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Service Areas

Texas Roofing Service Areas

Local storm exposure, roof age, and material guidance for every community we cover across Texas.

Dallas County

Dallas Roofing

Dallas homeowners face some of the most persistent severe weather exposure in North Texas, with hail, straight-line winds, and triple-digit summer heat cycling through every roof on the market.

Hail: ExtremeWind: High
Tarrant County

Fort Worth Roofing

Fort Worth sits squarely in one of the most active hail corridors in the United States, with supercell storms routinely producing damaging hail between March and June.

Hail: ExtremeWind: High
Tarrant County

Arlington Roofing

Arlington homes sit directly between the DFW metro storm corridors, receiving repeated hail impacts that can compound roof damage over multiple seasons.

Hail: ExtremeWind: High
Collin County

Plano Roofing

Plano’s rapid growth since the 1990s means a large cohort of roofs are aging into replacement territory, while the city remains a hot spot for severe hail.

Hail: ExtremeWind: Moderate
Collin & Denton

Frisco Roofing

Frisco’s housing stock is newer on average, but steep roof pitches, tall 2- and 3-story homes, and severe hail exposure still drive significant roofing demand.

Hail: ExtremeWind: Moderate
Collin County

McKinney Roofing

McKinney’s mix of historic downtown homes and sprawling newer subdivisions creates a wide range of roof conditions, from 20+ year-old 3-tabs to recently installed impact-resistant systems.

Hail: ExtremeWind: Moderate
Denton County

Denton Roofing

Denton sits at the northern edge of the DFW storm corridor, with a mix of university-area rentals, historic homes, and newer subdivisions all facing consistent hail and wind exposure.

Hail: HighWind: High
Tarrant County

Southlake Roofing

Southlake’s premium housing stock typically features designer shingles, synthetic slate, and tile roofs, requiring roofing partners experienced with high-end architectural systems.

Hail: ExtremeWind: Moderate
Tarrant County

Grapevine Roofing

Grapevine homes near the DFW Airport and Lake Grapevine receive both open-water wind exposure and regular hail events during spring storm season.

Hail: HighWind: High
Tarrant County

Keller Roofing

Keller homeowners deal with the same hail corridor that impacts Fort Worth and Southlake, with many homes now approaching the 15-year mark on their original shingle systems.

Hail: ExtremeWind: Moderate
Parker County

Weatherford Roofing

Weatherford’s rural and semi-rural housing stock includes older farmhouses with metal roofs and newer subdivisions with asphalt shingles, all exposed to strong prairie wind events.

Hail: HighWind: High
Dallas County

Irving Roofing

Irving’s central DFW location places homes in an active storm-path zone, with significant inventory of 1990s–2000s housing now entering replacement-age territory.

Hail: HighWind: High
Denton County

Lewisville Roofing

Lewisville homeowners along Lake Lewisville face both hail and wind exposure, with many older homes carrying 15+ year-old shingle systems near end of service life.

Hail: HighWind: High
Denton County

Flower Mound Roofing

Flower Mound’s rolling terrain, mature trees, and premium housing stock create a unique mix of roofing concerns from tree impact damage to complex architectural rooflines.

Hail: HighWind: Moderate
Collin County

Allen Roofing

Allen sits in the heart of Collin County’s hail corridor, with most neighborhoods carrying roofs installed during the 2000s building boom now approaching replacement.

Hail: ExtremeWind: Moderate
Collin & Denton

Prosper Roofing

Prosper’s newer premium housing stock features more designer shingles and impact-resistant systems, but the area still sees intense Collin County hail activity.

Hail: ExtremeWind: Moderate
Rockwall County

Rockwall Roofing

Rockwall homeowners near Lake Ray Hubbard face lake-driven wind events alongside the regional hail threat common across East DFW.

Hail: HighWind: High
Dallas County

Garland Roofing

Garland has one of the older housing stocks in DFW, meaning a large portion of roofs in the city are at or beyond typical asphalt shingle service life.

Hail: HighWind: High
Tarrant County

North Richland Hills Roofing

North Richland Hills sits in the Mid-Cities hail zone, with established neighborhoods and aging roof systems that often need professional assessment after storm events.

Hail: HighWind: High
Tarrant County

Colleyville Roofing

Colleyville’s upscale housing stock features designer shingles, concrete tile, and synthetic slate systems that require specialized inspection and repair expertise.

Hail: HighWind: Moderate

DFW and Texas roofing service coverage

TexRoof publishes city-specific roofing intelligence across the entire Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex plus surrounding North and Central Texas communities. Every city page is built from local housing-stock data, historical hail and wind exposure, and the material decisions that consistently produce the best results in that specific submarket. If you are comparing quotes, planning a roof replacement, documenting storm damage, or trying to understand how your insurance deductible applies to a recent event, start with the city page closest to your home.

