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REGIONAL COST GUIDE · Fresno County, CA

How Much Does a New Roof Cost in Fresno County, CA?

Compare roofing quotes in Fresno County, CA. Asphalt shingle replacement averages $12,190 after local wage adjustments. Metal roofing starts at $14,840.

Cost range $9,010 – $15,370
Average $12,190
Updated May 17, 2026
COST BREAKDOWN

What homeowners in Fresno County actually pay.

Local market ranges built from regional labor, materials, and permitting data — not national averages.

Asphalt Shingles (Full Replacement)

$9,010 Avg: $12,190 $15,370

Metal Roofing (Full Replacement)

$14,840 Avg: $19,610 $26,500

Roof Repair (Minor)

$320 Avg: $795 $1,590

National avg $11,500 × 1.06x local adjustment = $12,190

Why Fresno County prices look like this.

Fresno's roofing market employs 640 roofers earning a mean $30.14/hour across the metro area, based on 2025 OEWS data. That workforce, combined with a 1.06x local services adjustment derived from wages above the national baseline, pushes a full asphalt shingle replacement to an average of $12,190 in this market. Fresno County's median home value of $362,600 sits within a regional pricing environment that indexes at 2.1x the national home-value ratio, making a roof investment a meaningful share of total property value. The county's extreme hazard profile adds another layer to every material decision: FEMA's National Risk Index assigns Fresno a composite risk score of 99.30, with wildfire (98.44) and hail (95.52) both rated Relatively High. Material selection here carries more consequence than in lower-risk markets, and insurance carriers often respond to certified material upgrades with premium adjustments.

Labor Costs and Contractor Availability

Roofers in the Fresno metro earn a mean $30.14/hour ($62,680 annually), according to 2025 BLS OEWS data covering a workforce of 640 employed workers. The local wage runs 9.8% above the national reference wage of $27.45/hour, which drives a 1.06x services adjustment for this market. Since labor accounts for roughly 60% of a roofing bid (with materials at 40%), that wage premium translates directly into quotes modestly above national cost guides. On a standard replacement project, expect labor to represent $3,500 to $6,500 of the total contract, depending on roof pitch and complexity. With only 640 roofers serving Fresno County and surrounding areas, peak-season demand from May through September can extend project start times by two to four weeks. Scheduling bids in late winter or early fall often yields faster turnaround and occasionally better pricing.

Hazard Risk and Material Recommendations

Fresno County holds a 99.30 composite risk score on FEMA's National Risk Index, placing it in the Relatively High tier. The four hazards most relevant to roofing decisions are wildfire (98.44), inland flooding (98.70), hail (95.52), and lightning (84.73). Wildfire is the dominant concern for homes on the county's eastern edges near the Sierra Nevada foothills, where wind-driven embers can ignite deteriorating shingles quickly. Class A fire-rated materials, including metal, concrete tile, and fiberglass-backed asphalt shingles, are worth prioritizing in those zones. A hail score of 95.52 makes UL 2218 Class 4 impact-resistant shingles a practical baseline, with many insurers offering premium discounts for certified products. Tornado risk is Relatively Low (57.12) and winter weather registers Very Low (17.73), so those hazards do not need to drive material selection here.

Climate Zone and Roofing Performance

Fresno County falls in IECC Climate Zone 3B, a mixed-dry classification that shapes both heating and cooling loads. With 2,138 annual heating degree-days (HDD), the county's heating demand runs about 42% below the national median of 3,700 HDD, reducing the urgency of heavy attic insulation upgrades relative to colder markets. Cooling is the more pressing concern: 1,576 cooling degree-days (CDD) mean attic temperatures during Fresno's long summers drive significant AC load. Reflective or cool-roof-rated shingles and metal roofing with high solar reflectance reduce radiated heat into living spaces, potentially cutting cooling costs by 10-15%. The 'B' moisture regime signals a dry climate, limiting concerns about algae, moss, and moisture-driven shingle degradation common in wetter coastal zones. Adequate attic ventilation remains a priority for temperature management despite the arid conditions.

Energy Efficiency and Solar Considerations

California's residential electricity rate of $0.332/kWh (EIA, February 2026) ranks among the highest in the nation, raising the value of energy-efficient roofing choices. Fresno sits in one of California's strongest solar corridors, with 6.04 peak sun hours per day and a global horizontal irradiance of 5.25 kWh/m²/day. A 6kW roof-mounted solar system is estimated to produce 9,647 kWh/year (NREL PVWatts v8), offsetting roughly $3,203/year in electricity costs at current rates. Coordinating a solar installation with a roof tear-off reduces combined labor costs and avoids the need to remove and reinstall panels later. Adding solar-ready conduit runs and structural blocking during replacement adds little to the roofing contract. Cool-roof-rated products with an initial solar reflectance above 0.65 also address the significant cooling load that Fresno's 1,576 annual CDD produce.

