Roofing Network: Purpose and Scope
The National Roof Repair Authority provider network catalogs roofing service providers, contractors, and industry professionals operating across the United States, with providers structured around verifiable licensing, geographic service scope, and compliance with applicable building codes. This page defines how the provider network is organized, what qualifies a roofing entity for inclusion, and how the resource functions as a reference tool for property owners, facility managers, insurance adjusters, and construction professionals. The Roof Repair Provider Network Purpose and Scope reflects the full classification logic applied to every verified entity.
How entries are determined
Provider Network entries are evaluated against a structured set of criteria drawn from roofing industry licensing standards, contractor classification frameworks, and applicable model codes. The International Building Code (IBC) and International Residential Code (IRC), both maintained by the International Code Council (ICC), establish baseline technical standards against which roofing work is assessed in jurisdictions that have adopted those codes — as of 2024, 49 states reference ICC model codes in some form.
Roofing contractor classification distinguishes 4 primary operational categories:
- General Roofing Contractors — licensed to perform full roof replacement, installation, and structural repair across residential and commercial property types, holding active general contractor or specialty roofing licenses in their operating jurisdictions.
- Specialty Roofing Contractors — certified for specific roofing systems such as single-ply membrane (TPO, EPDM), metal roofing, or built-up roofing (BUR), often holding manufacturer certification programs such as those issued by GAF or CertainTeed alongside state licensure.
- Repair and Maintenance Contractors — providers whose scope is limited to repair, leak remediation, and preventive maintenance rather than full system replacement; licensing requirements for this category vary by state, with Florida and California imposing distinct specialty endorsements.
- Emergency and Storm Response Contractors — entities operating under emergency work authorization frameworks, subject to heightened scrutiny given post-disaster deployment patterns flagged by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in contractor fraud advisories.
Entries that cannot be verified against a state licensing database, or that operate exclusively under unlicensed general maintenance classifications, fall outside provider network inclusion standards regardless of self-reported credentials.
Geographic coverage
The provider network covers roofing service providers operating across all 50 US states, with providers normalized to reflect actual service territory rather than business registration addresses. A contractor registered in Nevada but operating solely in Clark County is classified as a regional provider, not a statewide one. A contractor holding active licenses in 12 or more states and maintaining documented field operations in those jurisdictions qualifies for a multi-state or national scope designation.
State-level licensing authority over roofing contractors is distributed across contractor licensing boards, construction industry commissions, and department of consumer affairs offices depending on jurisdiction. Florida's Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB), California's Contractors State License Board (CSLB), and Texas's Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) each impose licensing examinations, bond requirements, and insurance minimums that factor into the provider network's geographic classification of verified entities.
Jurisdictions without mandatory roofing-specific licensure — a category that includes several southeastern and midwestern states — are treated under general contractor licensing frameworks, and entries from those states are evaluated against applicable local or county-level permit requirements rather than state specialty licenses.
How to use this resource
The Roof Repair Providers database is structured for lookup by service type, geographic scope, and roofing system classification. Property owners identifying a contractor for a specific scope of work — flat roof membrane replacement versus pitched asphalt shingle repair, for instance — can filter against the system classification tags attached to each provider.
Roofing work requiring a building permit in the relevant jurisdiction should be confirmed against local permitting authority requirements before contractor engagement. Permit thresholds differ: replacing more than 25% of a roof surface triggers a full permit requirement under many local adoptions of the IRC, while minor repair work below that threshold may qualify for an over-the-counter or no-permit category. The provider network does not substitute for jurisdiction-specific permit lookup, which remains the responsibility of the property owner or the contractor of record.
Insurance professionals and claims adjusters using the provider network to identify licensed repair contractors following storm events can cross-reference the storm response classification tag, which identifies contractors holding active credentials in post-storm deployment rather than relying solely on general roofing licensure. OSHA's general industry standards under 29 CFR 1926 Subpart R govern fall protection requirements on roofing worksites, and safety compliance history is a factor in the verification review applied to verified entities.
For detailed navigation guidance, the How to Use This Roof Repair Resource page provides a structured walkthrough of filter categories and provider fields.
Standards for inclusion
Inclusion in the network requires documented evidence across 3 core qualification areas: active licensure, insurance coverage, and service territory verification.
Active licensure is validated against the issuing state licensing board at the time of provider creation and is subject to renewal review. Licenses in suspended, probationary, or expired status disqualify a provider until reinstatement is confirmed through the relevant board.
Insurance coverage must include at minimum general liability coverage and workers' compensation where required by state law. Minimum general liability thresholds vary: California's CSLB requires $1,000,000 per occurrence for licensed contractors, and comparable floors are established by licensing authorities in Florida, New York, and Illinois.
Service territory verification requires documented evidence of completed work or active operational presence — not merely a business registration address — in the claimed geographic footprint.
The following categories are explicitly excluded from the provider network regardless of other qualifications:
- Unlicensed contractors operating under handyman or general maintenance classifications in states with mandatory roofing-specific licensure
- Entities under active investigation by a state contractor licensing board or subject to unresolved disciplinary proceedings
- Subsidiary brands whose parent entity already holds a provider network provider, unless the subsidiary holds independent licensure under a distinct license number
- Providers whose primary operation is materials supply or roofing equipment rental without contractor licensure in any jurisdiction
References
- 36 CFR Part 61 — Professional Qualification Standards, Electronic Code of Federal Regulations
- 2018 International Building Code as adopted by Alaska
- 2018 International Residential Code (IRC) and 2018 International Building Code (IBC)
- Alabama Historical Commission — Secretary of the Interior's Standards
- California Contractors State License Board (CSLB)
- ASHRAE/IECC Climate Zone Map — U.S. Department of Energy Building Energy Codes Program
- Alabama Licensing Board for General Contractors
- 29 CFR 1926 Subpart R