2026 PRICING GUIDE

Roof Replacement Cost in 2026

A new roof in 2026 averages $10,250 installed for architectural asphalt shingles on a 2,000 SF roof, with the typical range running $7,000 to $17,000. Materials, pitch, complexity, tear-off scope, and region drive the variance. Verified pricing data per HomeGuide, This Old House, Angi, Modernize, and Fixr 2026 reporting.

Asphalt avg

$10,250

2,000 SF roof

Per SF range

$4 – $11

all materials

National range

$7.5K – $30K

typical project

Labor share

50 – 60%

of total cost

2026 Roof Replacement Cost by Material

Installed cost ranges from HomeGuide, This Old House, Angi, Modernize, Fixr, and Western States Metal Roofing 2026 reporting. All figures cover materials plus labor on a standard residential pitch including basic underlayment, ridge cap, and drip edge — tear-off, decking repair, and steep-slope premiums add on top.

MaterialInstalled Per Square2,000 SF RoofService Life
3-Tab Asphalt Shingles$343 – $500$7,000 – $11,00015 – 20 yrs
Architectural Asphalt (30-yr)$550 – $800$11,000 – $17,00025 – 30 yrs
Premium Designer Asphalt$700 – $1,200$14,000 – $25,00030 – 50 yrs
Corrugated Metal$500 – $1,200$10,000 – $24,00025 – 40 yrs
Standing Seam Metal$1,000 – $1,800$16,000 – $36,00040 – 70 yrs
Stone-Coated Steel$700 – $1,500$14,000 – $30,00040 – 70 yrs
Concrete Tile$700 – $1,900$14,000 – $38,00050+ yrs
Clay Tile$1,100 – $2,200$22,000 – $44,00075 – 100 yrs
Natural Slate$1,780 – $3,848$36,000 – $77,00075 – 200 yrs
Copper Standing Seam$2,000 – $4,000$40,000 – $80,000+100+ yrs

One roofing square = 100 square feet of roof surface. Multiply your building footprint by the pitch multiplier (1.054 at 4/12, 1.118 at 6/12, 1.202 at 8/12) for actual roof area. Use the roof pitch calculator to confirm slope before applying any cost number. For commercial flat-roof projects (TPO, EPDM, PVC, modified bitumen), see the dedicated flat roof replacement cost guide.

Roof Replacement Cost by House Size

Installed cost ranges by roof footprint, assuming standard 6/12 pitch and simple gable shape. Multiply the bottom of each range by 1.2 to 1.4 for steep slope or cut-up hip roofs.

FootprintSquares (6/12)Asphalt ShinglesMetal RoofingTile / Slate
1,000 SF~12 sq$4,500 – $11,000$10,000 – $24,000$9,000 – $28,000
1,500 SF~18 sq$6,500 – $15,000$14,000 – $32,000$13,000 – $40,000
2,000 SF~22-24 sq$9,000 – $18,000$16,000 – $36,000$17,000 – $50,000
2,500 SF~27-30 sq$11,000 – $23,000$20,000 – $45,000$21,000 – $60,000
3,000 SF~33-36 sq$14,000 – $27,000$24,000 – $54,000$26,000 – $75,000
3,500 SF~38-42 sq$16,000 – $32,000$28,000 – $63,000$30,000 – $90,000

What Drives Roof Replacement Cost

Six factors push the same roof through a 3x cost range. Understanding each one keeps a contractor bid honest and prevents mid-project surprises.

Material Choice

Asphalt shingles to natural slate spans a 10x price range. Architectural asphalt ($550-$800/sq) is the residential default. Standing seam metal ($1,000-$1,800/sq) is the premium upgrade. Tile and slate live above $1,100/sq with structural verification requirements.

Roof Pitch and Surface Area

A 1,500 SF footprint becomes 1,677 SF of roof at 6/12 pitch, 1,803 SF at 8/12, and 2,121 SF at 12/12. Apply the pitch multiplier before quoting because steeper roofs need more shingles, more underlayment, and longer install time.

Pitch Premium (8/12+)

Steep slope adds 15 to 35 percent on labor at pitches over 8/12. Productivity drops 25 to 40 percent because crews need harnesses and roof jacks. Most contractors carry a separate steep-slope rate that triggers at the 8/12 threshold.

Roof Complexity

Simple gable roofs waste 5 to 8 percent of material. Cut-up hip roofs with multiple valleys, dormers, and skylights waste 15 to 20 percent. Each cut edge consumes shingle material plus the labor to handle it.

