Roofing Cost · Colorado
Roofing Cost in Colorado (2026)
Roofing in Colorado typically runs $12,300–$27,300 for a typical 1,800–2,200 sq ft roof replacement (asphalt shingles, tear-off included). That works out to roughly $6.16–$14.46 per square foot.
Colorado context that moves roofing cost
Climate: Semi-arid with cold winters and significant altitude variation. Snow loads at elevation require engineered roof systems. Wildfire risk in mountain communities.
Labor market: Above national average.
Permits & codes: Colorado follows the IRC with local amendments. Mountain jurisdictions have enhanced snow load requirements (often 60–100+ PSF). WUI zones require fire-resistant construction. Denver and Boulder have their own energy efficiency amendments that exceed the base code.
About roofing in Colorado
A residential roof replacement covers tear-off of the existing roofing, inspection and repair of the decking, new underlayment, drip edge, flashing, vents, and shingle installation. For a typical 2,000 square foot home with a moderate pitch, that's a one-week job for an established crew.
Asphalt shingles are still the dominant residential roofing material in the US — about 80% of replacements. Tile is common in the Southwest and on Spanish-style homes; metal roofing is growing in mountain and coastal regions; cedar shake is niche. Material choice can swing the total cost 2-3× even before you account for regional labor differences.
What moves the price
Material choice
3-tab asphalt: $90–$130 per square (100 sq ft). Architectural / dimensional asphalt: $130–$200 per square. Metal standing-seam: $400–$900 per square. Clay or concrete tile: $400–$1,200 per square. Cedar shake: $400–$700 per square. The material is usually 35–50% of the total job cost; the rest is labor, tear-off, and accessories.
Roof complexity
A simple gable roof is the cheapest installation. Hip roofs add 10–15%. Multiple dormers, valleys, skylights, and chimneys add labor at every penetration. A complex roof can cost 30–60% more per square than a simple one of the same area.
Tear-off vs overlay
Most jurisdictions allow only one shingle layer; if your existing roof already has two, you must tear off. Tear-off adds $1.50–$3.50 per square foot in labor plus $400–$900 in disposal fees. Some areas now require tear-off regardless because layered roofs hide damage and complicate insurance inspections.
Decking repair
Once the old roof is off, you may find soft or rotted sheathing — typically 5–15% of the deck needs replacement on a 20+ year roof. Budget $70–$120 per 4x8 sheet of OSB or plywood installed. On bigger replacements (1,500+ sqft) you'll often hit $500–$2,000 in deck repair you didn't see in the original bid.
Permit and disposal fees
Permits run $150–$700 depending on jurisdiction. Disposal of 20+ year asphalt is typically by the cubic yard at a transfer station — $400–$1,000 for a 2,000 sq ft tear-off. Some states charge tipping fees on top.
Wind, snow, and impact ratings
Code-required wind ratings vary by climate zone. Coastal hurricane zones require 120–150 mph rated shingles installed with a tighter nailing pattern (6 nails per shingle vs 4). Hail-prone regions in the Midwest and Plains often install Class 4 impact-rated shingles that earn an insurance discount; these run 15–25% more in material.
Roofing cost across Colorado metros
Within Colorado the spread between metros is usually 25–40% of the state midpoint. Major metros pay more than rural areas because of labor demand, permit complexity, and material delivery overhead.
- Denver — typical home build $190–$440/sq ft range
- Colorado Springs — typical home build $170–$380/sq ft range
- Boulder — typical home build $220–$500/sq ft range
- Fort Collins — typical home build $180–$400/sq ft range
- Vail / Summit County — typical home build $300–$700/sq ft range
Frequently asked questions
How much does a roof replacement cost in Colorado?
What does the Colorado cost include?
Why is roofing more expensive in some Colorado metros than others?
When should I replace vs repair my Colorado roof?
Should I file an insurance claim for storm damage in Colorado?
Get a Colorado-specific roofing estimate
CostKit's AI pulls Colorado labor rates, regional material prices, and code-driven requirements automatically. Generate a free phase-by-phase estimate in under 60 seconds.
Generate a free estimate →Related
See the full 50-state roofing cost comparison to see how Colorado stacks up nationally.
For broader benchmarks across Colorado, see the cost to build a house in Colorado.
Other trade costs for Colorado:
