Roof Replacement Permit
Roof Replacement Permits, Decking, and Final Inspections
Roof permits help cities verify wind rating, fire rating, underlayment, sheathing repairs, ventilation, and final installation before leaks become expensive.
Permit likelihood
Usually required for full roof replacement, structural decking repairs, roof covering changes, and many reroof projects.
Typical permit cost
$75-$500 for many residential roof permits; higher where wind, fire, or engineered documentation is required.
Planning timeline
Same day to three weeks depending on local review, storm season demand, and whether structural repairs are included.
Common permit triggers
- Full reroof
- Changing roof covering type
- Replacing damaged sheathing
- Adding skylights or roof penetrations
Documents to gather before applying
- Roofing material specifications
- Contractor license information
- Scope of tear-off or overlay
- Structural repair notes if decking is damaged
Inspection sequence to plan around
- Decking or in-progress inspection if required
- Flashing and underlayment checks
- Final roof inspection
- Correction inspection if needed
Mistakes that create delays
- Assuming a contractor warranty replaces permit approval
- Covering rotten decking without inspection
- Ignoring ice, wind, or wildfire requirements
- Missing final inspection after the roof is complete
State and city variation
Coastal wind zones, wildfire areas, snow load, and local overlay limits can change the reroof checklist.
Contractor questions
- Who is responsible for pulling the permit?
- Will the permit list the full scope of work?
- Which inspections must happen before work is covered?
- Are permit fees, corrections, and reinspection fees included in the quote?
- Will I receive copies of approvals and final inspection records?