Roofing in Syracuse
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Typical price: $140–$41,400
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Roofing prices in Syracuse
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minor repair Replace shingles, reseal flashing, fix a small leak | $140 | $410 | $1,400 |
| Partial reroof (one slope/section) Tear-off and replace one section after localized damage | $1,400 | $3,200 | $6,450 |
| Full asphalt replacement (~2,000 sq ft roof) Tear-off, underlayment, new architectural shingles | $7,350 | $11,000 | $18,400 |
| Metal roof replacement Standing seam or metal shingle full replacement | $13,800 | $23,000 | $41,400 |
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
Do I need a permit for roof work?
Full replacements commonly require a building permit or regulatory compliance; small like-for-like repairs usually don't. Rules vary by country and municipality, and a legitimate contractor will know and handle the paperwork — treat 'we don't need a permit' on a full reroof as a flag to double-check.
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 a new roof be installed over the old one?
Sometimes — an overlay saves tear-off cost but hides deck problems, adds weight, and often shortens the new roof's life and warranty. Many codes and manufacturers limit roofs to two layers. Tear-off costs more upfront and is usually the better long-term decision; get both options priced.
Is moss on a roof actually a problem?
Yes, over time — moss holds moisture against the surface, lifts tile and shingle edges, and accelerates frost damage. Have it removed by soft washing or manual scraping, never high-pressure washing, which strips granules and forces water under the covering. Zinc or copper strips slow regrowth.
How long does a roof last?
Typical service lives: asphalt shingles 15-30 years, concrete tile 40-60, clay tile and slate 60-100+, metal 40-70, flat membranes (felt, EPDM, TPO) 15-30. Underlayment and flashings usually fail before the covering itself, which is why old roofs leak even with intact tiles.
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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