Tear-Off and Decking

Single-layer asphalt tear-off runs $100 to $150 per square plus $40 to $60 disposal. Multi-layer tear-offs run $150 to $250 per square. Decking surprises (rotted plywood, hidden second layers) add $1 to $3 per SF in repair allowance.

Region and Labor Market

South and Mountain West run $5.50 to $7.50 per SF on architectural asphalt; Northeast and West Coast run $7.50 to $10.00 per SF. Prevailing labor rates, ICC code zone, and material delivery distance drive a 30 to 50 percent regional spread.

Regional Roof Replacement Cost Variance

Labor rates, code requirements, and material delivery distance drive a 30 to 50 percent spread across US regions. Architectural asphalt installed prices by region:

RegionAsphalt $/SF (installed)Notes
South (TX, AZ, FL, GA)$4.50 – $6.50Lowest labor rates; hot-weather underlayment uplift
Midwest (OH, IL, MI)$5.50 – $7.50Standard pricing; ice & water shield required in cold zones
Northeast (NY, MA, NJ)$7.00 – $9.50Higher labor; tight permitting in coastal jurisdictions
West Coast (CA, OR, WA)$7.50 – $10.00Highest labor rates; strict code in coastal CA wildfire zones
Mountain West (CO, UT, NM)$5.50 – $7.50Hail markets — Class 4 impact rating common; insurance discount available

Insurance, Tax, and Hidden Cost Considerations

Homeowners Insurance

Most US policies cover sudden storm damage (wind, hail, fallen trees) under ACV or RCV terms minus deductible ($1,000 to $5,000 typical, higher in hail zones). Gradual wear and age are not covered. A storm claim sends a carrier adjuster who sets scope per Xactimate-aligned line items.

Class 4 Insurance Discount

Class 4 UL 2218 impact-resistant materials qualify for 5 to 35 percent premium discounts in hail markets. Texas TDI publishes a credit table; Oklahoma, Colorado, Nebraska, and Kansas run similar programs. Class 4 metal requires a signed cosmetic damage waiver — the policy covers function, not dent appearance.

Energy and Cool-Roof Rebates

Energy Star cool-roof rated materials (reflective metal, certain shingles) qualify for utility rebates of $0.10 to $0.50 per SF in 30+ US states and save 10 to 25 percent on summer cooling in IECC zones 1 to 3. Rebate paperwork runs 30 to 90 days to land but is meaningful on a 2,000 SF roof.

Hidden Costs to Budget

Permit fees $200 to $2,700 by jurisdiction. Decking repair allowance $1 to $3 per SF for rotted plywood discoveries. Chimney flashing rebuild $300 to $1,200. Skylight reseal or replace $400 to $2,500 each. HVAC curb and pipe boot work $50 to $200 per penetration. Build a 5 to 10 percent contingency on every retail bid.

Roof Replacement Cost FAQ

Q:How much does a new roof cost in 2026?

A: A standard 2,000 SF architectural asphalt shingle roof replacement averages $10,250 in 2026 (per HomeGuide and This Old House 2026 data), with a typical range of $7,000 to $17,000. Standing seam metal runs $16,000 to $36,000 ($10 to $18 per square foot). Concrete tile runs $14,000 to $38,000. Natural slate runs $36,000 to $77,000+. Across all materials, the U.S. national range is $7,500 to $30,000 with $9,000 to $18,000 being typical for asphalt.

Q:What is the cheapest type of roof to install?

A: 3-tab asphalt shingles remain the cheapest residential roofing at $343 to $500 per square installed (per HomeGuide 2026). Most contractors no longer install 3-tab on new replacements because 30-year architectural asphalt is only $100 to $300 more per square and lasts 50 to 100 percent longer with better warranty coverage. The cheapest practical replacement in 2026 is architectural asphalt at $550 to $800 per square installed.

Q:How much does roof replacement cost per square foot in 2026?

A: The 2026 national average roof replacement is $5.09 to $6.66 per square foot for architectural asphalt (per Modernize). Standing seam metal runs $10 to $18 per square foot installed. Premium materials reach $20 to $40+ per square foot for copper or natural slate. Labor typically makes up 50 to 60 percent of total cost, averaging $2.50 to $6.00 per square foot. The total spans roughly $4 to $11 per square foot for most residential materials.