The DFW metroplex is not a single roofing market. Hail frequency in Collin and Denton counties exceeds Tarrant and Dallas counties on a per-event basis, while Tarrant County sees slightly higher average hail sizes and stronger straight-line wind exposure. Dallas County carries the highest raw claim volume in the state due to housing density. These differences drive real pricing, material-selection, and insurance outcomes, and they are the reason TexRoof publishes a dedicated local resource for each covered community rather than a single generic DFW page.

Hail

DFW sits inside the national hail alley. Collin, Denton, and Tarrant counties record more severe hail events per capita than almost any other metro.

Heat

Summer roof-deck temperatures above 160F accelerate asphalt aging. Light colors and balanced ventilation meaningfully extend shingle life.

Roof age

DFW housing stock averages 15 to 25 years of roof age depending on submarket, with 2005-to-present construction dominating northern suburbs.

Claims

DFW files more residential wind-hail claims per year than any other Texas metro, with well-documented inspections improving outcomes.

DFW hail and wind: what the last decade has actually done to roofs

The Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex has recorded severe hail events in every year of the past decade, with at least one billion-dollar storm impacting residential roofs somewhere in the nine-county metro every calendar year since 2016. Collin County alone has logged more than 40 distinct hail events with stones at or above one inch in diameter during that span. Tarrant and Denton counties trail closely. Dallas County, while slightly lower in raw event count, produces the highest total insured losses because housing density concentrates the damage.

What those numbers mean for an individual DFW homeowner is simple: even a roof that has not been obviously "hit" has almost certainly cycled through multiple marginal storm events. Marginal events are the ones that shorten lifespan without triggering a filed claim. Sub-cosmetic bruising accumulates. Seal strips release. Underlayment pinholes form. By year ten, a shingle that looks fine from the driveway is often measurably thinner at the mat than it was at installation, and the next real storm becomes the one that pushes it past the threshold.

How DFW adjusters actually walk a roof

An experienced Texas independent adjuster working a DFW hail claim typically spends 30 to 60 minutes on the roof. They will chalk out a ten-foot-by-ten-foot test square on each elevation, count functional hail strikes inside the square, measure soft-metal dent patterns on vents and flashing, and check for directional damage consistency across elevations. If the counts exceed carrier-specific thresholds on at least the front and one other elevation, the roof is typically approved for full replacement at replacement-cost value minus deductible. If only one or two elevations hit the threshold, partial approvals are common and are often the most contested outcome in DFW claims.

Wind patterns specific to DFW

Straight-line wind events in DFW produce distinctive damage patterns that differ sharply from hail. Shingle creasing running parallel to the eaves, missing tabs in diagonal strips, ridge-cap loss along north and west-facing exposures, and underlayment exposure in 6-to-12-tab patches are the most common wind signatures across the metroplex. The 2019 Dallas tornado event, the 2021 Fort Worth-area derecho, and the 2024 McKinney wind event each left recognizable patterns that adjusters and roofers still reference when evaluating current storm claims.

What DFW roof replacement actually costs in 2025

Real 2025 DFW roof replacement pricing for a standard 2,200-square-foot single-family home with architectural asphalt shingles, single-layer tear-off, standard pitch, and no major decking issues typically lands between $11,500 and $18,500 installed. That range reflects actual invoice data from completed DFW projects, not manufacturer list pricing. Moving up to a Class 4 impact-resistant shingle from a mainstream manufacturer such as Malarkey, GAF, Owens Corning, CertainTeed, or Atlas generally adds $1,800 to $3,600 to the same project and often qualifies the homeowner for a 10 to 35 percent wind-hail premium discount depending on carrier.

Standing seam metal on the same home runs roughly $28,000 to $48,000 installed. Concrete tile, common on premium homes in Southlake, Colleyville, and parts of Plano, typically runs $32,000 to $55,000. Synthetic slate and designer composite systems such as DaVinci and Brava land between $36,000 and $60,000 for a standard DFW home footprint. These numbers are intentionally wide because the variables that drive the final quote—pitch, access, penetrations, decking condition, and underlayment upgrades—can legitimately swing the total by 20 to 30 percent.

DFW-specific cost drivers homeowners underestimate

Three cost factors surprise almost every first-time DFW roof-replacement customer. First, decking condition. Homes built before the mid-1980s in Dallas and Fort Worth commonly have plank decking rather than OSB, and damaged or rotted planks must be replaced at $65 to $110 per sheet-equivalent. Second, upgraded underlayment. Synthetic underlayment is the current DFW standard; high-temp peel-and-stick ice-and-water shield at valleys and penetrations is increasingly non-negotiable for manufacturer warranty qualification and adds $600 to $1,400. Third, ventilation correction. A majority of pre-2000 DFW homes have under-ventilated attics, and properly balancing intake and exhaust during a replacement adds $400 to $1,200 but can add five to eight years of functional shingle life.

