Roof replacement is a major investment, and the honest answer to "what does it cost?" is that it depends. Here's exactly what drives the price in South Florida — and why a free inspection is the only way to get a real number.
Tell us about your South Florida project and we'll get back to you with a free, no-obligation assessment and written estimate.
Anyone who quotes a roof price over the phone without seeing it is guessing. Roof replacement cost depends on factors specific to your home, and they vary enormously from one roof to the next. What we can do is explain exactly what drives the price, so you understand your quote and can compare honestly.
Several factors determine what your roof will cost:
The cheapest roof today isn't always the most economical. A shingle roof costs less upfront but lasts fifteen to twenty-five years; a metal or tile roof costs more but can last forty to seventy years. Spread over the lifespan, the longer-lasting roof is often the better value — and adds more to your home. We help you weigh upfront cost against long-term value honestly.
We give you a fixed, written quote after a free on-site inspection. The price we quote is the price you pay, with no hidden fees and no mid-project surprises — unless we find something unexpected beneath the old roof, like rotted decking, which we always discuss with you before proceeding. That transparency is how roofing should work.
It depends on material, roof size, pitch, tear-off, decking condition, and complexity. There's no honest single price without seeing the roof. We provide a free inspection and a fixed, written quote so you know exactly what you'll pay.
Because every roof is different, and a phone quote would be a guess. Roof size, material, pitch, layers, and decking condition all change the price. An on-site inspection is the only way to give you an accurate, honest number.
Asphalt shingle has the lowest upfront cost, metal is mid-range, and tile is the most expensive. But shingle also has the shortest lifespan, so over time the pricier materials can be the better value.
No. Our written quote is the price you pay. The only exception is if we find hidden problems beneath the old roof, like rotted decking, which we always show you and discuss before doing any extra work.
Yes, a new roof is one of the higher-return improvements, especially in South Florida where buyers and insurers care about roof age and condition. Longer-lasting materials add more value.