Metal roofs last 40–70 years, shed snow cleanly, and handle Colorado wind and hail well. Red Hawk installs standing-seam metal with factory-matched trim, gutters, and flashing. Metal is 2–3x the cost of asphalt but eliminates roof replacement for decades.
About Metal Roofing in Denver
Metal roofs last 40–70 years and qualify for hail-resistance insurance discounts in Colorado. We install standing seam, stone-coated steel, and exposed-fastener systems.
Metal Roofing in Denver, Colorado often involves upgrading from asphalt to standing-seam metal that handles Front Range wind and hail at a level no shingle product matches. Red Hawk Roofing has documented 5 hail events in Denver since 2021 — the largest being 2.75-inch hail on May 30, 2024 — which is the size where standing-seam metal pays for itself versus repeated asphalt replacements over a 40–70-year roof life.
Our nearest office to Denver is in Englewood at 3535 S Platte River Dr Unit A. We dispatch Englewood-based crews from there for Denver projects — same crew, same warranty.
Denver's mix of pre-WWII historic homes and modern infill creates wildly different roofing scopes block-to-block. We work directly with every major Colorado carrier — including State Farm, USAA, Allstate, Farmers, American Family, and Liberty Mutual — and handle the adjuster process end to end on Denver claims. City and County of Denver permits residential roofing through its e-permit system; we file the application and handle any historic-district overlay paperwork when applicable.
For metal roofing in Denver, expect: free roof inspection, adjuster-grade photo documentation, written scope of work, insurance liaison if applicable, and standing-seam panel install with factory-matched trim, snow guards, hidden-fastener system, and full warranty registration with the panel manufacturer. Most metal roofing projects in Denver complete within 5–10 days depending on roof size and complexity.
Class 4 impact-resistant40–70 year lifespanInsurance discount eligibleEnergy-efficient
Common Questions: Metal Roofing in Denver
Metal roofing costs meaningfully more than asphalt — standing seam is the premium option, with stone-coated steel and exposed-fastener panels below it. Red Hawk provides side-by-side written estimates so the difference is explicit for your roof rather than a general figure. The higher upfront cost is offset by 40–70 year lifespan, insurance discounts, and energy savings. Red Hawk provides side-by-side estimates so the math is clear.
Properly installed metal roofs last 40–70 years in Colorado, with standing-seam systems at the long end (50–70 years) and exposed-fastener panels at the short end (40–50 years). Stone-coated steel falls between (50–60 years). Lifespan factors include coating quality (Kynar 500 / PVDF coatings outlast standard polyester by 20+ years), substrate gauge (24-gauge outlasts 26-gauge), and fastener spacing. Compared to 20–25 years for asphalt shingles, metal is the longest-lasting roofing material available short of slate or clay tile.
Standing-seam metal in 24-gauge or thicker handles Front Range hail without functional damage on impacts up to 2 inches. Cosmetic dents are possible from large hail (1.5 inches+), but functional integrity stays intact — water-shedding and structure remain unaffected. Class 4 stone-coated steel achieves UL 2218 Class 4 rating equivalent to impact-resistant shingles. Many Colorado insurers now apply cosmetic damage exclusions to metal roofs, so check your policy. Red Hawk recommends 24-gauge standing seam as the highest hail-survival roofing for hail country.
Denver issues roofing permits through Community Planning & Development at 201 W Colfax Ave (or online via E-Permits). Most reroof permits issue same-day or within 48 hours for standard residential. Permit fees run $90–$300 depending on project valuation. Designated historic districts (parts of Capitol Hill, Highlands, Park Hill) require Landmark Preservation Commission review that adds 4–8 weeks. Red Hawk pulls all permits and handles the post-install inspection.
Denver asphalt roof replacements typically run $15,000 to $25,000. RiNo and LoHi modern flat-roof TPO/EPDM runs separately at $7–$12 per sq ft. Red Hawk provides free line-item estimates.
Yes — Denver takes the same plains-track supercells that hit Aurora and Centennial. The ground record shows 5 documented hail days within 10 miles of the city center between 2021 and 2026, all confirmed by NWS storm spotters, the largest a 2.75-inch measurement on May 30, 2024 (42 ground reports). Older brick homes in Park Hill and Capitol Hill often have unrecognized cumulative hail damage on multi-decade roofs. Red Hawk pulls NOAA records for every estimate to timestamp damage.
Recent Metal Roofing Near Denver
Real metal roofing jobs from across the Front Range — material variety, install detail, and finished results.
Pole Barn Metal Install
Metal Ridge Cap Detail
Metal & Skylight Detail
Pole Barn Gable Trim
Project photography from Red Hawk Roofing's own portfolio. All installations performed by licensed, insured Red Hawk crews.
Hail History in Denver
Denver has 5 documented hail days within 10 miles of city center between 2021 and 2026 — 5 confirmed by NWS storm-spotter reports on the ground, the largest 2.75-inch hail measured on May 30, 2024 (42 reports), where NOAA radar indicated 2.5 inches — 0.25 inches below the measured size. Radar figures are NOAA SWDI estimates (MEHS), not measurements; ground figures are NWS Local Storm Reports.
Jun 1
2026
1.75"
Measured
14 reports
radar 2.25" (+0.50")
LSR+SWDI
May 30
2024
2.75"
Measured
42 reports
radar 2.50" (-0.25")
LSR+SWDI
Jul 8
2023
1.75"
Measured
2 reports
LSR
Jun 29
2023
1.75"
Measured
13 reports
radar 2.50" (+0.75")
LSR+SWDI
Jun 22
2023
1.75"
Measured
8 reports
radar 3.00" (+1.25")
LSR+SWDI
Measured figures are NWS Local Storm Reports — human-observed, ground-confirmed hail. Radar-indicated figures are NOAA SWDI estimates (MEHS, a radar algorithm calibrated to a high-end bound) — not measurements, and they can run high versus paired ground reports. Events within ~10 miles of Denver center, 2021–present, ≥1.0 inch.