Last spring, my buddy Tom in Meridian-Kessler called me in a mild panic. He’d noticed a strip of paint peeling off the fascia board near his back porch. No big deal, he thought. But when he climbed up to take a closer look, his finger punched right through the wood. Carpenter bees had been busy, and a few winters’ worth of ice dams had done the rest. Water had been sneaking behind the siding for who knows how long. What started as a “small trim repair” quickly turned into a full soffit and fascia replacement on that side of the house. And of course, the gutter had to come down too.
Tom’s story isn’t unusual around Indianapolis—our freeze-thaw cycles, mature trees, and persistent woodpeckers can chew up exterior trim faster than you’d think. So if you’re staring at peeling paint, sagging gutters, or just want to know the real soffit and fascia replacement cost in Indianapolis for 2026, I’ll break it down the way I wish someone had for Tom.
Why Your Soffit And Fascia Matter More Than You Think
Soffit is the flat material that closes off the underside of your roof overhang. It’s got a big job—it pulls air into the attic to keep temperatures steady and moisture from building up. Fascia is the vertical board that runs along the roof edge, right behind the gutters. It gives the gutters something solid to anchor to and keeps birds, squirrels, and bats from moving into your eaves.
When either one fails, you get trouble. Rot spreads. Gutters pull away. Ice dams form more easily. Pests find new entry points. And honestly, it makes the whole house look tired. People in neighborhoods like Fishers and Carmel notice—curb appeal matters when every other house on the block is well kept.
2026 Soffit And Fascia Replacement Cost In Indianapolis
Across the Indy metro—from Broad Ripple out to Avon and Greenwood—here’s what you can expect to pay per linear foot for soffit and fascia work, including materials and labor. These numbers are for a typical one-story home with decent access. Two-story jobs usually add $2–$4 per foot for safety equipment and extra time.
- Vinyl soffit with aluminum-wrapped fascia: $14–$24/lf
- All-aluminum system (soffit and fascia): $18–$30/lf
- Wood fascia with vented vinyl soffit: $16–$28/lf
- Fiber-cement fascia with vinyl or aluminum soffit: $22–$38/lf
- Premium PVC fascia with vinyl or aluminum soffit: $28–$45/lf
Those ranges cover removing your old material and hauling it away. If you’re just getting a soffit replacement Indianapolis crew to swap out a small section, you’ll probably pay a minimum trip charge—most companies around here won’t mobilize for less than $1,200–$1,800.
So what does that mean for a whole house? A small ranch with about 160 linear feet of eave typically runs $2,400 to $5,500. A two-story with 220 linear feet might land between $3,500 and $8,000. Bigger homes with complex rooflines—lots of hips, dormers, and gables—can push past $10,000 or more. The fascia board replacement cost alone jumps if you’re dealing with intricate profiles or custom bends.
What Drives The Price Up (Or Down)
- Total linear feet is the biggest factor. The more eave you have, the more material and time you need.
- Height and access. Two-story houses need scaffolding or lifts, which adds rental costs.
- Roofline complexity. Rake board replacement along steep gables or multiple levels takes longer.
- Material choice. Upgrading from painted wood to PVC or fiber cement changes your material cost by 40% or more.
- Rot or rafter-tail repair. You won’t know until the old stuff comes off. Budget $85–$200 per trouble spot.
- Gutter work. If gutters have to come off and go back on, that’s another $6–$12 per foot. And if they’re shot, a full gutter and fascia replacement might be smarter—we’ll get to that.
- Ventilation upgrades. Swapping solid soffit for continuous vented panels can stabilize attic temps and help with ice dams. Figure $300–$900 depending on attic size.
Real-World Cost Add-Ons
When I’m walking a property in Zionsville or Brownsburg, I always tell homeowners to plan for the unexpected. Here’s what often comes up once we peel back the old fascia:
- Rot repair on rafter tails or sub-fascia: $85–$200 per spot. We cut out the bad wood, sister in new lumber, and wrap it tight.
- Paint or stain for wood elements: $2–$4 per foot if you want wood fascia to have a stained look instead of wrapping it.
- Drip edge adjustments: Sometimes the existing drip edge is too short or rusted. Not a huge expense, but it’s part of getting the water-shedding details right.
- Gutter removal and reinstall: $6–$12/lf. But honestly, if your gutters are more than 15 years old or have seams pulling apart, it’s often cheaper in the long run to swap in new ones while the fascia is bare. No extra labor for removal, and the new install goes faster.
