Roof Insure
Residential roofing - Metal Residential Roofing Insurance
residential

Metal Residential Roofing Insurance

Metal residential roofing contractors install standing seam, metal shingle, stone-coated steel, and corrugated panel systems on homes. Underwriters view metal roofing as a specialty trade requiring higher skill levels than standard shingle work, which translates to different rate structures and carrier appetite depending on the contractor's documented experience with metal systems.

Risks Specific to This Sub-Trade

Metal panel handling creates unique laceration and crushing injuries that drive higher WC severity than shingle operations. Improper fastening patterns on standing seam systems lead to oil-canning and thermal expansion failures that generate callbacks years after installation. The higher material cost per square means inland marine exposure per job is 3-5x that of standard shingle work. Noise from metal cutting and installation generates more frequent neighbor complaints and nuisance claims in dense residential areas.

Coverages This Sub-Trade Needs

Carriers That Write This Sub-Trade

Metal residential roofing is moderately well-received by admitted carriers, though fewer markets actively compete for it compared to asphalt shingle. Carriers like Travelers, Hartford, and CNA will write experienced metal roofers with clean histories. Newer operations or those transitioning from shingle to metal may need E&S placement initially with carriers like Kinsale or Colony until they build a metal-specific track record.

What Disqualifies an Account

Contractors without documented metal roofing experience (training certifications, manufacturer partnerships, or verifiable project history) face declination from carriers that would otherwise write residential roofing. Operations that mix metal roofing with metal fabrication or welding trigger different classification codes and more restrictive underwriting. Accounts with completed operations claims specifically related to metal system failures are very difficult to re-place.

Premium Range

Metal residential roofers at $300K-$700K revenue typically pay $9,000-$18,000 with higher inland marine limits factored in. Mid-size operations at $1M-$2.5M generating consistent metal-only revenue pay $22,000-$55,000. Established metal roofing firms above $3M should expect $60,000-$130,000, with installation floater costs adding $3,000-$8,000 annually depending on maximum project values.

Frequently Asked Questions

Talk to a roofing insurance expert.

Tell us about your operation. We will get back to you within one business day.