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2026 step-by-step guide

The roof replacement process, start to finish

Replacing a roof sounds disruptive, but the process is predictable once you know the stages. Here's exactly what happens — from the first inspection to the final magnet sweep — how long each step takes, and how to prepare your home.

A roofer inspecting a roof at the start of the replacement process
The quick answer

A roof replacement moves through five clear stages: a free inspection and written estimate, choosing materials and scheduling, tear-off and deck inspection, installing the new roof system, and cleanup with a final inspection and warranty registration. The on-site work usually takes one to three days for a typical asphalt-shingle roof; the full process from first call to final cleanup spans one to three weeks once scheduling and permits are factored in.

First: do you actually need a replacement?

Not every aging roof needs to be torn off. Before you commit to a full replacement, it's worth confirming that repair or restoration isn't the smarter, cheaper move. A roof is usually a true replacement candidate when you see several of these signs together:

  • Age. An asphalt roof at or past 20–25 years is near the end of its service life, even if it still looks okay from the ground.
  • Widespread shingle damage. Curling, cracking, or buckling across large areas — not just a few spots.
  • Bald spots & granule loss. Significant granules in the gutters and shingles that look smooth or shiny where the protective layer has worn away.
  • Active or repeated leaks. Water stains on ceilings, daylight visible in the attic, or leaks that keep returning after repairs.
  • Sagging or structural concerns. Any dip or wave in the roofline warrants immediate professional attention.
  • Storm damage. Hail bruising or wind-lifted shingles — which may be covered by an insurance claim.

Start with an honest inspection

A reputable contractor will tell you if a targeted repair will buy you years — or if replacement is genuinely the right call. That's exactly what the first step below is for.

The roof replacement process in 5 steps

Every replacement, regardless of material, follows the same arc. Here's the timeline at a glance before we break each stage down in detail.

1

Free inspection & written estimate

The contractor inspects, documents, and gives you an itemized quote.

Day 0
2

Choose materials & schedule

Pick material and color, sign the contract, handle permits, lock a date.

1–2 weeks out
3

Tear-off & deck inspection

The old roof comes off; the deck is inspected and repaired.

Install day, AM
4

Underlayment & new roof install

Drip edge, ice-and-water shield, underlayment, flashing, and material go on.

Install day(s)
5

Cleanup, inspection & warranty

Magnet sweep, final quality check, and warranty registration.

Final day

Step 1 · Free inspection & written estimate

Everything starts with a thorough inspection. A qualified contractor examines your roof from both outside and inside the attic, looking at the shingles, flashing, vents, gutters, and the decking and rafters from below. Good inspectors photograph everything so you can see what they see — especially important if the work may go through an insurance claim.

From that inspection you should receive a detailed, itemized written estimate — not a number scrawled on a business card. A trustworthy quote spells out:

  • The roofing material, brand, and product line
  • Tear-off and disposal of the old roof
  • Underlayment, ice-and-water shield, flashing, and ventilation
  • A per-sheet price for any decking replacement (since rot is only confirmed after tear-off)
  • Labor, permits, cleanup, and the warranties included

Get three estimates

Comparing at least three written quotes is the single best way to understand fair pricing and spot an outlier — high or suspiciously low. Learn what separates a great contractor from an average one in our guide to choosing a roofer.

Step 2 · Choose materials & schedule the work

With a contractor selected, you'll make the decisions that shape the project: material and color, warranty tier, and timing. This is the moment to weigh asphalt against metal, tile, or other options — our materials comparison and cost guide break down the trade-offs.

Once you sign the contract, the contractor handles the logistics that happen behind the scenes:

Permits & HOA

Your contractor pulls any required building permits and confirms HOA color or material rules so nothing stalls the job.

Material order & crew date

Materials are ordered and delivered, and your installation is scheduled around crew availability and the weather forecast.

Expect a typical wait of one to three weeks between signing and installation, longer in peak season or after a major storm when crews are booked solid.

Step 3 · Tear-off & deck inspection

Installation day begins with protecting your property — crews lay tarps over landscaping, cover pools and AC units, and position a dumpster for debris. Then the old roof comes off, stripped down to the bare wood deck. (In some cases a single layover is allowed, but a full tear-off is almost always the better long-term choice — it's the only way to inspect what's underneath.)

