Roofing & Siding Contractors in Georgia
Licensed roofing and siding contractors serving Atlanta, Augusta, Savannah, Macon, Columbus, and communities statewide. Georgia's diverse climate spans Atlantic hurricane paths in the coast and southeast, the Piedmont's active spring tornado and hail corridor, and the north Georgia Appalachian mountains — combined with Atlanta's status as one of the fastest-growing metro areas in the US creating extraordinary year-round statewide demand.
Georgia Roofing — Atlanta's April 2020 Tornado, 2014 Ice Storm, Active Spring Hail, Savannah Hurricane Exposure, and the Fastest-Growing Metro in the Southeast
Georgia's roofing market is anchored by Atlanta — the 10th largest metro in the United States and one of the fastest-growing, consistently adding 80,000–100,000 residents per year across its 29-county metro area. Atlanta's roofing demand comes from multiple sources: aging inner-city housing stock (the in-town neighborhoods of Grant Park, Inman Park, East Atlanta Village, Decatur, Morningside, Virginia-Highland contain late-Victorian through mid-century housing needing expertise); the first-replacement cycles of 1990s–2000s outer-suburb development in Cherokee, Forsyth, Paulding, Henry, and Douglas counties; and periodic severe weather events. The April 27, 2020 tornado outbreak struck metropolitan Atlanta directly — a confirmed EF3 tornado moved through Chattahoochee Hills in the southwest metro (Fulton County) and additional confirmed tornadoes struck Troup County, causing catastrophic roof and structural damage in communities southwest of downtown. The February 2014 Atlanta ice storm was a different kind of disaster: 2 inches of ice accumulated on the metro's roofing surfaces, causing widespread structural stress and gutter failures across Atlanta's enormous housing inventory — the event was primarily an infrastructure failure (roads became unusable) but roofing damage from ice loading was significant in older housing stock. Georgia's coast (Savannah, Brunswick, the Golden Isles) is in the Atlantic hurricane corridor — Hurricane Matthew (2016) made a near-landfall approach to the Georgia coast that drove evacuation and caused significant wind and storm surge damage in coastal communities.
Our Services
Roof Replacement
Full tear-off and replacement. North Georgia Appalachian communities require ice-and-water shield and snow load specifications; Atlanta suburban housing spans 1890s to 2020s requiring varied expertise; coastal Georgia requires hurricane wind-rated specifications; algae-resistant shingles essential statewide. Manufacturer warranties, licensed crews.
Roof Repair
Leak diagnosis, flashing repair, storm and wind damage repair. Emergency response across Georgia.
Siding Replacement
Vinyl, fiber cement, and engineered wood siding selected for Georgia's specific climate.
Gutters
Seamless aluminum gutters and guards engineered for Georgia's precipitation patterns.
Storm Damage
Insurance claim support for wind, hail, and hurricane damage. Documented scope, insurer coordination.
Windows
Energy-efficient replacement windows optimized for Georgia's climate.
Areas We Serve in Georgia
- Atlanta
- Augusta
- Savannah
- Macon
- Columbus
- Athens
- Sandy Springs
- Roswell
Frequently Asked Questions — Georgia
What was the April 2020 Atlanta tornado outbreak?
The April 27, 2020 outbreak produced the most significant tornado activity in the Atlanta metropolitan area in years. A confirmed EF3 tornado moved through Chattahoochee Hills in southwest Fulton County, destroying homes and causing catastrophic structural damage. Additional confirmed tornadoes struck Troup County (LaGrange area) to the southwest. Atlanta has a complex tornado history: the March 14, 2008 downtown Atlanta tornado was one of the most media-covered urban tornado events in US history, producing an EF2 that tracked through downtown (striking CNN Center, the Omni Hotel, and Georgia Dome) while NBA playoff and NCAA tournament events were occurring — an event that dramatically raised public awareness of Atlanta's tornado risk. The city sits in a convergence zone where Gulf moisture interacts with cold fronts from the northwest, producing active tornado potential several times per spring season.
How did the February 2014 Atlanta ice storm affect roofing?
The February 2014 Atlanta ice storm (often called 'Snowmageddon 2' in Atlanta media) was primarily a transportation disaster — 2 inches of ice on roads brought the city to a standstill, with thousands of cars abandoned on interstates overnight. From a roofing perspective, the 2-inch ice accumulation created significant structural loading on older housing stock not designed for ice loads. Atlanta averages fewer than 2 ice events per decade of this magnitude, meaning its housing stock — unlike northern cities' construction — is not engineered with ice loads in mind. Flat-roof commercial structures in the Atlanta metro experienced failures; older residential housing in the in-town neighborhoods saw gutter failures and ice dam events despite the relatively small accumulation.
Which Atlanta suburbs have the highest roofing replacement demand right now?
The highest replacement demand in the Atlanta metro is currently concentrated in the outer-ring counties from the 1990s–2000s growth boom: Cherokee County (Canton, Woodstock, Holly Springs), Forsyth County (Cumming, South Forsyth — the fastest-growing county in Georgia for multiple years), Henry County (McDonough, Stockbridge, Hampton), Paulding County (Dallas, Hiram), and Douglas County (Douglasville). These communities built enormous housing volumes in the 1990s–2010s; that housing is now 15–30 years old across large subdivisions, producing simultaneous first-replacement demand. Forsyth County in particular has been the fastest-growing county in Georgia and one of the fastest in the nation — the density of similarly-aged housing creates predictable, wave-like replacement demand.
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