
The average roof replacement cost in 2026 is $9,500, with most homeowners paying between $7,500 and $16,000. Final price depends on four things: roof size, material type, your location, and whether the old roof needs tearing off first. The only way to know your actual number is to get quotes from licensed contractors in your ZIP code.
What Does a New Roof Actually Cost in 2026?
Most national averages are useless because they mix a $7,000 job in rural Ohio with a $22,000 job in coastal Florida. Here is what real homeowners are paying broken down by material:
| Material | Cost per sq ft | Average total cost | Lifespan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Asphalt shingles (3-tab) | $3 to $5 | $5,700 to $10,000 | 20 to 25 years |
| Architectural shingles | $4 to $6 | $7,500 to $16,000 | 25 to 40 years |
| Metal (steel/aluminum) | $7 to $16 | $10,000 to $35,000 | 40 to 70 years |
| Tile (concrete) | $8 to $20 | $12,000 to $45,000 | 50 years |
| Slate | $15 to $30 | $22,000 to $70,000 | 75 to 150 years |
What Drives the Price Up and What Drives It Down
Four factors move the number more than anything else:
Roof Size
Contractors price by the square. One square equals 100 square feet of roof surface. Your roof surface is always larger than your home footprint because of pitch and overhangs. A 2,000 square foot home typically has 2,400 to 2,600 square feet of actual roof.
Roof Pitch
Steeper roofs cost more. A low-pitch roof is walkable and faster to work on. A steep pitch requires extra safety equipment, more labor time, and more material waste. Expect to pay 20 to 40 percent more on steep roofs.
Tear-Off
If your old roof needs to come off first, add $1,000 to $3,000 to the total. Most states allow a maximum of two shingle layers. If you already have two, a full tear-off is mandatory.
Location
Labor rates vary by state. Contractors in Florida, California, and New York charge significantly more than contractors in the Midwest and rural South, in line with regional roofer wage data published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Demand spikes after major storms also drive prices up temporarily.
Cost by State: What Homeowners Are Paying in 2026
| State | Average cost (asphalt) | Why it varies |
|---|---|---|
| Florida | $9,000 to $18,000 | Hurricane-grade requirements, high contractor demand |
| Texas | $8,000 to $17,000 | Hail damage demand, large home sizes |
| California | $10,000 to $22,000 | High labor rates, fire-resistant requirements |
| New York | $9,000 to $20,000 | High labor rates, union contractors |
| Georgia | $7,500 to $15,000 | Moderate labor rates, storm demand |
| North Carolina | $8,000 to $16,000 | Storm season demand, mixed urban and rural rates |
| Arizona | $7,000 to $14,000 | Lower labor rates, dry climate |
| Ohio | $6,500 to $13,000 | Competitive market, lower cost of living |
| Colorado | $8,000 to $18,000 | Hail belt, high demand post-storm |
Repair vs Replace: How to Decide
Repair makes sense when: damage is isolated to one area, the roof is under 12 years old, and fewer than 25 percent of shingles are affected.
Replace when: the roof is over 20 years old, leaks are appearing in multiple spots, shingles are curling or losing granules across the whole surface, or you plan to sell the home within 5 years. (See 7 signs you need a replacement, not just a repair.)
The math: a $2,000 repair on a roof that will need replacing in 2 years costs you more than replacing now. A new asphalt roof typically recoups 60 to 70 percent of its cost in resale value.
How to Avoid Overpaying
Contractors know most homeowners call one or two companies and pick whoever sounds most reasonable. That is exactly how a $6,800 gap between two quotes for the same roof happens.
Three things that reduce what you pay:
First, get at least 3 quotes for the exact same scope of work, same material, same warranty, same tear-off.
Second, avoid the post-storm rush. Prices spike after major hail or hurricane events when contractor demand surges.
Third, schedule in late fall or winter when contractor demand drops and crews are more motivated to compete on price.
For more on protecting yourself, read how to find a roofing contractor you can trust.