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Choose a roofer with a current North Carolina license, real liability and workers' comp insurance, a local track record with reviews, and a written workmanship warranty. Favor companies that use their own crews. Avoid storm-chasing door-knockers, high-pressure sales, deductible games, and anyone without a written estimate.
The Crew Matters More Than the Shingle
Homeowners spend a lot of energy choosing a shingle brand and color, and far less choosing the people who install it. That is backwards. A skilled, careful crew makes a mid-range shingle last its full life, while a sloppy install can fail early on the best product made, often voiding the warranty in the process.
So the most important decision in a roof replacement is which contractor you trust on your roof. The questions below are how you tell a solid, accountable roofer from a fly-by-night one. None of them are rude to ask, and a good contractor will answer every one without hesitation.
The Questions to Ask Every Roofer
Work through this list with any roofer you are considering. Ask for the answers in writing where it makes sense, and compare contractors on the same questions rather than just on price.
- Are you licensed in North Carolina, and what is your license number?
A legitimate roofer has a current state license and will share the number so you can verify it. No license is an immediate disqualifier.
- Do you carry liability and workers' compensation insurance?
Ask for current certificates. Liability covers damage to your property; workers' comp protects you if a worker is hurt on your roof. Without both, you can be exposed.
- How long have you worked in the Triangle, and can I see local reviews?
A real local track record beats a logo on a truck. Look for recent reviews from your area and references you can actually contact.
- Are you a certified installer for the products you sell?
Manufacturer credentials mean the roofer has met strict standards and can register enhanced warranties most contractors cannot.
- Do you offer a written workmanship warranty, separate from the product warranty?
The manufacturer covers the shingle; the workmanship warranty covers the install. You want both, in writing, with clear terms.
- Will your own crews do the work, or do you subcontract it out?
Companies that run their own trained crews tend to deliver more consistent quality and clearer accountability than those who hand the job to whatever sub is available.
- Can I get a detailed written estimate that itemizes the work?
A real estimate lists the system layers and a per-sheet price for decking repair. A number scrawled on a card is not an estimate.
License and Insurance: The Non-Negotiables
Two of those questions are pass-fail, and you should never bend on them. A roofer must hold a current North Carolina license, and must carry both liability insurance and workers' compensation. These are the floor, not a bonus.
The reason is your exposure. If an uninsured worker is injured on your roof, or an uninsured contractor damages your home, the liability can land on you, the homeowner. A licensed, insured roofer carries that risk where it belongs. Ask to see the certificates, and verify the license rather than taking a word for it.
What Manufacturer Certifications Actually Mean
Manufacturer certifications get thrown around in roofing ads, so it helps to know what the top tiers signify. Every major manufacturer runs one — and the top designations are held by only a share of contractors, because they require proof of licensing, insurance, a track record, and ongoing standards.
What it means for you is twofold. First, it is an independent signal that the roofer has cleared a real bar, not just printed a badge. Second, certified contractors can register enhanced manufacturer warranties that uncertified roofers simply cannot, which can meaningfully extend your coverage. Ask any roofer you interview which programs they hold and what coverage that actually lets them register.
Own Crews vs. Subcontractors, and the Warranty
Who actually climbs on your roof matters. Some companies sell the job and then hand it to whatever subcontractor crew is free that week. Others run their own trained, employed crews. The difference shows up in consistency and accountability.
With in-house crews, the same standards and the same people are behind every job, and there is no finger-pointing between the seller and the installer if something needs fixing. That ties directly to the warranty. A written workmanship warranty is only as good as the company standing behind it, so a roofer who controls its own crews and plans to be around in ten years is what makes that promise real.
The Red Flags to Walk Away From
Some warning signs are clear enough to end the conversation. Many surface right after a storm, when out-of-town crews descend on a hard-hit area looking for quick, high-pressure deals. A local, established roofer behaves very differently.
Watch for these in particular, and remember that in North Carolina you are free to choose your own licensed roofer rather than whoever knocks first or whoever the insurer suggests.
- Door-knocking storm chasers pressuring you to sign on the spot
- An offer to pay, waive, or absorb your insurance deductible, which is not legal in North Carolina
- No written, itemized estimate, or a demand for full payment up front
- No verifiable local license, insurance certificates, or real reviews
- Vague answers about who actually does the work and what the warranty covers
Free, documented, and no pressure. A real estimator within the hour.

