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Colorado Homeowner Resource

Colorado weather
is brutal.
Your roof shouldn't be.

Years of experience in this market. We've watched hail claims get denied, companies take the money and disappear, and homeowners left holding the bill for work that didn't last. This site exists to fix that.

Licensed Roofing Experts
Hail, Wind & Snow Specialists
No Sales Pitch. Just Straight Talk.
We Understand the Colorado Market

What Every Colorado Homeowner Should Know

Colorado is one of the hardest places in the country to own a roof. The Front Range sits in what storm researchers call "Hail Alley" — a corridor stretching from Texas through Nebraska where hail frequency, size, and intensity are higher than almost anywhere in the U.S. Colorado Springs and the Palmer Divide average more than seven hail events per year, and golf-ball-sized hail is not unusual. The Denver metro ranks among the top markets in the country for roofing insurance claims in most years. When a major storm hits, it can generate tens of thousands of claims in a single afternoon.

Altitude makes everything harder. At 6,000 feet, UV radiation is roughly 25% more intense than at sea level — shingles oxidize and lose granules faster here than in lower-elevation states. Temperature swings of 50°F in a single day are common, and repeated freeze-thaw cycles stress every material on your roof. Snow loads, high-altitude wind events on the Palmer Divide, and a winter that can bring ice dams even in a mild year round out a climate that asks a lot of any roofing system.

The contractor market reflects all of this. After a major storm, the contractor population in Colorado can double or triple in days — out-of-state operators follow the hail events, collect deposits, and move on before the work is done or before problems surface. Colorado has no statewide roofing license. Licensing is handled locally, jurisdiction by jurisdiction, which means an out-of-town contractor can show up with no local accountability and no one here who knows their work. The companies worth hiring are the ones who were here before the storm and will be here long after it — the ones who shop at the same stores, whose kids go to the same schools, who have a reputation in this community worth protecting. That's a harder thing to fake than a license number.

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Tired of Door Knockers? Print a "No Roofing Solicitors" Sign A free, printable sign for your door or yard — one small way to cut down on storm-chaser pitches before they start.
Print It →
If You Just Got Hit

Your roof got hailed on. Take a breath.

Your home just got hit and you don't know how bad. Door knockers every five minutes. Everyone has a card, a clipboard, and a sense of urgency they're trying to make yours.

Here's what most of them won't tell you: unless you have a skylight blown out, a tree through the roof, or water actively coming in, you have time. You do not need to sign anything today. You do not need to call your insurance company today. You need to slow down.

Door knockers are trained to convince you that your roof is on the verge of failure — that one more rainstorm and you'll be living under a waterfall. And while it's true that hail can have a serious impact on a roof's lifespan and integrity, in most cases the damage isn't the kind that causes an immediate leak. Hail bruises shingles. It knocks off granules. Over time, that accelerates wear. But your roof is not a ticking clock that expires at midnight.

What you should do: find a trusted local roofer — someone with roots in this community — and ask them to give you an honest evaluation before you talk to your insurance company. A good roofer will tell you what they actually see. They'll tell you if the damage is significant enough to file a claim, or if it's superficial, or somewhere in between. And even if there is real damage, they'll tell you the truth about what that means for your roof right now versus down the road.

That's the conversation worth having. Not the one on your doorstep with someone who drove in from out of state this morning.

Learn More About Hail Damage →
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Verify Your Contractor

Look up your local building department in seconds — confirm your contractor's license is real and current, and see what your area requires for a reroof.

Find your department →
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Just Got Hailed On?

Before you sign anything or call your insurance company, read this. Straight talk on what to do, what to ignore, and how to protect yourself from door knockers.

What to do right now →
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How to Evaluate a Contractor

Licenses, insurance, bids, and contracts — a practical guide to vetting a roofing contractor before you sign anything, and the questions that separate the good ones from the rest.

Full vetting guide →
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Homeowner's Insurance Guide — Roof Claims

RCV vs. ACV coverage, how to file your own claim, what to expect from the adjuster, and how to avoid getting taken advantage of during the process.

Full insurance guide →
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Hail Season Guide — Colorado Springs

What to inspect before and after a storm, how to document damage, how to file your own claim, and how to avoid storm chasers. Step-by-step for El Paso County.

Full storm prep guide →
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Roofing Code & Permit Requirements

Colorado has no statewide roofing license — code enforcement happens at the local level, jurisdiction by jurisdiction. PPRBD (Pikes Peak Regional Building Department) reroofing requirements, nailing standards, and why code compliance is the floor, not the ceiling.

What Colorado homeowners need to know →
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What a Roof Replacement Actually Costs

Real price ranges by material, what drives your number up, and how an insurance claim changes what you pay out of pocket. An apples-to-apples way to compare bids.

Full cost guide →
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Shingle Comparison — Colorado Conditions

3-tab vs. architectural vs. SBS Class 4 vs. metal — an honest breakdown of every major shingle category, including what to avoid and why, for Front Range conditions.

