District of Columbia · roof cost & coverage

Roof replacement cost in District of Columbia

A typical roof replacement in District of Columbia runs roughly $11,000–$22,000 — about 22% above the US average. The estimator below is preset to District of Columbia's rough regional cost level.

01 · Replacement cost Live estimate
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$0typical · $11k

Estimate only — not a measured quote. Material, pitch, decking surprises, and local labor swing the real number. Get 2–3 written quotes from licensed, insured roofers.

What a new roof costs in District of Columbia

Labor and material in District of Columbia run about 22% above the US average, so a typical asphalt re-roof lands around $11,000–$22,000. That's a rough planning band, not a quote — your real number depends on material, roof size and pitch, tear-off, and access. Adjust the fields above to see the swing.

Typical District of Columbia cost by material

Rough whole-roof totals for a typical home, adjusted to District of Columbia's regional cost level:

MATERIALtypical total in District of Columbia
Architectural asphalt$11,000–$22,000
Standing-seam metal$26,800–$48,800
Clay or concrete tile$29,300–$58,600

Hail, wind & weather in District of Columbia

District of Columbia's hail risk is low and its wind risk is moderate — humid summers, storms & ice. Storm exposure drives both how often roofs need replacing here and how your insurer prices coverage — heavier hail and wind regions often carry separate percentage deductibles.

District of Columbia's hail and wind exposure is moderate, so architectural asphalt is the usual value choice; the bigger local factor is humid summers, storms & ice.

Roof insurance in District of Columbia

DC roof claims typically involve wind and storm damage rather than hail, and older row-house roofs are often settled at actual cash value when wear is advanced. Whatever your situation, coverage turns on the cause of the damage — run it through the coverage verdict tool, then estimate your ACV-vs-RCV payout before assuming you're covered or that you're not.

These District of Columbia figures are a rough, general estimate — not a quote or a coverage determination. Roofing prices and insurance rules vary by locality and policy, so confirm the cost with a licensed local roofer and confirm coverage with your insurer or the District of Columbia Department of Insurance.

Finding a roofer in District of Columbia

We don't sell leads or pass your details to contractors. Get two or three written quotes from licensed, insured roofers, have storm damage documented with dated photos, and use the estimate above to compare bids on equal footing.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a new roof cost in District of Columbia?

A typical asphalt roof replacement in District of Columbia runs roughly $11,000–$22,000 — about 22% above the US average. Basic 3-tab costs less; metal, tile, and slate cost considerably more. Use the calculator above for a figure tuned to your material and roof size.

What roofing risks are common in District of Columbia?

District of Columbia's hail risk is low and its wind risk is moderate — humid summers, storms & ice.

Does homeowners insurance cover roof replacement in District of Columbia?

DC roof claims typically involve wind and storm damage rather than hail, and older row-house roofs are often settled at actual cash value when wear is advanced. As a rule, policies cover sudden perils like hail and wind but exclude age and wear — and older roofs are often paid at depreciated actual cash value. Check your cause with our coverage verdict tool.

How do I find a roofer in District of Columbia?

Get two or three written quotes from licensed, insured District of Columbia roofers, and ask each to document storm damage with dated photos. We don't sell leads — bring the estimate from this page to compare quotes fairly.

Sources & methodology

Estimates compiled from the sources above and standard cost models — not professional, insurance, or legal advice, and may not reflect your policy or local prices. See our full methodology and disclaimer.