Top-Rated Tallahassee Roofing Contractors
Florida's heat, storms, and hurricane season take a serious toll on roofs. Whether you need a minor repair, full replacement, or emergency tarping after storm damage, these Tallahassee roofers are licensed, insured, and trusted by local homeowners.
Capital Roofing Tallahassee
Tallahassee's highest-rated roofing contractor. Full roof replacements, repair, and emergency storm response. Certainteed ShingleMaster certified.
- CertainTeed certified
- Insurance claim assistance
- Emergency tarp service
Tallahassee Roof Masters
Specialists in metal roofing, tile roofing, and flat roof systems. Excellent for older homes needing full replacement or commercial flat roofs.
- Metal & tile roofing experts
- Flat & commercial roofing
- 25-year workmanship warranty
Leon County Roofing
Affordable roofing repair and shingle replacement. Family-owned and serving Leon County since 2008. Great for smaller repairs and insurance supplement work.
- Affordable repair specialists
- Shingle & tile repair
- Insurance supplement help
Roofing Services Available in Tallahassee
- Full roof replacement (asphalt shingle, metal, tile)
- Roof repair — leaks, missing shingles, flashing
- Storm damage assessment & emergency tarping
- Insurance claim documentation & supplement
- Flat roof systems (TPO, EPDM, modified bitumen)
- Gutter installation & repair
- Roof inspection & maintenance
- Skylight installation & repair
- Attic ventilation improvement
- Commercial roof replacement
Roofing FAQ — Tallahassee, FL
Full roof replacement in Tallahassee typically costs $8,000–$20,000 for an average single-family home. Asphalt shingles run $4–$7 per square foot installed; metal roofing $8–$14 per sq ft. Variables include roof size, pitch, material, and whether decking replacement is needed. Always get at least 3 written estimates.
Florida's heat, UV exposure, and hurricane-season storms reduce roof lifespan compared to northern states. Asphalt shingle roofs in Tallahassee typically last 15–25 years. Metal roofs last 40–70 years. Have your roof inspected annually after hurricane season ends in November.
Most Florida homeowner's policies cover storm damage (wind, hail, falling trees) but not wear and tear. Document damage immediately with photos, contact your insurer to open a claim, then get a written damage assessment from a licensed roofer. Avoid signing anything presented by door-to-door "storm chasers" — they are often unlicensed and commit assignment-of-benefits fraud.