With the deck exposed, the crew inspects it for rot, water damage, or soft spots and replaces any compromised sheathing. This is the step you can't see from the ground but matters enormously: a new roof is only as sound as the deck beneath it.

Why decking is usually priced separately

No one can see rotted decking until the old roof is off, so honest contracts quote it per sheet rather than guessing up front. A good crew will show you any damage — ideally with photos — and confirm the added cost before installing over it.

Step 4 · Underlayment, flashing & the new roof

This is the heart of the job — and where workmanship truly counts. The new roof goes on in carefully ordered layers, each with a job to do:

  • Drip edge along the eaves and rakes to direct water into the gutters.
  • Ice-and-water shield in the valleys, around penetrations, and along the eaves — a waterproof membrane that guards the most leak-prone areas.
  • Underlayment across the full deck as a secondary moisture barrier beneath the surface material.
  • Flashing around chimneys, vents, skylights, and walls — the metal detailing that seals every transition. Failed flashing, not failed shingles, causes most roof leaks.
  • The roofing material — shingles, metal, or tile — installed from the eaves up.
  • Ridge ventilation and ridge caps to finish the roof and let the attic breathe.

For a typical asphalt roof this is completed in a day or two; larger, steeper, or premium-material roofs take longer. Proper ventilation here isn't an afterthought — it protects the roof's lifespan and your energy bills.

Step 5 · Cleanup, final inspection & warranty

A professional crew leaves your property cleaner than they found it. The final stage covers:

Thorough cleanup

All debris is hauled away and the crew runs magnetic rollers across the lawn, driveway, and flower beds to collect every stray nail.

Final inspection

A supervisor — and often a municipal inspector — verifies the work meets code and the manufacturer's installation standards.

Warranty registration

Your manufacturer (material) and workmanship warranties are documented and registered. Keep these records.

Understand your two warranties

A material warranty covers manufacturing defects; a workmanship warranty covers installation. They're different, and their length and transferability vary widely — our warranties guide explains what to look for.

How to prepare your home for install day

A little prep keeps the job smooth and your belongings safe. In the day or two before the crew arrives:

  • Clear the driveway and move vehicles to the street so crews can reach the roof and position the dumpster.
  • Protect the attic. Cover or remove stored items — tear-off vibration sends dust and debris down.
  • Take down wall hangings and shelf items, especially on the top floor; the pounding can knock them loose.
  • Secure pets and plan for kids — the day is loud. Many families step out during the noisiest hours.
  • Move patio furniture, grills, and potted plants away from the house perimeter.
  • Mark or move delicate landscaping and point out anything you want the crew to take extra care around.
Bottom line

A roof replacement is a big project, but it's a well-worn path: inspect, decide, tear off, install, clean up. The brands and colors get the attention, but the deck, underlayment, flashing, and ventilation underneath — and the crew installing them — are what keep water out for the next 25 years. Get a few written estimates, choose a vetted contractor, and the rest is routine.

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Frequently asked questions

How long does a roof replacement take?
Most residential asphalt-shingle roofs are torn off and replaced in one to three days, depending on size, pitch, complexity, and weather. Larger or premium-material roofs (tile, slate) can take a week or more. The full process from first inspection to final cleanup usually spans one to three weeks with scheduling and permits.
Do I need to be home during the work?
No, though it helps to be reachable by phone in case the crew uncovers hidden damage. Most homeowners are present for the initial walkthrough and the final inspection.
What happens if the crew finds rotted decking?
Damaged decking is replaced before new materials go on. Because rot can only be confirmed after tear-off, most contracts price decking replacement separately (often per plywood sheet). A reputable contractor shows you the damage and confirms the cost first.
Can I stay in my house during the replacement?
Yes. It's noisy — expect hammering and footsteps overhead — but the home stays livable. People who work from home or have small children or pets sometimes step out during the loudest tear-off and install hours.
How do I prepare my home?
Move vehicles out of the driveway, clear and cover items in the attic, take down wall hangings on upper floors, secure pets, and move patio furniture and grills away from the house. Your contractor will advise on dumpster and delivery access.
What's the most important step?
The deck inspection and the underlayment/flashing details. The material gets the attention, but it's the layers underneath that keep water out — which is why proper installation matters as much as the shingle brand.
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