Colorado Pricing Guide
Roof Replacement Cost Estimator
A typical Colorado asphalt roof replacement runs $15,000–$25,000 — the market range for a medium-size, one-to-two-story Front Range home. Material, home size, stories, roof complexity, and location move that number. Pick your five options below for an instant educational estimate — and if a storm damaged your roof, insurance may cover replacement minus your deductible.
Select material, home size, stories, roof complexity, area to see your estimated range.
Instant, free, and no contact info required.
Ranges reflect typical Colorado market pricing, rounded to the nearest $500. This is an educational estimate — not a quote from Red Hawk. Exact pricing requires roof measurements; free written estimates include line-item pricing.
The Free Inspection
What's Included
- Full on-roof inspection plus attic check — 45–75 minutes
- Photo documentation of every defect we find
- Written report in adjuster-ready insurance format, typically within 24 hours
- NWS-confirmed storm date and severity documentation when damage is found
- 100% free — no obligation, no pressure
Roof Cost Questions
A typical Colorado asphalt roof replacement runs $15,000–$25,000 — that's the market range for a medium-size home (1,500–2,500 sqft), not a quote from any one contractor. Class 4 impact-resistant shingles run slightly higher, typically $10,000–$19,500 for the same home, and often earn an insurance premium discount. Premium materials cost significantly more: metal roofing commonly lands around $16,000–$36,000 for a typical home, and tile higher still. Roof size, stories, complexity, and location move the number from there.
If your roof has documented hail or wind damage, your homeowners insurance may cover the full replacement — you'd typically pay only your deductible, not the market price. Colorado's Front Range is one of the most hail-active regions in the country, so storm damage is worth ruling out before paying cash. Red Hawk's free inspection documents any damage in adjuster-ready format so you know whether a claim makes sense before you spend anything.
Five main factors: roof size (cost scales roughly with area), material (Class 4 asphalt runs modestly above standard asphalt; metal and tile run roughly two to three times asphalt installed), roof complexity (hips, valleys, dormers, and steep pitches add labor and shingle waste), stories (3+ stories add staging and safety costs), and location (foothills and mountain homes add access and logistics costs). Tear-off layers and decking condition also move the final number.
No — the estimator shows the typical Colorado market range for educational purposes, so you can walk into any conversation knowing what's normal. An actual price requires measuring your roof. Red Hawk provides free written estimates with line-item pricing, and if a storm caused your damage, the free inspection comes first so you don't pay cash for a roof insurance might cover.

