The most common one, asphalt shingles, and a highly hail-resistant alternative, stone-coated steel.
Asphalt is the budget go-to. Stone-coated steel is rapidly gaining popularity for its durability, but is the higher upfront cost actually worth it?
This guide walks through the pros and cons of each system and the real lifetime cost, including what most homeowners overlook: the cost of insurance.
There is a reason asphalt shingles dominate about 80% of the market. They are affordable, fast to install, and available in just about any color and style you could want.
An average asphalt roof runs between $15,000 and $20,000.
Asphalt is fast and straightforward to install, which keeps labor costs down and project timelines short.
Asphalt shingles come in countless profiles and colors to match almost any home.
There are two main classes of asphalt shingles: hail-rated (Class 4 impact resistant) and unrated. Hail-rated shingles cost more, but those that pass the Underwriters Laboratories impact resistance test may qualify for a discount on your homeowner’s insurance. Keep in mind, however, that even hail-rated shingles can still sustain hail damage.
Asphalt shingles last 15 to 25 years or until the next hail storm, which in Colorado could be the next year.
Poor attic ventilation makes your house hotter and shortens the life of the shingles. They literally cook from both the bottom and the top. If shingles appear defective and the attic is not properly ventilated, most manufacturers will void the warranty. Always ask your contractor whether your attic is properly ventilated.
Many insurance companies will fully insure an asphalt roof for only the first 10 years. After that, they pay the depreciated value, which can be roughly 50% of the roof’s value after 20 years. In some cases, insurers will not cover an older asphalt roof at all.
Hail-rated shingles typically hold up to marble-sized hail. Once hail reaches quarter-size or larger, all asphalt shingles tend to sustain damage. Shingles also lose granules from freeze-thaw cycles and intense sun exposure, and high winds can blow them off.
Asphalt roofs usually do not need much upkeep, but once the roof is a few years old, an inspection every couple of years is smart to make sure nothing is quietly failing.
Stone-coated steel is engineered around a 26-gauge steel core, finished to look like traditional shingles, shake, or tile. It is designed to be a one-and-done roofing system.
Stone-coated steel is designed to last 50+ years.
It carries a Class 4 impact rating, the highest currently offered. Honestly, if there were a Class 5 or Class 6, stone-coated steel would likely pass those too. It is not just hail resistant like some asphalt shingles, it is nearly hail proof.
The manufacturer rates stone-coated steel to withstand winds up to 120 mph, and in practice it handles gusts well beyond that. It is the preferred roof in hurricane zones for a reason.
Stone-coated steel comes in a variety of styles that replicate the aesthetic appeal of concrete tile, including barrel tile profiles, at a fraction of the weight. That weight difference matters: unlike a concrete tile barrel system, a stone-coated steel barrel system doesn't require a structural engineer for installation, making the upgrade simpler and more accessible.
According to insurance leaders in Denver that Excel Roofing has met with, some insurance providers are now offering premium discounts for metal roofing. In the past, discounts were available for Class 4 asphalt shingles, but because those shingles are still susceptible to hail damage, most providers have moved away from that discount.
Metal roofing has become the preferred candidate for these savings due to its superior hail resistance. Because the likelihood of filing a hail damage claim is significantly lower, homeowners can raise their deductible, which reduces their monthly premiums.
Until the 1990's, most homes and buildings in the United States had cedar shake shingle roofs. That changed when insurance companies no longer wanted to insure cedar shakes.
The claim was because of their fire rating, but in reality it was because of how easily they were damaged by hail. Over time, it made more sense to insure other types of roofs that were more resistant to hail instead of insuring cedar shake roofs.
We are now seeing a similar trend with asphalt shingles as insurance companies are no longer wanting to insure asphalt shingle roofs with RCV (retail cost value) and are moving many policies to ACV (Actual Cost Value). Many homeowners with older asphalt shingle roofs are seeing their coverage be reduced or worse case scenario, denied because there is a strong likelihood that the roof will be totaled in the next hail-storm or strong wind event.
