Copper is the lifetime-plus gutter material: it never rusts, needs no paint, work-hardens with age, and develops the green-brown patina that historic districts and premium builds prize. Free referral to a licensed local pro — one call, no obligation.
Copper is the lifetime-plus gutter material: it never rusts, needs no paint, work-hardens with age, and develops the green-brown patina that historic districts and premium builds prize. It is also a genuinely different trade from aluminum work — joints are soldered, not caulked; expansion has to be engineered; and copper's scrap value makes theft a real design consideration. The result is a system routinely still working at 60+ years.
These are the specific failure modes licensed installers see most on this work.
Galvanic corrosion where copper contacts aluminum or bare steel (fasteners, flashing, hangers must be copper or brass).
Improperly soldered joints cracking with thermal expansion on long runs.
Runoff staining light-colored masonry below during early patina years.
One call to (888) 650-1415 — tell us your ZIP code and what the gutters are doing.
We connect you with a licensed local gutter professional who covers your area.
The pro inspects and quotes the work. No obligation, and the referral costs you nothing.
Your local pro completes the job — installation, repair, or maintenance.
Material cost is a fraction of it — the labor is skilled metalwork. Joints are soldered by hand, hangers and fasteners must be copper or brass, and the crews that do it well are specialty craftsmen. You are buying a 50–100 year system installed once.
European installations older than a century are still in service. The metal doesn't rust; the practical lifespan is set by joint workmanship and mechanical damage, which is why installer skill matters more with copper than any other gutter material.
Yes — bright penny copper dulls to brown in months and reaches green-blue patina over 5–20 years depending on climate (faster near salt air). Patina is protective, not decay. It can be accelerated chemically or sealed to preserve the bright finish, though sealing needs renewal.
No — direct copper-to-aluminum contact causes galvanic corrosion that eats the aluminum. A copper system needs copper downspouts, hangers, and fasteners, or engineered isolation between metals.
Scrap value makes ground-level copper a known target in some areas. Installers mitigate with tamper-resistant fasteners and by running lower sections in less accessible configurations; insurance riders are worth a conversation on large installations.
Half-round is traditional for copper — it matches historic architecture, sheds debris better, and is easier to solder cleanly. K-style copper exists for transitional styles. Your installer will match the home's period and rooflines.
The licensed installer prices by linear foot, profile, and access; copper runs a multiple of aluminum. GutterLinker's referral to a copper-experienced pro is free — ask to see photos of their soldered work.
Less than any other material: no painting, no sealant renewal. They still need debris cleaning like any gutter, and soldered joints should get a visual check every few years — most go decades untouched.
Free referral to a licensed local gutter pro. One call. No obligation.
Call (888) 650-1415 Now