Can The Gutter Guy do work a standard stock-and-install crew turns down? On the evidence here, yes. The company runs its own roll-forming machinery, so profiles are bent on site instead of bought in. Seth Forrestier has been on the tools since 1996, started this East Texas operation in 2009, and now trains other installers nationally through an organization called Gutter School. For the homeowner who needs an odd profile and has already been told no twice, that fabrication capability is the reason to read further.
The fabrication case
This is where almost everything worth knowing sits. The continuous gutter range covers more than eleven profiles and sizes, including half round gutter, continuous box gutter, and continuous straight face gutter. The site also names Yankee box gutter restoration and castle-style downspouts as work The Gutter Guy will fabricate for. None of that means anything on a 1990s ranch house with a standard run. It means a great deal on a round building, a Tudor, a century-old structure, or any roofline a typical crew cannot match from stock. Owning the machine is what lets a contractor say yes to those jobs, and most cannot.
The supporting detail backs the claim. A Technical Library on the site publishes installation details and procedures, which is rare for a residential trades contractor and lines up with the Gutter School teaching. A working tradesman who teaches the trade nationally is putting a public claim to expertise on record, the kind most contractors never have to back up. Publishing your own methods is an invitation to be measured against them. Leaf guard gutter protection rounds out the offering as a system component. Forrestier holds membership in the East Texas Builders Association, and The Gutter Guy has entered the Parade of Homes, meaning work shown publicly against other area contractors rather than completed quietly for private clients. Taken together, the in-house roll-forming, the named specialty services, and the documented national instruction give a buyer with a hard custom job enough published specifics to decide on. For that narrow case, The Gutter Guy is a sensible name to call.
It is worth being clear about who this does not help. A homeowner replacing a standard run on a conventional house gains nothing from any of it. The roll-forming machine, the Yankee box restoration, the castle-style downspouts, the published procedures, all of it is overhead for a job a dozen ordinary crews can do faster and with references on hand. The Gutter Guy is built around the difficult end of the trade, and the listing reads that way. Match the contractor to the job and most readers fall on the wrong side of the line.
Coverage, contact, and the reputation problem
The service area is East Texas, named town by town: Longview, Gilmer, Marshall, Tyler, Kilgore, and Henderson. A defined radius like that is honest and immediately useful, since it tells you in one glance whether a site visit is plausible. Getting a quote means a free estimate; an estimator visits, the site puts the visit at five to ten minutes, and payment runs through SwipeSimple online after the job is done. Contact is a request form, with Facebook listed beside it. There is no phone number, so a buyer who wants to ask one quick question before filling out a form has nowhere to do it. That is a friction point, not a fatal one.
The reputation question is where the listing falls short, and it falls short hard for a service like this. The name is shared by several unrelated companies around the country, so any star rating that turns up in a general search cannot be tied to this East Texas operation with any confidence. There is no aggregate score a buyer can lean on. Everything an outsider can verify comes from the company's own pages and its two local affiliations. The East Texas Builders Association membership and the Parade of Homes entry connect The Gutter Guy to the local trade community and carry a measure of accountability, but neither is a substitute for a body of past-customer feedback a stranger can read. For a custom restoration job that may run into thousands of dollars and depends entirely on craftsmanship, that absence of independent, attributable feedback is a serious problem. Published method documents show what The Gutter Guy intends to do; they say nothing about what past customers actually got. A buyer cannot reasonably commit on self-reported expertise alone, however detailed.
So the honest read is cautious. The fabrication capability is unusual, and the published specifics give a buyer real footing on the rare hard job. But there is no outside record to confirm the work matches the claims, and the standard substitutes for that record are not available here. A homeowner with a routine East Texas gutter run has no reason to take on an unproven contractor with no phone number and no traceable reviews when ordinary stock-and-install crews with visible local references are easy to find. The narrow exception is the buyer with a genuinely unusual roofline who has exhausted every other option; for that person The Gutter Guy is worth a call, but only after demanding direct references from Forrestier and confirming a few past jobs in person. Anyone else should not treat the listing's own pages as enough to act on.






Business address
The Gutter Guy
624 Leach St,
Kilgore,
TX
75662
United States
Contact details
Phone: 9035222191