I remember a homeowner in Noblesville who insisted we rehang her old gutters to save a few hundred bucks. A year later, a seam split during a downpour and water poured down her siding. She ended up paying for new gutters anyway—plus some siding repair. Sometimes the cheaper path upfront isn’t cheaper at all.
Picking The Right Material For Indiana’s Mood Swings
Indianapolis weather isn’t polite. We get freeze-thaw cycles that yank on fasteners, spring hail that dents aluminum, and summer humidity that rots wood in a hurry. Here’s how the main materials hold up:
- Aluminum fascia doesn’t rust, laughs at carpenter bee damage fascia, and takes paint well if you ever want a color change. The aluminum fascia cost per linear foot is usually in that $14–$30 range installed, depending on thickness and whether soffit is included.
- PVC fascia (cellular PVC) is the premium choice. It won’t crack, peel, or absorb moisture. Carpenter bees ignore it. It’s pricier upfront—often $28–$45/lf with soffit—but you’ll never paint it again.
- Vinyl soffit is the most affordable vented option, and it comes in dozens of colors. The vinyl soffit installation price is typically part of that lower-end $14–$24/lf package. It can get brittle in extreme cold, but a good install with proper expansion gaps prevents trouble.
- Wood fascia has that classic look, but it needs repainting every few years and is a magnet for woodpeckers. If you’ve got carpenter bee holes (those perfect ½-inch circles), switching to a wrapped or PVC fascia is a long-term fix.
- Fiber cement fascia (like HardieTrim) is fire-resistant and stable, but it’s heavy. Expect $22–$38/lf when paired with soffit. It handles Indiana’s moisture well if detailed correctly.
How RoofPros Works (And Why It’s Not A Sales Pitch)
I’ve heard enough contractor horror stories. So we keep things painfully straightforward. When you call us for a soffit and fascia estimate, here’s what happens:
- We come out and measure every linear foot, take photos of damaged areas (including what you can’t see from the ground), and talk about your goals.
- You get a written, line-by-line scope with good/better/best material options and per-foot pricing. No vague “exterior trim” line items.
- We show you real color samples against your siding and gutters so nothing clashes.
- We explain exactly how we’ll protect your landscaping, where scaffolding will go, and how long the job takes.
- And we don’t push. You decide when you’re ready. If you want to get a firm number on your soffit and fascia replacement cost in Indianapolis, head here to grab a no-pressure walk-through.
Soffit, Fascia, and Gutters: Why Doing Them Together Saves Headaches
Almost every fascia job involves the gutters. They hang off the fascia, so to replace the boards, gutters come down. If your gutters are already aging—rusting, leaking, pulling away—replacing them at the same time means you pay zero extra for removal and get a seamless system that fits the new fascia perfectly. A gutter and fascia replacement done together also gives you a chance to resize downspouts for heavier rains. After a few recent springs in Indy with biblical downpours, that’s worth considering. Before you decide, check out our roof maintenance checklist for other trouble spots to address while the eaves are open.
When A Patch Job Makes Sense (And When It Doesn’t)
If you’ve got one short section of fascia rot near a leaky gutter corner, and the rest is solid, a repair is reasonable. But if the soffit vents are painted shut, the wood is spongy in multiple spots, or you can see daylight through the seams, full replacement is usually the better call. Patching rotted fascia while ignoring failing soffit is like slapping a Band-Aid on a broken arm—it buys you a little time, but the problem keeps spreading.
Getting Ready For Install Day
Once you’ve picked your materials and booked a date, a few small things make the day go smooth: - Move cars out of the driveway and clear anything leaning against the house. - Let neighbors know there’ll be a crew and some noise. - If you’re in a newer HOA neighborhood (looking at you, Westfield and Plainfield), double-check that your color selection doesn’t need approval. Most don’t, but a quick call can save a headache. - Plan to keep pets inside. The sound of nail guns can spook even calm dogs.
Our crews work through light cold, but if a blizzard hits, we’ll reschedule. Fall and late spring tend to book quickly, so if you’re thinking about an eaves trim cost estimate for this year, reach out early. We’d rather get you on the calendar than have you wait until the paint is falling off.
Hope that clears up what soffit and fascia replacement actually costs around Indianapolis. It’s one of those projects that’s easy to ignore until you can’t, so if you’re even a little worried about what’s hiding behind those old boards, give us a shout.
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