What happens during a roof inspection? A Houston homeowner's guide
Most homeowners have never watched a roof inspection happen. Here's exactly what a thorough professional inspection looks like — zone by zone, from the ground to the attic — so you know what you're getting and what to ask about.
A roof inspection is one of those things homeowners know they should do but often delay because they don't know what to expect. Will it take all day? Will the inspector find a problem I can't afford to fix? What happens after?
The honest answer: a good inspection takes 45–90 minutes, gives you a clear picture of your roof's condition, and costs nothing if you work with a contractor who offers free inspections (most reputable local roofers do). Here's exactly what happens.
The five inspection zones
A thorough roof inspection covers five distinct areas. If an inspector skips any of them — or spends less than 30 minutes total — they're not giving you a complete picture.
1 Ground-level walkthrough
Before going up, a good inspector walks the perimeter of your home and scans the roofline from every angle. This establishes the big picture: overall condition, visible missing or damaged shingles, sagging areas, gutter condition, and any obvious structural concerns. Dents or damage to gutters, downspouts, and AC units at ground level tell a story about hail impact.
- Visible shingle damage, curling, or missing sections
- Gutter alignment, attachment, and visible damage
- Fascia and soffit condition from below
- Overall roofline symmetry — sags or dips indicate structural issues
2 Roof surface inspection
This is where the real work happens. The inspector gets on the roof and walks every area — not just the slope facing the driveway. Houston roofs take damage from all directions, and many problems only show up on north or east faces that don't get inspected by a quick look from the street.
- Shingle condition: granule loss, cracking, blistering, curling at edges
- Impact marks — circular bruising pattern indicates hail damage
- Ridge and hip cap — these weather fastest and are often the first to fail
- All flashings: chimney, pipe boots, wall flashings, valley metal
- Vent boots and penetration seals
- Any previous patch work — quality and remaining life of repairs
- Fastening patterns — lifted shingle edges can mean insufficient nailing
3 Attic inspection
This is the inspection step that gets skipped most often — and it's one of the most revealing. The underside of your decking tells the story of every leak that's ever happened, even ones that dried up and were forgotten about. Houston's humidity also makes attic ventilation critically important to shingle longevity.
- Water stains on decking or rafters (old and new)
- Active moisture or mold presence
- Daylight visible through decking boards (gaps or nail holes)
- Attic ventilation — adequate intake at eaves and exhaust at ridge
- Insulation condition — wet insulation means active or past leaks
- Rafter condition and any signs of structural movement
4 Gutters and drainage
Gutters are the last mile of your roof's water management system, and their condition affects your home's foundation just as much as the roof above. Granule buildup in gutters indicates shingle degradation; separated or sagging sections mean improper drainage.
- Granule accumulation — indicator of shingle wear rate
- Bracket attachment and gutter pitch (slope toward downspouts)
- Separation at corners and end caps
- Downspout extensions — are they directing water away from the foundation?
5 Documentation and findings walkthrough
A professional inspection ends with the inspector walking you through what they found — in person, with photos, before they leave the property. Photos should be timestamped and show specific damage locations. Any recommendations should come with clear explanations of why — not just a line item on a quote.
- Photo documentation of all damage areas
- Clear explanation of findings in plain language
- Written summary of condition and recommended action
- Estimated remaining life if no immediate action is needed
When should you get a roof inspection?
There are five situations that should always trigger a professional roof inspection:
- After any significant hail event or tropical storm. Even if you don't see obvious damage, hail can cause functional damage that only becomes apparent over the following year as the compromised shingles degrade faster.
- Every 2–3 years if your roof is under 15 years old. Houston's UV intensity, heat cycling, and humidity age roofs faster than most national averages suggest. Catching developing issues early is much cheaper than emergency repairs.
- Annually if your roof is 15 or more years old. At this age, you're in the replacement planning window. An annual inspection tells you how much life is left and helps you plan rather than react.
- Before buying a home. A home inspection covers the basics, but a dedicated roofing inspection by a roofing contractor goes much deeper on roof-specific condition. The $0–$300 cost is worth it before a six-figure purchase.
- Before listing a home for sale. Knowing your roof's condition before buyers and their inspectors start looking prevents surprises that derail deals or reduce your negotiating position.
What "free inspection" actually means
Most reputable roofing contractors offer free inspections because it's how they find work — and that's fine. A good local contractor isn't going to fabricate damage, because their business depends on repeat customers and neighborhood referrals. You should absolutely use the free inspection, ask to see photos of every finding, and feel free to get a second opinion if the recommended scope seems extensive.
What happens after the inspection
After a thorough inspection, you'll typically fall into one of three categories:
- Roof is in good shape. You get a clean inspection with documentation of current condition. File it away — it's useful if you ever need to prove pre-storm condition for an insurance claim.
- Repairs needed. Specific issues (a failed pipe boot, a few lifted shingles, a section of separated flashing) can be addressed with targeted repairs. Get the repair scope in writing with a fixed price.
- Replacement warranted. If the roof is at end of life or has widespread damage, replacement is the right call. You'll receive an estimate covering materials, tear-off, and labor — again, fixed price in writing.
At Roofs-N-More, we take photos of everything we find, walk you through them before we leave, and give you a written summary. We tell you honestly which category you're in — including "come back in two years" when that's the right answer. An honest contractor serves their community better than one who calls every roof an emergency.
Schedule a free roof inspection
We'll inspect every zone, document everything in photos, and give you a straight assessment. No pressure, no sales pitch if your roof doesn't need work.
