A roof inspection is worth booking in a few specific situations: after a hail or windstorm, when you're buying or selling a home, when you spot a leak or a stain on a ceiling, or simply when your roof is old enough that you want to know how much life is left. In every case, the value is the same — you replace guesswork with facts.
Our inspection covers the whole system, not just the shingles. We check the field of the roof, the flashing at chimneys and penetrations, the valleys, the eavestrough and fascia, the ventilation, and — where it's accessible — the attic for signs of moisture. You get a written report with photos and an honest recommendation: sometimes that's a small repair, sometimes it's full replacement, and sometimes it's 'your roof is fine, call us in five years.'
That honesty matters. Some contractors use a 'free inspection' as a pretext to find problems that aren't there. We'd rather earn a customer for the next 30 years than sell an unnecessary roof today. If your roof has years of life left, we'll tell you.
For homebuyers and sellers especially, a roof inspection is one of the cheapest ways to avoid a five-figure surprise — the roof is the single most expensive component most inspections gloss over. Our guide on the 7 warning signs your roof needs replacing is a useful primer before we visit.
How it works
A simple, no-pressure process
- 1
Book your inspection
Call or request online. We schedule around you, usually within a business day or two.
- 2
On-site inspection
We inspect the full roof system — field, flashing, valleys, ventilation, eavestrough, attic where accessible.
- 3
Photos & written report
You get a plain-English report with photos of anything we found.
- 4
Honest recommendation
Repair, replace, or nothing needed — we tell you straight, with no pressure.
- 5
Optional quote
If work is needed, we can provide a fixed written quote. If not, there's no obligation.
What we inspect
Shingles / panels
Wear, curling, granule loss, damage.
Flashing & penetrations
Chimneys, vents, skylights, walls.
Valleys & transitions
Where leaks most often start.
Ventilation
Intake/exhaust balance and attic airflow.
Eavestrough & fascia
Drainage and roof-edge condition.
Attic (if accessible)
Moisture, staining, insulation issues.

