Siding Cost · North Carolina
Siding Cost in North Carolina (2026)
Siding in North Carolina typically runs $9,000–$19,000 for a typical 2,000 sq ft single-family home (approximately 2,000 sq ft of exterior wall surface). That works out to roughly $4.49–$9.48 per sq ft installed.
North Carolina context that moves siding replacement cost
Climate: Varies from coastal subtropical (Outer Banks) to mountain continental (Asheville). Hurricane risk on the coast. Moderate winters in the Piedmont.
Labor market: Below national average.
Permits & codes: North Carolina follows the NC State Building Code based on the IRC. The state has statewide code enforcement through local inspection departments. Coastal areas have additional wind-resistance requirements. The state requires energy code compliance and has radon-resistant construction requirements in some counties.
About siding replacement in North Carolina
Vinyl siding is the most common residential exterior in the US — about 30% of homes — because it's the cheapest durable option that doesn't require finish painting. A full replacement on a typical 2,000 sq ft home runs $9,000 to $19,000 nationally in 2026.
Fiber cement (Hardie board) is the next most common, costing 1.5–2× vinyl but offering a more upscale appearance and 50-year warranty. Wood, engineered wood (LP SmartSide), brick veneer, and stucco fill out the remaining options. Material choice and code requirements interact to drive the per-state spread.
What moves the price
Tear-off vs new construction
Replacing existing siding adds $1.50–$3.00/sq ft for removal and disposal. On a 2,000 sq ft house that's $3,000–$6,000 just to take the old material off. New construction over fresh sheathing is at the low end of the state range.
Insulated (foam-backed) vinyl
Standard vinyl runs $3–$5/sq ft material. Foam-backed insulated vinyl is $5–$8/sq ft and adds R-2 to R-4 of continuous insulation. Required in some Northeast and Northwest jurisdictions to meet energy code on replacement projects.
House wrap and trim
Code requires a weather-resistive barrier behind new siding. Tyvek HomeWrap or equivalent is $0.30–$0.60/sq ft. New aluminum or PVC trim around windows, doors, and corners adds $1,500–$3,500. Don't skip it — water intrusion at trim is the most common siding-related insurance claim.
Hurricane and wind zones
Florida, Gulf Coast, and Atlantic states require tighter nailing schedules (every 8" on center vs 16") and sometimes ring-shank or hurricane-rated nails. Some coastal counties require fiber cement or Hardie board instead of vinyl. Add 15–30% to your base cost in HVHZ and high-wind regions.
Profile and color choice
Most vinyl is double-4 or double-5 horizontal lap. Premium profiles (dutch lap, board-and-batten, scallop) add 15–35% in material. Darker colors (deep blue, charcoal, forest green) cost 10–20% more than light tans and whites because of color stabilizers.
Two-story vs single-story
A 2-story home of the same square footage as a single-story has roughly 1.4× the exterior wall area. Two-story labor is also higher because of scaffolding requirements — figure $1,500–$3,500 extra on a typical 2-story job vs the same footprint single-story.
Siding cost across North Carolina metros
Within North Carolina 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.
- Charlotte — typical home build $140–$320/sq ft range
- Raleigh / Durham (Triangle) — typical home build $140–$310/sq ft range
- Asheville — typical home build $155–$350/sq ft range
- Wilmington — typical home build $135–$300/sq ft range
- Greensboro / Winston-Salem — typical home build $120–$270/sq ft range
Frequently asked questions
How much does siding replacement cost in North Carolina?
How long does vinyl siding last in North Carolina?
Vinyl vs fiber cement in North Carolina — which is better value?
Can I install vinyl siding myself in North Carolina?
Should I insulate the wall when re-siding?
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See the full 50-state siding replacement cost comparison to see how North Carolina stacks up nationally.
For broader benchmarks across North Carolina, see the cost to build a house in North Carolina.
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