Roofing in Anchorage
Compare local roofing contractor pros in Anchorage and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: $150–$45,000
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Roofing prices in Anchorage
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minor repair Replace shingles, reseal flashing, fix a small leak | $150 | $450 | $1,500 |
| Partial reroof (one slope/section) Tear-off and replace one section after localized damage | $1,500 | $3,500 | $7,000 |
| Full asphalt replacement (~2,000 sq ft roof) Tear-off, underlayment, new architectural shingles | $8,000 | $12,000 | $20,000 |
| Metal roof replacement Standing seam or metal shingle full replacement | $15,000 | $25,000 | $45,000 |
How to hire a roofing pro in United States
- Verify the state contractor license where required (Florida and California have specific roofing classifications; requirements vary widely by state)
- Demand certificates of general liability and workers' comp insurance — roofing is a high-injury trade and uninsured crews are your risk
- Get 3 like-for-like bids covering tear-off, underlayment, ice-and-water shield, flashing replacement and a per-sheet price for deck repair
- Check manufacturer certifications (e.g. GAF or Owens Corning credentialed installers) — they unlock longer material warranties
- Confirm the contractor pulls the building permit, not you
- For insurance claims, get your own adjuster's assessment before signing any assignment-of-benefits paperwork
- Get both the manufacturer warranty and a written workmanship warranty (5-10 years)
Roofing licenses are set at state level — some states (Florida, California) require a dedicated roofing classification while others have no licensing at all. Workers' comp verification matters everywhere: roofing has among the highest injury rates of any trade, and homeowners can be exposed by uninsured crews.
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See the full breakdown of what drives roofing prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
What warranties should a new roof come with?
Two separate ones: a manufacturer warranty on materials (often 20-50 years, sometimes conditional on certified installation) and the contractor's own workmanship warranty (5-10 years is respectable). Get both in writing and understand what voids them — foot traffic, unventilated attics and pressure washing are common exclusions.
What are the warning signs I need roof work?
Missing, cracked or slipped tiles/shingles; granules collecting in gutters; daylight visible in the attic; damp patches or staining on top-floor ceilings; sagging roof lines; and moss holding moisture against the surface. Catching these early usually means a repair instead of a replacement.
Should gutters be replaced at the same time as the roof?
Often worth it: the access equipment is already up, edge details integrate cleanly, and combined pricing beats two separate jobs. If your gutters are under ten years old and sound, keep them — but have the roofer protect them during tear-off and note their condition in writing.
Can just part of a roof be replaced?
Yes — replacing one slope or section is common after localised storm damage and costs far less than a full reroof. The trade-offs are colour mismatch with weathered existing material and tying new work into old underlayment. It makes most sense when the rest of the roof has meaningful life left.
How much does a roof replacement cost in the US?
Most homeowners pay $9,000-$18,000 for a standard asphalt shingle replacement, with the full range running roughly $6,000 to $30,000+ depending on size, pitch and region. Metal roofs typically run $15,000-$45,000. Per-square (100 sq ft) pricing of $450-$1,100 installed is the common quoting unit.
Does homeowners insurance cover roof replacement?
For sudden storm damage, usually yes — but many insurers now pay only depreciated actual-cash-value on roofs past 10-15 years old, not full replacement cost. Check your policy's roof schedule, document damage immediately, and be cautious with contractors who want to 'handle the claim for you.'
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