Why DFW quotes vary so widely

Homeowners who collect three quotes on the same DFW roof routinely see a $4,000 to $9,000 spread between lowest and highest. That spread is almost never about profit margin. It reflects real differences in tear-off scope, decking allowance, ventilation correction, flashing replacement, underlayment class, ridge-cap upgrade, and warranty registration. A $12,000 quote and a $19,000 quote on the same DFW home are usually scoping entirely different projects. Apples-to-apples comparison requires reading the scope, not just the total.

Which roofing materials actually perform in DFW

Real DFW field performance narrows the practical material shortlist to four product classes. Architectural asphalt shingles remain the volume leader because of installed cost and contractor familiarity. Class 4 impact-resistant asphalt shingles are the fastest-growing segment due to insurance premium discounts and measurably better hail performance. Standing seam metal is the premium long-term answer for homeowners staying 20 years or more. Concrete and clay tile fit specific architectural styles in Southlake, Colleyville, and premium master-planned communities but carry real trade-offs on hail resistance.

Product selection inside each class matters almost as much as the class itself. Inside architectural asphalt, Malarkey Vista and Windsor, GAF Timberline HDZ, Owens Corning Duration, CertainTeed Landmark, and Atlas Pinnacle Pristine are the most commonly installed mainstream products in DFW. Inside Class 4, Malarkey Legacy, GAF Timberline AS II, Owens Corning Duration Flex, CertainTeed Landmark ClimateFlex, and Atlas StormMaster Shake dominate the insurance-discount conversation. Inside standing seam, 24-gauge Kynar-finish panels in 16-inch widths are the DFW volume standard.

Heat, UV, and the Texas color problem

DFW summers drive shingle surface temperatures above 160 degrees Fahrenheit on dark colors. That thermal load accelerates volatile-oil loss and granule embrittlement on every asphalt product, regardless of warranty class. Lighter shingle colors—weathered wood, driftwood, barkwood—consistently outperform darker tones on DFW homes by two to four years of functional life. Cool-roof reflective shingle lines and reflective metal finishes can reduce attic peak temperatures by 15 to 25 degrees, which translates into lower cooling bills and longer shingle life on everything underneath.

How DFW homeowner insurance actually pays for a roof

Every major Texas homeowner carrier active in DFW—State Farm, Allstate, USAA, Farmers, Liberty Mutual, Nationwide, Travelers, Progressive, Chubb, Germania, Texas Farm Bureau, and the regional carriers behind most independent agencies—handles roof claims in broadly the same framework, but with meaningful differences in deductible structure, depreciation schedules, and matching requirements. Understanding the structure of your specific policy before filing changes outcomes.

The baseline flow on a DFW hail claim is straightforward. The homeowner files first notice of loss, the carrier assigns an adjuster or dispatches an independent adjuster, the adjuster walks the roof within 5 to 21 days, a written estimate is produced at replacement-cost value or actual-cash value, the homeowner pays the wind-hail deductible, the carrier releases the actual-cash-value payment, the roof is replaced, the contractor submits a completion certificate, and the carrier releases the recoverable depreciation. On a fully approved DFW claim, the homeowner's out-of-pocket cost is the deductible plus any upgrades not covered by policy.

Where DFW claims go sideways

Claims fail or underpay most often for six specific reasons in DFW. First, damage is filed as storm-caused when the majority is age-related wear, triggering denial. Second, the initial adjuster inspection misses functional damage on rear elevations, producing a partial approval that undercounts the actual scope. Third, supplements are not submitted when the contractor uncovers additional damage during tear-off, leaving legitimate money on the table. Fourth, broad assignment-of-benefits forms transfer the homeowner's claim authority to a contractor who later disappears mid-project. Fifth, the deductible is quietly absorbed by the contractor, a felony under Texas law that unwinds the entire claim if discovered. Sixth, replacement-cost depreciation is never recovered because the homeowner does not submit the completion certificate within the carrier's required window, often 180 to 365 days.

Matching, ordinance and law, and code upgrades

Texas does not require insurers to match undamaged slopes to replacement slopes, which is why partial approvals are common and controversial. A homeowner with approval on front and right elevations but not rear or left frequently has to decide whether to accept a two-tone roof, pay out of pocket to match, or pursue reinspection. Ordinance and Law coverage, typically available for an additional 10 to 25 percent premium, pays for code-driven upgrades such as ice-and-water shield, drip edge, and updated ventilation that older policies would not otherwise cover. DFW homeowners nearing the point of roof replacement should verify current policy ordinance coverage before a storm, not after.

Licensed Texas professionals

All DFW inspections fulfilled by RoofDog Roofing or authorized partners.

No deductible games

Texas law prohibits absorbing a wind-hail deductible. We follow it.

Storm-cycle tested

Built on real DFW hail and wind claim experience since 2016.

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