We measure your roof from satellite imagery — or your own measurements — and price a new roof by material.
SAMPLE · A REAL SCOTTSDALE ROOF — OR ENTER YOUR ADDRESS ABOVE
Most asphalt-shingle replacements in the U.S. land roughly between $600 and $800 per square (100 ft²) installed — about $12,000–$25,000 for a typical single-family home, and more for tile, metal, or complex roofs. This estimator prices your actual roof: it measures the area and pitch from satellite imagery and applies regional material, labor, and disposal rates by material.
We use Google's Solar API, which maps roofs facet by facet from aerial imagery — each section's area, pitch, and direction. We sum the facets into the true roof area (not just the footprint) and price from that. Every measurement is shown on your survey sheet, down to the individual facet.
The measurement is imagery-grade — typically within a few percent where high-quality imagery exists. The price is a planning range: we apply ±10% on materials and ±15% on labor around a regional midpoint, and we show the full cost schedule so you can check the math. A final price always requires an on-site inspection.
Yes — free, no signup, no phone number required, and nobody contacts you. The estimate stays on your screen unless you choose to share it or send it to us for verification.
Yes. Roofs at or below a 2:12 pitch are priced as flat-roof systems (spray foam or TPO membrane) instead of shingles, which can’t be installed at that slope. Mixed roofs get each low-slope section flagged on the facet schedule, since bids typically price those separately.
Every survey has a shareable link that reproduces the exact estimate, and a print-ready PDF of the full survey sheet — measurements, cost schedule, and facet table included.