Skip to main content
Homericly Roofing

City Roofing Guide · Summit Crest Roofing

High-Alpine Roofing Done Right.

At 9,000+ feet, roofing is a completely different science. Homericly Roofing specializes in the snow loads, steep pitches, and extreme conditions of Summit County.

By Summit Crest Roofing · Updated May 26, 2026

Roofing in Summit County, CO

Breckenridge, Keystone, Frisco, Silverthorne, and Dillon all sit between 9,000 and 11,000 feet above sea level — elevations where standard roofing materials fail faster, snow loads exceed 100 lbs per square foot, and ice dams form every winter. Summit County's roofing market is dominated by steep-pitch designs, metal standing seam systems, and specialty underlayments rated for extreme cold. Vacation rental properties need fast turnarounds; full-time residents need reliability. Homericly's mountain-credentialed crews handle both.

By the numbers

300+"

annual snowfall — roofs must be engineered for it

48 hr

Free inspection scheduling window

0%

APR financing available

What roofs cost in Summit County

Typical price ranges for a standard single-family replacement. Insurance commonly covers most of this in declared hail-damage areas.

Low end

$10,500

Typical

$16,800

High end

$23,500

Full asphalt replacement, ~2,000 sq ft. These are market averages. Your actual estimate depends on pitch, square footage, dormers, and material class.

What we install most in Summit County

Common roofing systems in this market. We rotate brands based on supply, warranty support, and HOA requirements.

Metal standing seam

Best for: Most Summit County homes

Common in Summit County Summit County. Summit County averages 300+ inches of snow per year. Ice dams, structural snow loads, and freeze-thaw cycles are the primary roofing challenges — not hail.

Steep-pitch asphalt

Common in Summit County Summit County. Summit County averages 300+ inches of snow per year. Ice dams, structural snow loads, and freeze-thaw cycles are the primary roofing challenges — not hail.

Synthetic shake

Common in Summit County Summit County. Summit County averages 300+ inches of snow per year. Ice dams, structural snow loads, and freeze-thaw cycles are the primary roofing challenges — not hail.

Steel panel

Common in Summit County Summit County. Summit County averages 300+ inches of snow per year. Ice dams, structural snow loads, and freeze-thaw cycles are the primary roofing challenges — not hail.

Summit County questions

Do you serve all of Summit County?
Yes — every neighborhood in Summit County and the surrounding Summit County.
How fast can you inspect my roof?
We typically schedule Summit County free inspections within 48 hours. Same-day is available for active leaks.
Will you handle my insurance claim?
We meet your adjuster on the roof, walk the damage together, and translate the report into a fair scope of work. No charge for that work.

Before you call any roofer

  • Take wide-angle photos of your roof and gutters from the ground, dated.
  • Check your insurance policy's deductible and storm-damage timeline (usually 1 year).
  • Get at least two written estimates — walk away from anyone pressuring a same-day signature.
  • Verify the roofer carries general liability AND workers' comp insurance.
  • Confirm the manufacturer warranty transfers with the home — most do, but ask in writing.

Sources

  1. NOAA Storm Events Database
  2. IBHS shingle impact ratings
  3. Local market data — Summit County

Questions about your roof? We'll come look — free.

Summit Crest Roofing · Local roofing pros