Shingle Damage
Replace missing, lifted, cracked, or weather-worn shingles before water moves into vulnerable areas.
Practical roof repair for leaks, missing shingles, pipe boots, flashing concerns, vents, roof-edge issues, and weather-related wear.
We help you understand whether a repair is appropriate or whether a larger roofing plan should be considered.
Replace missing, lifted, cracked, or weather-worn shingles before water moves into vulnerable areas.
Pipe boots and roof penetrations are common leak points when rubber, sealant, or flashing fails.
Support vents, metal flashing, transitions, and roof details that often cause hidden leaks.
A useful repair does more than cover the symptom. It identifies the vulnerable detail, explains the repair area, and shows why that specific part of the roof needed attention.
Different roof leaks come from different details. These photos show the type of problem area we look for before recommending a practical repair.
Leaks around skylights often come from old seals, worn flashing, or weak transitions between the skylight frame and roof surface. A proper repair checks the full surrounding detail, not only the visible glass.
Tile-style roofs have different weak points than asphalt shingles. We look for cracked caps, separated joints, failed bedding, and water paths around ridges and transitions.
Chimney caps and metal flashing need a close look because water can enter where several materials meet: shingles, metal, siding, vent pipes, and sealants.
Vent and pipe flashing repairs often require lifting surrounding shingles or tiles so the new detail can be integrated properly, not just covered with surface sealant.
Rubber boots crack over time from sun, weather, and movement. Replacing the failed boot and checking the surrounding shingles helps protect the roof penetration properly.