Q:What factors drive roof replacement cost?

A: Six factors drive the variance: (1) material — asphalt to slate spans 10x price range; (2) roof size — measured in squares (100 SF) of actual roof surface, not building footprint; (3) pitch — 8/12 and steeper add a 15 to 35 percent labor premium; (4) complexity — cut-up hip roofs with multiple valleys waste 15 to 20 percent of material; (5) tear-off and decking — $100 to $175 per square for single-layer asphalt plus disposal, more for multi-layer or rotted deck; (6) region — 30 to 50 percent labor variance from South to Northeast/West Coast.

Q:Will my homeowners insurance cover roof replacement?

A: Most US homeowners policies cover sudden damage from wind, hail, or fallen trees under either Actual Cash Value (depreciated) or Replacement Cost Value (full replacement minus deductible). They do not cover gradual wear or age-related failure. A storm-damaged roof claim sends a carrier-assigned adjuster who sets scope per Xactimate-aligned line items. Deductibles typically run $1,000 to $5,000 on standard policies, higher in hail-zone markets. Class 4 UL 2218 impact-resistant roofing qualifies for 5 to 35 percent premium discounts (Texas TDI publishes a credit table; OK, CO, NE, KS run similar programs).

Q:Is a metal roof worth the higher cost over asphalt shingles?

A: For owners staying in the home 20+ years, yes in most scenarios. Architectural asphalt costs $11,000 to $17,000 installed and lasts 25 to 30 years — figure $400 to $700 per year over the service life including future tear-off and replacement. Standing seam metal costs $16,000 to $36,000 and lasts 40 to 70 years — $300 to $750 per year. Metal also reduces homeowners insurance 5 to 35 percent in hail markets, saves 10 to 25 percent on summer cooling in IECC zones 1 to 3 with cool-roof coatings, and increases resale value 1 to 6 percent. For owners selling within 10 years, the upfront cash premium rarely recoups in resale alone.

Q:How much does tear-off add to a roof replacement?

A: Single-layer asphalt tear-off runs $100 to $150 per square in 2026, plus $40 to $60 per square in disposal ($50 to $150 per ton landfill fee on 3 to 5 tons of debris per typical residential job, per SquareDash 2026 data). Multi-layer tear-offs run $150 to $250 per square. On a 2,000 SF roof (22 to 24 squares), expect $3,500 to $5,000 for tear-off and disposal combined. Tear-off is usually 8 to 15 percent of total replacement cost.

Q:How long does a roof replacement take?

A: A typical 2,000 SF residential asphalt shingle replacement takes 1 to 3 days for a 3 to 5 person crew under good weather. Metal roofing typically takes 2 to 5 days due to slower panel install and more precise measurement. Tile and slate take 4 to 8 days because each tile is laid and fastened individually. Tear-off alone is half a day to a full day on a single-layer roof. Steep slopes (8/12+) add 20 to 40 percent to schedule.

Q:Do I need a permit for a roof replacement?

A: Most US jurisdictions require a building permit for full roof replacement (any work that involves tear-off and re-decking). Permit fees run $200 to $500 in most markets, up to $2,700 in restrictive coastal or HOA-heavy zones. Permits trigger code inspection — ice & water shield placement in cold zones, attic ventilation calculations, and Class A fire rating verification on metal-over-shingles assemblies. Skipping the permit often voids manufacturer warranties.

Q:Can I install a new roof over the old one without tearing off?

A: Yes in most jurisdictions per IRC R908, with caveats: most codes allow a maximum of two total layers (so you can install over one existing layer of asphalt only). The deck must be inspected and intact. Metal over shingles requires an approved underlayment plus vented batten system. Going over existing shingles saves $1,000 to $3,500 in tear-off cost on a 2,000 SF roof, but the trade-off is added weight, no chance to inspect decking condition, and warranty terms that may require manufacturer approval.

Q:How accurate are online roof replacement cost calculators?

A: Calculators that take only square footage and material are 30 to 50 percent uncertain because they cannot see pitch, complexity, tear-off scope, regional labor, or accessory requirements. A calculator that builds cost from squares + material + tear-off + waste + labor + accessories lands within 10 to 15 percent of a contractor bid when inputs are honest. The only way to get within 5 percent is a site visit or aerial measurement plus a contractor attic walk. Use our free roofing cost calculator for the line-item buildup.

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Roof Replacement Cost in 2026 | Average by Material & Size