What a new roof really costs, and what holds up where you live. Real cost ranges for Tyler homes, the materials that survive Tyler weather, and the local factors that move the price.
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Adjust the inputs to match your home. Figures blend national pricing with Tyler's local cost index. They're guidance ranges, not quotes.
Tuned to Tyler labor and material pricing. Slide to match your home.
The default for most homes: layered asphalt, good looks, solid value.
Planning estimate, not a quote, your actual price varies by contractor, materials, and scope.
Per-square-foot ranges adjusted for Tyler. Premium materials cost more up front but last decades longer.
A new roof returns about 61% of its cost at resale, roughly $8,100 of added home value on a typical job, on top of avoiding insurance and inspection headaches.
A typical roof replacement here runs $9,900–$16,600. A fair Tyler quote includes a full tear-off, new underlayment, and proper flashing. Bids well below the range often skip one of those.
Roofers are busiest after spring and summer storms and through the fall rush. Booking in the slower, colder months usually means better pricing. These are modeled trends for Tyler; actual timing and savings vary.
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The local climate, insurance market, and permitting all shape what you should buy and budget.
Tyler sits in the East Texas Piney Woods at roughly 550 feet elevation in a classic humid subtropical climate: summers are long, hot, and oppressively humid, with temperatures regularly topping 95°F from June through August and dew points that keep nights miserable well into September. Spring is the most dangerous season, as Smith County sits on the southern fringe of Tornado Alley and sees rotating supercell thunderstorms with hail, high winds, and periodic tornado touchdowns from March through May. Winters are short and mild but not without hazard: ice storms roll through East Texas every few years, depositing freezing rain that causes more roof and gutter damage than the occasional hard freeze.
Storm damage is a covered peril on most Texas policies. Class 4 impact-resistant shingles often unlock a premium discount, so ask your carrier before you pick a material.
Tyler requires a roofing permit for full replacements; a licensed contractor pulls it through the city or county building department and schedules the required inspection.
Go deeper on costs, materials, and how to choose, then price it for your home above.
Asphalt vs. metal vs. tile: how the main roofing materials compare on installed cost, lifespan, and durability, and which one fits your home and climate.
Read guideCost guideA clear breakdown of roof replacement cost: per-square-foot ranges by material, the factors that move a quote, and how to read a roofing bid so you don't overpay.
Read guideComparisonWhen a roof repair is the smart, cheap fix and when it is throwing good money after bad. How age, damage, and the cost of the repair decide repair versus full replacement.
Read guidePlanningThe warning signs that a roof is failing, from curling shingles and granule loss to attic leaks and a sagging roofline, and how to tell a quick repair from a full replacement.
Read guideComparisonWhich roof material holds up best where you live. How heat, hail, snow, and wind change the right pick among asphalt, metal, and tile, and where Class 4 shingles pay off.
Read guidePlanningSimple roof maintenance that adds years of life: inspect twice a year, keep gutters clear, reseal flashing early, and keep the attic properly ventilated.
Read guideHow we estimate: ranges combine national per-square-foot installed pricing by material with Tyler's local cost index, roof size, pitch, and stories. They're modeled for planning and may differ from contractor quotes. Always get an on-site inspection before you commit.