Instant Roof Cost Calculator
Enter your roof size and pick a material to see your estimated cost in Broomfield.
Cost by House Size and Material in Broomfield
| House Size | Asphalt | Architectural | Metal | Tile |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1000 sq ft | $5,100 | $6,300 | $13,800 | $14,400 |
| 1500 sq ft | $7,650 | $9,450 | $20,700 | $21,600 |
| 2000 sq ft | $10,200 | $12,600 | $27,550 | $28,750 |
| 2500 sq ft | $12,750 | $15,750 | $34,450 | $35,950 |
| 3000 sq ft | $15,300 | $18,900 | $41,350 | $43,150 |
Roofing in Broomfield: what locals should know
Weather & climate
Broomfield in the Denver metro experiences severe hailstorms along the Front Range, particularly from May through July when afternoon thunderstorms develop rapidly
Best materials for Broomfield
Impact-resistant Class 4 shingles are highly recommended in Broomfield, with Colorado insurers typically offering 15-28% premium discounts for qualifying products
Local market
Broomfield's fast-growing market means experienced roofing contractors are in high demand; verify licensing and check recent references carefully
Permits
Broomfield requires a building permit from the city's Development Services Department for all full roof replacements
What Affects Roofing Cost in Broomfield
- Roof pitch and accessibility
- Material type (architectural, metal, tile)
- Tear-off and disposal requirements
- Flashing and ventilation upgrades
- Decking repair or replacement
- Local labor rates in Broomfield, CO
- Hail damage frequency (impact-resistant materials recommended)
- HOA material and color restrictions in many neighborhoods
- High demand for contractors in this fast-growing market
Savings Tip
Broomfield is a fast-growing market. Booking in the off-season (late fall or winter) can save 10-15% on labor.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a new roof cost in Broomfield?
Most Broomfield homeowners pay between $5,100 to $100,700 for a new roof, depending on size, material, and pitch. Broomfield in the Denver metro experiences severe hailstorms along the Front Range, particularly from May through July when afternoon thunderstorms develop rapidly
Is roofing more expensive in Broomfield than the national average?
Roofing in Broomfield runs close to the national average for a comparable home — labor rates, material availability, and code requirements all sit near the middle of the range. Broomfield's housing stock averages about 18 years, which keeps decking-repair and ventilation-upgrade surprises relatively rare.
How does Broomfield's winter climate shape roofing material choice?
Impact-resistant Class 4 shingles are highly recommended in Broomfield, with Colorado insurers typically offering 15-28% premium discounts for qualifying products
What permits, inspections, and HOA approvals does Broomfield require for a new roof?
Broomfield requires a building permit from the city's Development Services Department for all full roof replacements. Verify the permit application names you as the property owner — when a Broomfield contractor pulls a permit in their own name, you can't independently track inspections or appeal failures. In Broomfield's HOA-heavy neighborhoods, factor in 2-4 weeks for architectural-committee approval of color and material — start that process before signing the contract.
What should a cold-climate roofing quote in Broomfield cover?
In Broomfield, a roofing quote should call out tear-off, underlayment, flashing, drip edge, starter strip, ridge cap, decking inspection, ice and water shield, disposal/cleanup, and the permit. In a cold climate, your quote should explicitly include ice and water shield at all eaves and valleys, a balanced ridge-and-soffit ventilation plan, and decking inspection — ice-dam damage is hidden until the next thaw. Any Broomfield bid that omits these items deserves a follow-up question; the gaps are how a "low" quote becomes the expensive one by the end.
Does hail damage affect roofing costs in Broomfield?
Yes. Broomfield is in a high hail-risk area. After major storms, contractor demand spikes and wait times can stretch to weeks. Consider impact-resistant (Class 4) shingles, which may also qualify for insurance discounts.

