inch drop per foot toward the nearest downspout.
Downspout placement matters because the goal isn’t just to catch water from the roof — it’s to get that water away from the house. We route downspouts to discharge at least five feet from the foundation in flat areas and use extensions or underground leaders where the grade doesn’t cooperate.
Oklahoma’s clay-heavy soils expand and contract with moisture cycles, which makes foundation water management more important here than in areas with sandy or loamy ground. Getting the downspout routing right is not an aesthetic decision.
What We Install and Why
- 5-inch K-style aluminum for most residential homes — handles normal Oklahoma rainfall loads
- 6-inch K-style for steep-pitch roofs or large catchment areas — moves 40% more water per linear foot
- 0.032-gauge heavy aluminum for longer runs or high-debris environments
- Micro-mesh gutter guards where cleaning frequency is a concern — not zero-maintenance, but meaningfully less work
Gutters and residential roofing are best addressed together. A new roof is the ideal time to inspect whether existing gutters are properly sized, sloped, and fastened — and replacing both at once eliminates a second mobilization. If a storm event has dented or separated your gutters, those repairs are commonly included in hail and wind insurance claims we document during our exterior inspection. Gutter damage often goes hand-in-hand with siding damage — we look at both elevations in the same visit.
If your current gutters are pulling away from the fascia, show rust at seams, or overflow during moderate rains, call for a free inspection. We give you a straightforward recommendation.
Our process
- 1
Measurement and slope planning
We measure every run, identify the optimal downspout locations, and calculate the slope needed to drain without pooling.
- 2
On-site forming
Our truck-mounted machine forms each gutter run to the exact length at your property — no pre-cut joints in field runs.
- 3
Installation and downspout placement
Gutters hung with hidden hanger hardware at 24-inch max spacing, downspouts positioned to route water at least 5 feet from the foundation.
- 4
Flow test and cleanup
We water-test every run before leaving, confirm downspouts are discharging correctly, and remove all installation debris.
Materials & options
Seamless Aluminum (Standard)
0.027-gauge aluminum formed on-site to exact run lengths. No joints means no seam failures — the most common source of gutter leaks.
Seamless Aluminum (Heavy Gauge)
0.032-gauge aluminum for longer runs or homes in areas with heavy debris load. Holds its shape better under Oklahoma ice and wet-leaf weight.
Galvanized Steel
Stronger than aluminum with a longer lifespan in high-impact areas. Used on commercial projects or where physical durability outweighs corrosion considerations.
Gutter Guards
Micro-mesh and reverse-curve guards that reduce cleaning frequency. Not zero-maintenance, but they meaningfully cut the interval for most Oklahoma homeowners.