Roof Services Providers

The providers published through Roof Services Authority document licensed roofing contractors, specialty service providers, and related trades operating across the United States. Each provider is structured to reflect the service scope, licensing credentials, geographic coverage, and service category of the verified entity. The provider network spans residential, commercial, and industrial roofing sectors, with entries organized to support service seekers, insurance adjusters, property managers, and industry researchers navigating a fragmented national market.


How to use providers alongside other resources

Providers function as structured reference records, not endorsements or verified performance evaluations. A provider entry identifies a provider's declared service scope and operational geography — it does not substitute for independent license verification through a state contractor licensing board, nor does it replace permitting research with the local Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ).

For context on the provider network's purpose and how provider categories are defined, the Roof Services Provider Network Purpose and Scope page provides the classification framework underlying all entries. Researchers investigating a specific service type — such as membrane roofing, storm damage repair, or commercial flat-roof systems — should cross-reference provider entries against the scope definitions published there.

Providers are most effective when used in conjunction with the How to Use This Roof Services Resource page, which describes how licensing tiers, service categories, and geographic fields are assigned. Regulatory verification remains the responsibility of the service seeker. In all 50 states, contractor licensing requirements are administered by state-level agencies — for example, the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB), the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR), and the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR). License status should be confirmed directly with the issuing agency before any contractual engagement.


How providers are organized

Providers are sorted by three primary axes:

  1. Service category — The dominant roofing discipline (e.g., residential re-roofing, commercial low-slope systems, roof leak repair, storm damage response, metal roofing, or green/vegetative roof installation).
  2. Geographic service area — Entries specify either a state-level or multi-state service radius. National providers are flagged separately from regionally bounded operators.
  3. Contractor classification — Entries distinguish between general roofing contractors, specialty subcontractors (e.g., waterproofing, flashing, skylight installation), material-specific installers, and inspection-only professionals.

Within each service category, entries contrast by license class where applicable. A Class A roofing license in states that use tiered classifications typically permits unlimited contract value, while Class C licenses cap project scope — often below $25,000, depending on the state statute. This distinction is structurally significant for commercial and multi-family projects, where contract thresholds routinely exceed residential averages.

The provider network does not mix inspection firms with installation contractors in the same category view. Roof inspection professionals — including those holding credentials from the National Roof Certification and Inspection Association (NRCIA) or the International Association of Certified Home Inspectors (InterNACHI) — appear in a dedicated inspection subcategory, separate from repair and installation providers.


What each provider covers

Each provider record includes the following structured fields:

  1. Business name and primary contact information
  2. State(s) of licensure and license number(s) (as declared by the provider)
  3. Primary service category (installation, repair, inspection, or emergency response)
  4. Secondary service categories, where applicable
  5. Roofing system specializations — e.g., TPO, EPDM, modified bitumen, built-up roofing (BUR), standing seam metal, asphalt shingle, tile, or spray polyurethane foam (SPF)
  6. Occupancy type served — residential (IBC Group R), commercial (IBC Groups B, M, S, or I), or industrial
  7. Geographic service radius — county, metropolitan statistical area (MSA), state, or multi-state
  8. Certifications held — manufacturer certifications (e.g., GAF Master Elite, CertainTeed SELECT ShingleMaster, Carlisle Authorized Applicator) are distinguished from professional credentials and state licenses

Providers do not include customer reviews, ratings scores, or performance assessments. The provider network operates as a factual reference structure. Review platforms and contractor vetting services serve a distinct function from what this index provides.


Geographic distribution

The national provider inventory spans all 50 states, with density concentrated in metropolitan areas where construction permit activity is highest. According to the U.S. Census Bureau's Building Permits Survey, Texas, Florida, California, and Georgia consistently rank among the top 4 states by residential roofing permit volume in any given year. Providers from these states reflect that density, with higher counts of both specialty subcontractors and full-service roofing firms.

Rural and lower-density states — including Wyoming, Vermont, and North Dakota — maintain thinner provider coverage by proportion of total entries, consistent with the underlying contractor population in those markets. Providers from these regions are not filtered or deprioritized; coverage reflects the actual distribution of licensed operators.

Storm-concentrated service corridors — including the Gulf Coast, the tornado-prone areas of Oklahoma and Kansas, and the hail-impact zones of Colorado and Nebraska — show elevated concentrations of emergency repair and insurance restoration contractors. These providers operate under roofing contractor licenses but frequently coordinate with licensed public adjusters operating under separate state insurance department regulations, a distinction the provider structure preserves.

For full access to the index by state or service category, the Roof Services Providers landing page provides the primary navigation point into the complete provider network.

References