Roofing & Siding Contractors in North Carolina
Licensed roofing and siding contractors serving Charlotte, Raleigh, Durham, Greensboro, Winston-Salem, and communities statewide. North Carolina's geography spans Atlantic hurricane landfall zones in the east, the Appalachian Mountain snow and ice storm zone in the west, and an enormous Piedmont growth corridor with one of the fastest-growing housing markets in the Southeast — creating year-round replacement demand across the state's three distinct climate regions.
North Carolina Roofing — Hurricane Corridor, Appalachian Ice Storms, Charlotte Tornado Exposure, and the Southeast's Fastest-Growing Piedmont
North Carolina's roofing market is defined by its extraordinary geographic diversity — it is the only state with significant roofing demand driven simultaneously by Atlantic hurricane landfall, Appalachian mountain winter weather, and Piedmont tornado and hail activity. Eastern North Carolina (Wilmington, New Bern, Jacksonville, the Outer Banks, Goldsboro, Greenville) is in one of the most active hurricane landfall zones on the East Coast: Hurricane Floyd (1999) dropped 20 inches of rain inland and caused catastrophic riverine flooding; Hurricane Florence (September 2018) made direct landfall near Wilmington as a Category 1 and stalled, dropping 30–40 inches across a 3-day period and causing $24 billion in North Carolina damage; Hurricane Dorian (2019) devastated the Outer Banks. Western North Carolina (Asheville, Boone, Banner Elk, Bryson City) sits in the Blue Ridge Mountains and receives 50–80 inches of annual snowfall with significant ice storm exposure — the December 2002 ice storm left much of the mountains without power for weeks and caused widespread roofing damage from ice accumulation. The Piedmont (Charlotte, Raleigh-Durham, Greensboro, Winston-Salem) is North Carolina's population center and one of the fastest-growing regions in the US — both Charlotte and Raleigh rank consistently among the top 5 fastest-growing major metros in the country. Charlotte sits at the intersection of the Piedmont tornado corridor and the Appalachian storm track: the April 27, 2011 outbreak produced a tornado that struck the Charlotte suburb of Cabarrus County directly; the April 16, 2011 outbreak produced damaging tornadoes in Raleigh that struck during morning rush hour.
Our Services
Roof Replacement
Full tear-off and replacement. Atlantic coast and eastern NC require hurricane-rated fastening schedules; western NC mountain communities need ice-and-water shield and snow load engineering; Piedmont suburban housing benefits from algae-resistant shingles for NC's humid summers. Manufacturer warranties, licensed crews.
Roof Repair
Leak diagnosis, flashing repair, storm and wind damage repair. Emergency response across North Carolina.
Siding Replacement
Vinyl, fiber cement, and engineered wood siding selected for North Carolina's specific climate.
Gutters
Seamless aluminum gutters and guards engineered for North Carolina'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 North Carolina's climate.
Areas We Serve in North Carolina
- Charlotte
- Raleigh
- Durham
- Greensboro
- Winston-Salem
- Wilmington
- Asheville
- Fayetteville
Frequently Asked Questions — North Carolina
What damage did Hurricane Florence cause in North Carolina in 2018?
Hurricane Florence made direct landfall near Wilmington, NC on September 14, 2018 as a Category 1 hurricane, then stalled over the Carolinas for three days, dropping 30–36 inches of rain across the coastal plain and 20+ inches as far inland as the Piedmont. The rainfall produced catastrophic riverine flooding — the Cape Fear, Neuse, Lumber, and Waccamaw rivers all reached historic or near-historic flood stages, inundating Wilmington, New Bern, Jacksonville, Lumberton, and Goldsboro. Total North Carolina damage from Florence exceeded $24 billion; roofing damage was widespread across the coastal region from direct wind, with much greater structural damage from flood inundation of entire first floors in the river communities. Florence is now the benchmark against which all NC storm events are measured.
How does North Carolina's growth in the Raleigh-Durham Research Triangle affect roofing demand?
The Research Triangle (Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill) and its surrounding counties (Wake, Durham, Orange, Johnston, Chatham, Harnett) have been among the fastest-growing areas in the US for 20 years — Wake County alone added 35,000+ residents per year during peak growth years. This volume of new housing is entering multiple maintenance cycles simultaneously: the 2000s-era developments in Apex, Cary, Morrisville, and Holly Springs are approaching 20-year shingle life; the 1990s developments are on second replacement cycles. The Triangle's combination of growth, tech-sector incomes, and NC's periodic severe weather creates a deep, sustainable roofing market that is not dependent on storm events to drive demand.
Does western North Carolina require different roofing than the Piedmont?
Significantly. Western NC's Blue Ridge Mountain communities (Asheville, Boone, Weaverville, Black Mountain, Waynesville) receive 50–80 inches of annual snowfall and significant ice storm exposure — ice accumulation from freezing rain is often more damaging than snow because of its greater weight per inch. Mountain roofing requires ice-and-water shield extending 6+ feet from eaves, proper attic ventilation to prevent ice dams, and snow load engineering for steeper slopes. The Piedmont's climate is markedly different: Raleigh averages only 6 inches of annual snowfall and Charlotte averages 4 inches — standard architectural shingle with algae-resistance treatment is the primary driver, with hurricane wind resistance a secondary consideration for the eastern Piedmont.
More Service Areas Near North Carolina
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