Just like asphalt shingles, stone-coated steel does not need snow guards to keep snow and ice from sliding off the roof. The ceramic granules create an abrasive, rough surface that holds snow in place through mechanical friction, meaning the rougher the surface, the less movement.
Direct-to-deck stone-coated steel panels
Batten mounted stone-coated steel helps create a system similar to a cold roof, and that matters because ice dams are one of winter's most damaging roof problems.
The space between the decking and the panel creates a dead air pocket that insulates the roof, keeping the snow on top cold and uniform. No warm-roof-meets-cold-edge swing means no melt-and-refreeze cycle, and no ice dam.
Ice dams form when snow melts on a warm upper roof, runs down, and refreezes at the cold eaves. That ridge of ice traps water behind it, and since shingles only shed water flowing downhill, the backup seeps underneath and into your attic, insulation, walls, and ceilings. The result can be rot, mold, stained drywall, and damaged gutters.
Diagram explaining how a cold roof system prevents ice dams
Batten mounted stone-coated steel panel close up
Unless there is a leak or manufacturer defect, stone-coated steel requires essentially no maintenance.
Stone-coated steel runs about 2 to 2.5 times the cost of an asphalt roof.
On rare occasions, the epoxy bonding the granules to the panels can fail, usually when golf-ball-sized hail knocks granules loose. This typically does not affect panel performance, but granules may need to be re-glued. It would take baseball-sized hail or larger to actually destroy this type of roof.
Panels can dent if they are walked on incorrectly. When anyone needs to get up on the roof, send someone light who knows how to walk on stone-coated steel.
A stone-coated steel panel that has been dented from someone walking on it improperly
Unlike asphalt shingles, stone-coated steel is much more of a technical installation, requiring specialized tools to precisely cut panels (this tool is called a guillotine) specialized skills/techniques and much more experience to install correctly. If a stone-coated steel roof is improperly installed, the likelihood of leaks is significantly higher than if an asphalt shingle roof was installed wrong.
In March, Excel Roofing hosted a stone-coated steel installation training day. Led by our expert service technician, Raul.
This roof requires specialized skills and a contractor with real experience installing it correctly. Excel Roofing has been installing stone-coated steel across the Front Range for years.
Here is where the comparison gets interesting. Asphalt is cheaper today, but you will likely replace it three or more times over the next 50 years. Stone-coated steel is basically a one-and-done solution.
Over a 50-year horizon, the steel roof is actually cheaper when you account for repeat replacements, and it adds superior resale value. But the bigger cost most homeowners miss is insurance.
We have put together a 10-year insurance cost comparison for asphalt versus stone-coated steel. We also recommend asking your own insurance agent to build a 10-year cost spreadsheet for your home comparing different roof types.
The real savings start around year five, when the cost to insure an asphalt roof climbs to nearly double the cost of insuring stone-coated steel. The reason is simple: an asphalt shingle roof is much more likely to be totaled by hail or wind, so insurers charge more to cover it.
Over 10 years, total insurance costs for an asphalt roof run about double those of stone-coated steel — roughly $46,000 versus $24,000. The money you save on insurance alone largely covers the upfront upgrade to a steel roof. When you add in the fact that stone-coated steel is nearly hail proof, meaning your odds of paying future deductibles on hail-totaled roofs are close to zero, the math makes a strong case for steel.
You will likely see 50-80% of a stone-coated steel upgrade from the sale of a home
Choose asphalt if you are on a strict budget or planning to move within the next five years.
Choose stone-coated steel if you plan to stay in the home more than five years and you do not want to deal with future roof claims.
Both will do a great job protecting your home. It really comes down to upfront cash versus a long-term investment that reduces the chance of roof claims down the road.
Excel Roofing has installed roofs across the Front Range since 1993. If you want a straight answer on which system makes sense for your home, budget, and insurance situation, schedule a free inspection and we will walk you through a clear Good-Better-Best estimate, no pressure, just the numbers.