Full comparison →

What Is a Colorado Proof Roof?

Class 4 shingles, 6-nail fastening, full ice and water barrier, new flashings, and balanced ventilation — what a quality roof installation actually looks like, beyond code minimums.

See the standard →
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Shingle Types & El Paso County Standards

Not all shingles survive a Colorado hailstorm. Class 4, SBS-modified, metal, synthetic — what the ratings mean and which products actually hold up at altitude.

Full guide + comparison table →
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Roof Ventilation & PPRBD Compliance

Intake, exhaust, and net free area — poor ventilation quietly shortens shingle life and can void your warranty. What balanced ventilation actually looks like in El Paso County.

Full ventilation guide →
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Is Your Roofer Owned by Private Equity?

PE firms have quietly bought up dozens of roofing companies, often keeping the local name on the truck. How to tell who's actually behind the contractor in front of you, and why it matters.

How to tell →
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Year-Round Roof Maintenance Checklist

A season-by-season checklist — what to check yourself from the ground, what needs a professional, and why the ladder is the most dangerous tool on this whole list.

Start the checklist →

Questions to Ask Before You Sign Anything

A contractor who gets uncomfortable with any of these is telling you something.

Red Flags to Watch For

Storm chasers show up fast after hail. Not all of them should be on your roof.

🚩 Door-to-Door After a Storm

Out-of-state contractors flood Colorado after major hail events. They take deposits and disappear, or do poor work and move on before you find out.

🚩 Asking You to Sign the Insurance Check Over

You control your claim. A contractor who wants to handle everything including the insurance payment is inserting themselves between you and your own policy.

🚩 No Verifiable Local Address

A P.O. box isn't a business address. Ask for a physical location you can verify. Out-of-town operators often borrow a local license number — confirm the name on the license matches who you're signing with.

🚩 Pressure to Sign Today

Urgency is a sales tactic. A legitimate contractor will give you time to make a decision. "This price is only good today" is never true of a reputable company.

🚩 Unusually Low Bids

They're cutting corners somewhere — materials, labor, or both. A bid that's 30% below everyone else isn't a deal. It's a preview of the roof you're going to get.

🚩 Offering to Cover Your Deductible

This is insurance fraud in Colorado, full stop. A contractor willing to commit fraud on your behalf will also cut corners on your roof. These two things go together.

🚩 Wants to "Handle" Your Insurance Claim

You file your own claim. You schedule your own adjuster. You're present for the inspection. A contractor who wants control of your claim is creating a situation where you have no visibility into your own money.

🚩 No Written Warranty on Labor

"We stand behind our work" is not a warranty. If they won't put a specific number of years and a scope of coverage in writing before you sign, assume there is no warranty.

Don't Sign Until You Read This

Most homeowners sign a roofing contract without asking the questions that actually matter. This checklist fixes that.

We included two columns: what to ask, and what the answer should sound like. A roofer who gets uncomfortable with any of these is telling you something.

Print it. Have it in hand when they show up. Watch how they react.

Colorado Homeowner's Roofing Checklist
  • Are you licensed in this county?Should provide PPRBD license number without hesitation.
  • Do you carry GL and workers' comp?Should offer a certificate of insurance on the spot.
  • Will you pull the permit?Yes. No exceptions. "We don't need one" is a red flag.
  • How are you handling ventilation?Should calculate your attic square footage, not just replace what's there.
  • What's the workmanship warranty?Should be in writing. "We stand behind our work" is not a warranty.
  • Who actually does the work?Subs are fine — but they should know and tell you upfront.
  • + 4 more questions in the full PDF...

Talk to Us

We work with a small number of local roofing companies we know personally — licensed, insured, family-owned operations that have been working El Paso County for years. Not a call center. Not a franchise. People who live here, work here, and will still be here if something needs to be made right.

Your information is never sold or shared with third parties. We connect you with one contractor — someone we'd call ourselves.

Years
of Colorado Roofing Experience
1000s
of Roofs in Colorado

We Built This Because Too Many People Got Burned

We've seen it too many times. A hailstorm hits, the door knockers arrive, and a homeowner — stressed, confused, and pressured — signs something they shouldn't have. Weeks later they have a roof that doesn't perform, a claim they didn't fully understand, or a contractor who's long gone and unreachable.

This site is that resource. No contractor trying to close a deal, no lead form disguised as advice, no agenda beyond giving you the information you need to make a good decision. Read it, use it, share it with a neighbor who just got hit. That's the whole point. And yes — if you want, we can connect you with a local roofer who holds themselves to everything on this page. But honestly, you don't need to click it.

Colorado's climate is harsh and its contractor market moves fast after a storm. Our goal is simple: make sure you walk into that conversation prepared. The best roof for your home starts with knowing enough to ask the right questions.