Top Emergency Roofing Services in Los Angeles, CA, 90001 | Compare & Call

There are 239 roofing companies server in Los Angeles CA

SoCal Roofing Solutions

SoCal Roofing Solutions

★★★★★ 4.9 / 5 (185)
Santa Fe Springs CA 90670
Roofing, Roof Inspectors, Gutter Services

At SoCal Roofing Solutions, our work is a family legacy. For over 30 years, our family has been in the roofing trade, a craft we're now proud to pass to the next generation. We founded this company in...

NEMA Roofing Solutions

NEMA Roofing Solutions

★★★★★ 4.8 / 5 (206)
300 E Esplanade Dr FL9, Oxnard CA 93036
Roofing

NEMA Roofing Solutions Inc. is a family-owned and operated roofing contractor serving Oxnard, CA. Founded by Adam, whose diverse background includes military training and a commitment to integrity, th...

California First Roofing

California First Roofing

★★★★★ 4.9 / 5 (88)
5850 W 3rd St Ste E, Los Angeles CA 90036
Roofing, Gutter Services

California First Roofing Inc. is a locally owned and licensed roofing contractor serving Los Angeles and Southern California. Founded by a roofer with over 15 years of experience as a partner in one o...

J & J Roofing

J & J Roofing

★★★★☆ 4.4 / 5 (290)
1485 Lincoln Ave, Pasadena CA 91103
Roofing, Roof Inspectors

J & J Roofing is a family-owned and operated roofing contractor based in Pasadena, CA, with over 30 years of experience serving Los Angeles County. Founded by John Glass and now run by his sons, Matt ...

Golden Team Roofing

Golden Team Roofing

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 (46)
8228 W 3rd, Los Angeles CA 90048
Roofing

At Golden Team Roofing, our core belief is that a solid roof is the foundation of a secure and comfortable home. With over 20 years of hands-on experience in Los Angeles, we've built our reputation on...

Smart Roofing

Smart Roofing

★★★★★ 4.9 / 5 (165)
22120 Clarendon St Ste 140, Woodland Hills CA 91367
Roofing

Smart Roofing in Woodland Hills, CA is a locally owned and operated roofing company led by owner Levi, who personally handles estimates and on-site supervision to ensure quality workmanship. Specializ...

Family Roofing

Family Roofing

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 (26)
7111 Santa Monica Blvd Ste B 413, West Hollywood CA 90046
Roofing, Roof Inspectors

I'm Ami Biton, the owner of Family Roofing Inc. in West Hollywood. I started this company with a simple goal: to bring reliable, honest craftsmanship to the community I call home. We're a family-orien...

America's Best Roofing Company

America's Best Roofing Company

★★★★★ 4.8 / 5 (272)
3848 W Carson St Ste 218, Torrance CA 90503
Roofing

America's Best Roofing Company is a licensed, full-service roofing contractor dedicated to serving Torrance and the broader Southern California community. We provide custom roofing solutions for both ...

AAA Roofing Services

AAA Roofing Services

★★★★★ 4.8 / 5 (317)
23901 Calabasas Rd Ste 2063, Calabasas CA 91302
Roofing, Roof Inspectors

AAA Roofing Services has been a trusted roofing provider in Calabasas since 2000, founded by an owner who learned the trade hands-on and personally oversees every project. As a family-owned, licensed,...

Sky Shield Roofing

Sky Shield Roofing

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 (52)
3500 W Olive, Burbank CA 91505
Gutter Services, Roofing, Roof Inspectors

Sky Shield Roofing is a licensed and bonded roofing company proudly serving Burbank and the surrounding tri-county area. We believe in providing roofing you can trust at prices you can count on, with ...



Estimated Roofing Service Costs in Los Angeles, CA

Emergency Leak TarpingEstimated Range
$464 - $624
Roof Health InspectionEstimated Range
$179 - $244
Minor Roof Leak RepairEstimated Range
$669 - $899
Asphalt Shingle ReplacementEstimated Range
$12,939 - $17,259
Seamless Gutter InstallEstimated Range
$2,894 - $3,869

Methodology: Estimates are dynamically generated using labor multipliers derived from 2025 BLS OEWS (SOC 47-2181) data for Los Angeles. Prices include standard parts and labor adjusted for 2026 economic projections.

Q&A

My homeowner's insurance premium in Los Angeles just jumped again. Can a new roof really lower my bill?

