Red Hawk provides free roof inspections across Colorado with photo documentation and a written report. We inspect for hail damage, leaks, missing shingles, flashing issues, and age-related wear — then recommend repair or replacement with cost-benefit analysis.
About Roof Inspection in Boulder
Whether you're after a storm, buying a home, or just want peace of mind, our certified inspectors document the full condition of your roof with photos and a written report you can share with your insurer.
Roof Inspection in Boulder, Colorado often involves a free, no-pressure post-storm inspection with photo documentation — the same report we'd hand an adjuster if you needed to file a claim. Red Hawk Roofing has documented 5 hail events in Boulder since 2021 — the largest being 1.00-inch hail on July 11, 2025 — which is the threshold where we start finding cumulative bruising on roofs even when nothing is visible from the ground.
Our nearest office to Boulder is in Englewood at 3535 S Platte River Dr Unit A. We dispatch Englewood-based crews from there for Boulder projects — same crew, same warranty.
Boulder's housing stock is a mix of mid-century ranches and 2000s-2010s infill, with a meaningful slice of historic and high-performance builds that need careful flashing detail. 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 Boulder claims. Boulder County's energy-code overlay requires R-value documentation on any deck-level work; we handle the permit, the energy paperwork, and the inspection coordination.
For roof inspection in Boulder, expect: free roof inspection, adjuster-grade photo documentation, written scope of work, insurance liaison if applicable, and 25–60 captioned photos covering every slope, hail-strike density per square, attic moisture check, and a written PDF report in adjuster-ready format. Most roof inspection projects in Boulder complete within 45–75 minutes on-site, with the written report emailed within 24 hours.
100% freePhoto-documented reportNo high-pressure salesInsurance-ready format
Common Questions: Roof Inspection in Boulder
A Red Hawk inspection covers all field shingles, ridge and hip caps, valleys, flashings (chimney, sidewall, step, kick-out), pipe boots, vents, skylights, gutters, and downspouts. We photo-document every defect, measure hail strike density per slope, check attic ventilation, and produce a written report in adjuster-ready format. We also note any code-mandated upgrades that would apply if replacement is needed. The whole inspection is free, with no obligation, and takes 45–75 minutes for most Front Range homes.
A standard residential roof inspection takes 45 to 75 minutes from arrival to handoff. The on-roof portion is 20–30 minutes, attic check 10–15 minutes, and report compilation 15–20 minutes. Larger or steeper homes, multi-story commercial, or post-storm hail mapping can extend to 2 hours. The written report with photos is typically delivered within 24 hours by email. Same-day verbal summary is provided before we leave so you know the verdict immediately.
Colorado homeowners should schedule a professional roof inspection annually, plus an extra inspection within 30 days of any major hail or wind event. Annual inspections catch wear before it becomes a leak and preserve manufacturer warranty eligibility — most warranties require documented maintenance. Pre-listing inspections are also smart before selling. Red Hawk's inspections are free year-round in our Front Range service area; spring (after hail season) and fall (before winter) are the highest-value times.
Boulder roofs frequently cost 10–25% more than comparable Denver-metro homes due to steeper average pitches in foothills neighborhoods, complex architecture in Mapleton Hill and Newlands, stricter green building code requirements, longer permit review cycles, and higher city wage rates. Average Boulder asphalt replacements run $12,000–$30,000, with custom Chautauqua and University Hill homes reaching $40,000+. Red Hawk provides free line-item estimates that separate base roof, code upgrades, and architectural premiums.
Boulder enforces SmartRegs and the Boulder Energy Conservation Code, which often requires above-baseline R-value attic insulation when a roof is opened, cool-roof reflective shingles for low-slope sections, and ENERGY STAR-rated underlayment in some cases. Reroof permits trigger inspection of attic ventilation balance (intake to exhaust ratio of 50/50). Red Hawk handles all code documentation and submits energy compliance paperwork as part of the permit. Plan for $400–$1,200 in code-driven adders on most Boulder reroofs.
Yes — though generally smaller than eastern-plains hail, Boulder has a documented record of 5 hail days within 10 miles of the city between 2021 and 2026, all confirmed by NWS storm spotters. Ground-measured stones here have run to 1.0 inch (July 11, 2025), smaller than Greeley-area hail but still capable of damaging aging shingles, and NOAA radar has indicated larger signatures aloft on those days. Storms that build over the foothills tend to weaken as they reach the higher, closer-in neighborhoods like Chautauqua and Mapleton Hill. Red Hawk pulls NOAA storm records for every estimate.
Recent Roof Inspection Near Boulder
Real roof inspection jobs from across the Front Range — material variety, install detail, and finished results.
Boulder Custom Multi-Gable
Boulder Craftsman Stone-Coated Steel
Foothills Metal Panel
Foothills Pole Barn Crew
Project photography from Red Hawk Roofing's own portfolio. All installations performed by licensed, insured Red Hawk crews.
Hail History in Boulder
Boulder 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 1.0-inch hail measured on July 11, 2025 (1 report), where NOAA radar indicated 2.5 inches — 1.5 inches above the measured size. Radar figures are NOAA SWDI estimates (MEHS), not measurements; ground figures are NWS Local Storm Reports.
Jul 11
2025
1.00"
Measured
1 report
radar 2.50" (+1.50")
LSR+SWDI
Jun 17
2025
1.00"
Measured
1 report
radar 2.25" (+1.25")
LSR+SWDI
May 30
2024
1.00"
Measured
2 reports
radar 2.00" (+1.00")
LSR+SWDI
May 9
2023
1.00"
Measured
1 report
radar 2.25" (+1.25")
LSR+SWDI
Jul 27
2022
1.00"
Measured
1 report
radar 2.50" (+1.50")
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 Boulder center, 2021–present, ≥1.0 inch.