
Roofers in Plano, TX
A Plano roof project runs in a set order: a local roofer climbs up and reads the roof, writes down what is worn and what it will cost, and only then does any work get scheduled, on your timeline. Nothing important is left to memory.
Roof leaking into the house this minute? The file can wait: a local roofer gets a tarp over the breach first, then the photos and the write-up start once the water stops. Emergency roof repair →
- Free, documented roof inspection
- The scope and the number, in writing
- Plain-English claim help, never filed for you
Roofing for Plano homes, from a leak repair to a full tear-off.
Much of Plano went up in the 1980s and 90s, so a lot of these roofs are on their second or third one by now and plenty of original builds are past due. Plano Premier Roofing keeps the whole range on a clear record: roof replacement, leak and storm repairs, hail work, commercial flat systems, and no-cost inspections.
Each of those jobs opens the same way, with a roofer on the roof documenting its real condition before anyone names a price. You get a dated file of your own, so what was found and what was quoted stays written down instead of half-remembered later.
- Leak repairs to full replacements
- Hail and wind damage, fully documented
- Flat and low-slope commercial roofs
- No-cost inspections you keep on file
Every kind of roofing work, one organized process.
A patched leak, a hail-battered slope, a full replacement, or a flat commercial roof: each starts with a roofer walking it on foot, naming the materials that suit your home and your budget, and setting the scope and the price in writing before a single shingle is pulled.
What happens at each stage of a Plano roof.
Repair or full tear-off, every project moves through the same five stages, and no stage begins until you have signed off on the one before it. At each hand-off you know exactly what comes next.

A roofer gets on the roof
The sequence starts with a local roofer on the roof, not a guess called up from the driveway. Each slope, valley, and flashing point gets walked and photographed the same day, so every decision after this rests on the roof's real condition.
on-foot walk · dated photosWhat was found, written down
Next the findings get written up: which slopes are worn, where the decking under the shingles has softened, and what makes this a spot repair instead of a replacement. It stays in plain English, so you can read the file yourself rather than take a verdict on trust.
plain-English notes · decking checkThe scope and the price, in writing
With the roof documented, your roofer lays down one written estimate: the whole scope with each line named, so you can see what every dollar covers. You decide on your own timeline, and nobody asks you to sign while the ladder is still against the house.
itemized scope · decide on your timeBuilt to the written scope
After you sign, local roofers build to that exact scope, deck to ridge: any soft decking replaced, new underlayment and the ice-and-water barrier laid down, flashing set at the joints, then the new field on top. What the file says is what goes on the roof.
decking · underlayment · flashingCleaned up, checked, and warrantied
The last stage is the walk-around: the yard and gutters swept with a magnet for stray nails, the finished roof checked plane by plane against the file, and the workmanship warranty handed over in writing. Manufacturer coverage rides on the materials the roofer installs, and the file closes with all of it on record.
magnet sweep · warranty in writingPlano's roofs and storms, by the real numbers.
Storm figures: NOAA / NCEI Storm Events Database, Collin County, on the record. Housing: U.S. Census ACS five-year estimates.
Everything in writing, before a nail goes in.
No guess from the driveway. Here is what a Plano homeowner gets on paper before the work begins.
- A written scope, line by line, before any work starts
- The materials named and spec'd, decking to drip edge
- One honest number, after a roofer gets on the roof
- No hidden line items and no surprise add-ons
Collin County's hail is logged. Your roof's date should be too.
A bruised shingle sheds granules without ever punching a hole, so a roof can look fine from the driveway and still be failing quietly. A documented date of loss, matched to a real storm, is what keeps a hail claim from being waved off. NOAA has logged 24 hail days across the Plano area lately, including 3.00-inch baseball hail on April 20, 2023 and gusts to 81 mph. The season-by-season record is below.
Source: NOAA / NCEI Storm Events Database, Collin County 2023–2026, on the record. Updated July 2026. Storm damage often is not visible from the ground, so it is worth a free look after a big one.
Across Plano, from the west-side enclaves to the historic core.
Local roofers cover Plano top to bottom: the west-side estate streets of Willow Bend and Kings Gate, the wooded custom lots of Shoal Creek, the newer gated homes of Normandy Estates, the older stock around Downtown Plano, and the golf-course community of Los Rios. Open your part of town on the service-area list for the local rundown, usually close enough that a roofer can get up the same week a storm rolls through.
What Plano homeowners ask before they book.
Q1How does Plano Premier Roofing work?
Q2Is the free inspection really free, or is there a catch?
Q3What do I walk away with after an inspection?
Q4Which parts of Plano do the roofers cover?
Q5Do the roofers handle commercial and flat roofs?
Q6How long does a full roof replacement take?
Book a free, documented roof inspection in Plano.
One free inspection opens the whole record: a local roofer sets a time, climbs your roof, photographs every plane, and hands you a plain read on what it needs. Nothing is owed, and no one pushes you to decide while the ladder is still up. Whatever comes next, a small repair or a full replacement, moves on your timeline and stays your call.