Yes, directly. Insurers are pricing for climate risk, leading to an average 18% premium trend increase. Upgrading to an IBHS FORTIFIED Roof standard, while not widely subsidized here, demonstrably reduces an insurer's risk model for your property. By submitting certification of a FORTIFIED-rated roof—which includes enhanced deck attachment, sealed roof edges, and impact-resistant coverings—you provide actuarial data that can lead to significant premium reductions, often offsetting a portion of the upgrade cost over the loan period.

With NEM 3.0 and the federal tax credit, should I replace my old clay tiles with solar shingles or a traditional roof plus panels?

This is a key 2026 decision. Solar shingles offer integration but at a higher cost per watt and less efficiency than modern panels. Under NEM 3.0's export rates, maximizing system efficiency is paramount. A new, resilient Class A asphalt roof provides a secure, long-lasting base for a separate, optimally angled panel array, often yielding a better financial return with the 30% federal ITC. For a historic Highland Park home where tile appearance is desired, high-efficiency panels on a new clay tile-composite roof is another durable, high-yield option.

A roofer did a walk-on inspection and said my clay tiles are fine. Should I trust that?

A traditional walk-over often misses critical failures beneath clay tiles. We use AI-enhanced aerial photogrammetry, which analyzes thousands of data points to detect subtle tile displacement, sub-surface moisture patterns, and thermal anomalies in the decking invisible to the naked eye. For a 1x6 plank deck, this technology can identify areas of wood rot and moisture saturation between the planks long before a leak manifests indoors, providing a complete picture of the roof's health and preventing costly emergency repairs.

My roof is actively leaking into my living room during a storm. What's your emergency response?

For an active leak, we dispatch a crew equipped with reinforced waterproof tarps and extraction tools. From our dispatch near the Avenue 50 Metro Station, the crew will take CA-110 north, with a typical travel time of 45-60 minutes to reach most of Highland Park. The priority is to deploy a tarp from the ridge to beyond the leak's source to divert water, then safely extract any standing water from the attic to prevent ceiling collapse. This is a temporary mitigation; a full inspection of the plank decking is required once the weather clears.

What does 'wind zone' mean for my roof replacement in Los Angeles, and what shingles should I use?

Los Angeles is in a 95-105 mph wind zone per ASCE 7-22, meaning your roofing system must be rated for those uplift forces. This requires specific nail patterns, high-wind rated underlayment, and sealed drip edges. Given our low hail risk, the critical upgrade is to Class A fire-rated asphalt shingles, which are a financial necessity. Their fire-resistant granules and heavier construction also provide superior wind resistance compared to standard options, directly protecting your investment during our peak December-March storm season.

What are the current code requirements for a roof replacement in Los Angeles that my contractor must follow?

The Los Angeles Department of Building Safety (LADBS) enforces the 2022 California Residential Code. For your wind zone, this mandates specific nail patterns into the plank decking and high-wind rated components. Critically, the code now requires a continuous ice and water shield membrane from the eave edge up the roof at least 24 inches inside the exterior wall line—a crucial upgrade for atmospheric river-driven rain. Your contractor must be licensed by the CSLB and pull a LADBS permit, ensuring all flashing details and material ratings meet these 2026 standards for your safety and insurance.

I have mold in my attic but no roof leaks. Could my low-slope roof be the cause?

Absolutely. A 4/12 pitch roof has less cavity for air movement, making proper ventilation critical. Inadequate intake at the eaves and exhaust at the ridge traps hot, moist air in the attic from household activities. This moisture condenses on the cool underside of the roof deck, promoting mold growth on the wooden planks. The 2022 California Residential Code specifies precise intake-to-exhaust ratios. Correcting this with balanced ventilation is essential to protect the Douglas Fir decking from dry rot and improve overall energy efficiency.

Why does my 1949 Highland Park house with its original clay tile roof have so many leaks now?

A roof from 1949 is 77 years old in 2026, exceeding the functional lifespan of the original installation. The primary failure point is often not the tiles themselves but the underlying 1x6 Douglas Fir plank decking. In Los Angeles's climate, decades of UV exposure and moisture cycles from winter atmospheric rivers have caused the wood to dry out, crack, and lose its structural integrity. This allows water to bypass cracked tiles and saturate the deck, leading to interior leaks and potential structural rot in the attic framing.

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