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Aerial view of Utah Valley and Wasatch Mountains — Utah roof cost guide

Roofing Costs

What a New Roof Costs in Utah (2026 Guide)

·7 min read·By Rhino Roofing and Exteriors Crew

Roofing costs in Utah can feel like a black box — contractors quote wildly different numbers and homeowners rarely know what to believe. This guide breaks down every major factor that drives the price of a new roof, offers honest broad ranges so you can budget realistically, and explains how storm damage insurance and smart bid comparison can keep costs under control. Nothing here is a guaranteed quote. Roofing is too project-specific for that. But after reading this, you'll be equipped to have a much sharper conversation with any contractor.

Factor 1 — Roof Size (Squares)

Roofers measure roof area in squares — one square equals 100 square feet of roof surface. A typical Utah Valley single-story home might run 20 to 35 squares; a larger two-story colonial could push 45 or more. Material, labor, and waste calculations all trace back to square count, so it is the single biggest lever on your total invoice.

Here is the catch: roof squares are not the same as your home's floor plan square footage. A steep roof on a 2,000-sq-ft home can cover considerably more surface than a low-slope roof on a 3,000-sq-ft home. Your contractor should produce a measurement report — ask for it. You can use a free tool like our instant roof estimate to get a ballpark square count before ever picking up the phone.

Factor 2 — Roofing Material

Material choice has a dramatic effect on price — and on how long your roof lasts. Here are the main options Utah homeowners consider, with very broad rough ranges. Treat these as ballpark budgeting figures only; actual prices vary by market conditions, supplier availability, and project specifics:

  • Architectural asphalt shingles — The most common choice. Rough range: roughly $8,000–$18,000 for an average Utah Valley home, though larger or more complex roofs will be higher. A good balance of cost, longevity, and curb appeal. Learn more about shingle roofing.
  • Metal roofing (standing seam or exposed-fastener panels)— Higher upfront investment, rough range: $15,000–$35,000+ for most residential projects. Metal typically outlasts shingles by decades and can handle Utah's heavy snow loads well. Explore metal roofing options.
  • Wood shake / cedar — Natural aesthetic, but requires more maintenance and is restricted in some HOA areas. Cost tends to fall between shingles and metal.
  • Tile (concrete or clay) — Premium cost, excellent longevity. Weight requirements often necessitate structural review, which adds to overall project cost.
  • Flat / low-slope systems (TPO, EPDM) — Primarily commercial or contemporary residential. Cost differs significantly from steep-slope work.

All figures above are rough ranges — not quotes. Every project is different. Get at least two written bids from licensed contractors before making any decision.

Factor 3 — Roof Pitch and Complexity

A low-pitch roof is easier and faster to walk. A steep roof requires additional safety equipment, more labor hours, and slower progress — all of which add cost. Contractors often add a pitch premium once the slope exceeds a threshold (commonly around 7:12 or 8:12 rise-to-run ratio).

Complexity matters just as much as pitch. A simple gable roof with one ridge and two valleys is fast to install. A roof with multiple dormers, skylights, chimneys, hip returns, and intricate valleys requires far more cutting, flashing, and sealing — all billed in labor hours. Count your penetrations and intersections before asking for a quote: the more of them you have, the higher the complexity premium.

Factor 4 — Layers and Tear-Off

In Utah, most municipalities and building codes limit how many layers of shingles can be stacked on a roof. If your current roof already has two layers, a new installation almost always requires a full tear-off of the existing materials. Tear-off adds to both labor cost and disposal fees — budget accordingly.

A fresh tear-off also gives your contractor the chance to inspect and replace rotted decking, damaged underlayment, or compromised flashing — work that is always cheaper to address during a full replacement than as a separate emergency repair down the road.

Repair vs. Replacement — How to Tell the Difference

Not every roofing problem is a full replacement. Repairs are appropriate when damage is localized — a handful of missing shingles after a windstorm, a failed pipe boot, or a single section of damaged flashing around a chimney. A good contractor will tell you honestly when a repair is the right call.

Replacement makes more sense when:

  • Your roof is near or past its expected service life (most shingle roofs last 20–30 years in Utah's UV-intense climate).
  • Damage is widespread across multiple sections rather than one localized area.
  • You have active leaks in more than one location.
  • Granule loss on asphalt shingles is severe, leaving bare substrate exposed.
  • The decking below has widespread rot or moisture damage.
  • You want a professional roof report to document the condition before making any decision.

When in doubt, request a documented inspection rather than relying on a verbal assessment. A written report gives you a baseline record that is especially useful if an insurance claim is in play.

How Storm Damage Insurance Can Offset Costs

Utah homeowners are frequently surprised to learn that hail, wind, and other storm damage may be covered under their homeowners insurance policy. A strong hail event can bruise shingle granules, crack tabs, and compromise the roof's weather resistance — even when the damage is not immediately visible from the ground.

The general process looks like this: a contractor performs a roof inspection and documents the damage with photos and measurements. That report is submitted alongside your insurance claim. An adjuster visits to verify the damage. If approved, your insurer pays to restore the roof to pre-loss condition, minus your deductible.

Key points to understand:

  • File promptly. Most policies have a window — often one to three years — to file after a storm event.
  • Document everything. Photos before, during, and after any storm are invaluable.
  • Beware of contractors who offer to waive your deductible — this is insurance fraud in Utah and can void your claim.
  • Work with a contractor experienced in the claims process. Learn how Rhino Roofing handles insurance claims assistance.

A properly documented storm claim can cover the majority of a roof replacement — but only if you file within your policy window and work with a contractor who knows the process.

How to Compare Roofing Bids Without Getting Burned

Price shopping alone is a trap. A bid that is $3,000 cheaper may use lighter-weight shingles, skip a layer of synthetic underlayment, or leave old flashing in place rather than replacing it. What looks like savings often becomes a warranty void or a repeat leak in three years.

When you receive multiple bids, compare on these dimensions:

  • Scope of work: Does the bid include tear-off? Decking replacement if needed? Full flashing replacement or just patching?
  • Material specs: Shingle weight class, underlayment brand and type, ice-and-water shield coverage zone.
  • Ventilation plan: Is ridge vent or box vent work included? Proper ventilation dramatically affects material longevity.
  • Warranty terms: Separate the workmanship warranty (contractor-backed) from the manufacturer material warranty. Both matter. Backed by a workmanship warranty plus manufacturer material warranties.
  • Licensing and insurance: Verify the contractor's license with the Utah Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing (DOPL) and confirm they carry general liability and workers' compensation coverage.
  • Timeline and payment terms: Be wary of contractors demanding full payment upfront. A deposit followed by final payment at completion is standard.

Ready to get started? Request an instant roof estimate or call us at (801) 529-2054 to schedule a no-pressure inspection. We serve Orem, Pleasant Grove, Lindon, Lehi, Provo, and all of Utah County.

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