Financing a Roof Replacement in Fresno County

With the 30-year fixed mortgage rate at 6.36% (Freddie Mac, May 14, 2026) and Fresno County's median home value at $362,600, most homeowners who purchased more than a few years ago hold sufficient equity to finance a roof replacement. A $12,190 average asphalt replacement financed over 20 years at 6.36% adds approximately $90/month in carrying costs. The county's median annual property tax of $2,704 (ACS 2023) reflects assessed values that often lag market price significantly under California's Proposition 13 framework, meaning many long-term owners carry larger equity cushions than their tax bills suggest. Many Central Valley roofing contractors offer 12-to-24-month same-as-cash promotional financing for qualified buyers, which avoids tapping home equity for homeowners who prefer a shorter payoff window. Energy-efficiency lenders also offer specialty products for cool-roof and solar-ready installations.
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FREQUENTLY ASKED · 07

Questions buyers ask about roofing in Fresno County.

Short answers to the most common things we hear about local pricing, scope, and timing.

  1. What does a new asphalt shingle roof cost in Fresno County?

    Based on national averages adjusted by the **1.06x local services factor** (reflecting Fresno roofers earning **$30.14/hour**), a full asphalt shingle replacement ranges from **$9,010 to $15,370**, with an average of **$12,190**. Roof size, pitch, and tear-off complexity determine where your project falls in that range.

  2. What does a metal roof cost in Fresno County?

    Metal roofing in Fresno County runs **$14,840 to $26,500**, averaging **$19,610** after the 1.06x local services adjustment. Given the county's hail risk score of **95.52** and wildfire exposure of **98.44** on FEMA's National Risk Index, metal's Class A fire rating and impact resistance make it a defensible long-term investment despite the higher upfront cost.

  3. How does Fresno County's wildfire risk affect roofing material choice?

    Fresno County scores **98.44 out of 100** on FEMA's National Risk Index for wildfire, placing it in the Relatively High tier. Homeowners near the Sierra Nevada foothills should prioritize Class A fire-rated materials: metal roofing, concrete tile, and fiberglass-backed asphalt shingles. Homes with older wood shake roofs face the highest ember exposure risk and may also see elevated insurance premiums.

  4. Are impact-resistant shingles worth the cost in Fresno County?

    With a hail risk score of **95.52 (Relatively High)**, Fresno County is a strong candidate for UL 2218 Class 4 impact-resistant shingles. Many insurance carriers offer premium discounts for Class 4 certified products that can offset a portion of the 10-20% cost premium over standard architectural shingles across the life of the roof.

  5. How does IECC Climate Zone 3B affect roofing decisions in Fresno?

    Zone 3B's mixed-dry designation means cooling load management matters more than insulation depth for most Fresno roofs. With **1,576 cooling degree-days** and **2,138 heating degree-days** (about 42% below the national median of 3,700 HDD), reflective or cool-roof-rated products are more cost-effective than heavier insulation upgrades. The dry 'B' moisture regime also reduces the need for algae-resistant treatments common in wetter markets.

  6. What financing options exist for a roof replacement in Fresno County?

    With the 30-year mortgage rate at **6.36%** (May 2026) and a county median home value of **$362,600**, home equity financing is accessible for many owners. A $12,190 project financed over 20 years adds roughly **$90/month** in carrying costs. Many Central Valley roofing contractors also offer 12-to-24-month same-as-cash promotional financing for buyers who prefer to avoid tapping equity.

  7. How does Fresno's solar potential factor into a roofing project?

    Fresno receives **6.04 peak sun hours per day** and **5.25 kWh/m²/day** of global horizontal irradiance, placing it among California's top solar markets. A 6kW roof-mount system is estimated to generate **9,647 kWh/year** (NREL PVWatts v8), offsetting about **$3,203/year** at California's **$0.332/kWh** residential rate. Bundling solar with a roofing project reduces future retrofit costs and avoids removing panels on a later tear-off.

SOURCES · 08

How these numbers were built.

Cost estimates are derived from government data including the U.S. Census Bureau (ACS), Bureau of Labor Statistics (OEWS), FEMA National Risk Index, EIA energy data, IECC climate zone classifications, Federal Reserve (FRED), and HUD Fair Market Rents.

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