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Metal Roof vs Asphalt Shingles: Which Makes Sense in 2026

9 min read April 6, 2026 · Updated Reviewed by QMR Editorial

Cost, lifespan, climate fit, and resale value compared across the two most common residential roofing materials.

Standing-seam metal roof on a residential home showing parallel ridge pattern

Metal roofs cost $15,000 to $40,000 installed and last 40 to 70 years. Asphalt shingles cost $7,500 to $16,000 and last 20 to 30 years. Metal costs more upfront but is cheaper over a 50-year period if you stay in the home. Asphalt is the right choice for most homeowners planning to sell within 10 years or working with a tighter budget. Metal also qualifies for cooling-energy credits under the ENERGY STAR roof products program, which most asphalt shingles do not.

MetalAsphalt shingles
Average cost$15,000 to $40,000$7,500 to $16,000
Lifespan40 to 70 years20 to 30 years
Cost per year$300 to $570$300 to $640
Weight50 to 150 lbs per square200 to 350 lbs per square
Energy efficiencyHigh (reflects heat)Moderate
Noise in rainHigherLower
Resale value boostModerate to highModerate
Best forLong-term owners, hot climatesMost homeowners, tighter budgets

The Real Cost Comparison Over Time

On a 50-year timeline, the math often favors metal. Asphalt needs replacing twice in that period, once around year 25 and again around year 50. Two asphalt replacements at today's prices total $15,000 to $32,000. One metal roof costs $15,000 to $40,000 but lasts the full 50 years with minimal maintenance.

The break-even point is roughly 25 to 30 years. If you plan to stay in your home past that point, metal is worth the higher upfront cost. If you plan to sell within 10 years, asphalt delivers a better return on your investment. For current asphalt pricing in your state, see our 2026 roof replacement cost guide.

Metal Roofing: Who It Is Right For

Metal makes the most financial sense when: you plan to stay in the home for 25 years or more, you live in a hot climate where energy savings on cooling bills are significant, your area has frequent hail or severe weather (metal handles impact better than asphalt), or you want a roof that will outlast your mortgage.

Standing Seam vs Corrugated Metal

Standing seam metal roofing is the premium option. Panels lock together with hidden fasteners, creating a clean look and excellent weather resistance. It costs more but performs better long-term. Corrugated metal is cheaper and common on rural or agricultural buildings. For residential homes, standing seam is the standard recommendation.

Asphalt Shingles: Who They Are Right For

Asphalt is the right call when: your budget is under $15,000, you plan to sell the home within the next decade, your neighborhood has homes with asphalt roofs and a metal roof would look out of place, or you need the roof done quickly (asphalt installs faster and contractors are easier to find).

3-Tab vs Architectural Shingles

Within asphalt, always choose architectural (also called dimensional or laminate) over 3-tab. Architectural shingles are thicker, more durable, and look better. The price difference is small, $500 to $1,500 on most jobs, and the lifespan difference is 5 to 10 years. There is no good reason to install 3-tab shingles on a residential home in 2026.

Climate Considerations by US Region

Hot climates (Florida, Texas, Arizona, California): Metal wins here. It reflects heat, reduces cooling costs, and holds up against UV degradation better than asphalt. Energy savings of 10 to 25 percent on cooling bills are common.

Hail-prone states (Texas, Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma): Metal wins here too. Class 4 impact-rated metal roofing can qualify for insurance discounts of 20 to 30 percent in hail zones.

Cold climates (Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan): Both work well. Metal sheds snow better and does not crack in freeze-thaw cycles. Asphalt holds up fine in cold but needs proper attic insulation to prevent ice dams.

Humid climates (Georgia, North Carolina, Louisiana): Asphalt works but requires good ventilation to prevent premature granule loss. Metal is more resistant to moss and algae growth in humid conditions.

What Contractors Will Not Always Tell You

Metal roofing requires experienced installation. An asphalt crew cannot simply switch to metal without specific training. Always ask a metal roofing contractor how many metal roof installations they have completed in the past 12 months. Fewer than 10 is a red flag. Poor installation on a metal roof causes more problems than poor installation on asphalt because metal expands and contracts with temperature changes. More screening tactics: how to find a roofing contractor you can trust.

Frequently Asked

Common questions about this topic.

Is metal roofing noisy when it rains?

It can be on older or lower-quality systems. Modern residential metal roofing installed with solid decking underneath is not significantly louder than asphalt in rain. The noise issue is mostly a myth that persists from older agricultural metal roofs installed directly on purlins with no insulation layer.

Does metal roofing attract lightning?

No more than any other roofing material. Metal roofing does not increase the likelihood of a lightning strike. If lightning does strike, metal disperses the electrical charge more safely than other materials.

Can I install metal roofing over my existing asphalt shingles?

Yes, in most cases. Metal is light enough to install over one layer of existing asphalt shingles without structural concerns. This avoids the tear-off cost and adds an insulation layer. Ask your contractor to inspect the existing decking first to confirm it is in good condition.

Which roof type has better resale value?

Both improve resale value over a worn-out roof. Metal roofing appeals strongly to buyers in storm-prone states and hot climates. In most traditional neighborhoods, a well-installed architectural shingle roof is equally valued. Talk to a local real estate agent before making the decision based on resale alone.

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