Last Updated: June 17, 2026 | Author: Tripp Atkinson, Founder, ContractingPRO A new architectural asphalt roof in the Memphis area runs $10,000 to $30,000 in 2026. Most homes land somewhere in the middle.
Read MoreLast Updated: June 17, 2026 | Author: Tripp Atkinson, Founder, ContractingPRO A new architectural asphalt roof in the Memphis area runs $10,000 to $30,000 in 2026. Most homes land somewhere in the middle.
Read MoreBartlett and Germantown sit in one of the busier paths for spring thunderstorm systems in the Mid-South. Straight-line winds of 60 to 70 mph aren't unusual during a typical April storm. Gusts in tornadic systems can exceed 90 mph.
Read MoreMemphis gets hail. Not every year, not every storm, but often enough that every homeowner in the Mid-South should know how to recognize hail damage on a roof. The tricky part: hail damage often doesn't look like much from the ground. The shingles look fine. The house looks fine.
Read MoreA spring storm comes through Memphis. A tree limb hits the roof, or hail dents your gutters, or wind lifts shingles off three slopes. You're going to file an insurance claim. Now what?
Read MoreA new roof is a significant expense. Most Memphis-area asphalt shingle replacements run $14,000 to $25,000, with premium materials or larger homes pushing higher. For most homeowners, that's not money sitting in checking.
Read MoreYou're standing in the front yard looking up at the roof. Maybe there are a few curling shingles, maybe a leak showed up after the last storm, maybe a contractor knocked on your door and told you the whole thing needs to come off.
Read MoreMost Memphis homeowners assume that the word warranty on a roofing contract means they're covered if something goes wrong.
Read MoreIf you've been getting roofing quotes in Memphis, you've probably seen the phrase Owens Corning Platinum Preferred Contractor on at least one marketing flyer, truck wrap, or website. It sounds like a sales tagline. It isn't.
Read MoreDrive through any neighborhood in Memphis, Germantown, Collierville, or Bartlett, and you'll see the same thing on most of the houses: asphalt shingles.
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