Chandler Superior Roofing: Roof Replacement & Repair for Residential & Commercial

#1 Roofing Company in Chandler, AZ

Chandler Superior Roofing has served residential and commercial property owners in Chandler, AZ for 20 years, handling everything from minor leak repairs to full roof replacements. We work with a full range of roofing materials suited for Arizona conditions, including tile, asphalt shingles, metal, foam, flat roofing systems and silicone coatings - and we match each option to the structure, budget, and long-term needs of the property. Whether a home needs a new tile roof or a commercial building requires a flat roofing solution, the right material choice makes a measurable difference in durability and performance.

Commercial properties in Chandler typically feature flat or low-slope roofs, which require different systems than residential pitched roofs. We install and service several commercial roofing system types including TPO membrane, EPDM rubber roofing, Modified bitumen and Spray polyurethane foam (SPF).

For homeowners we handle full roof replacements to repairs for failing or leaking roofs, our services address cracked or missing tiles and shingles, damaged or deteriorated underlayment, worn or lifted sealants, and more.

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Residential Roof Types We Replace & Repair

Concrete Tile Roofs

Concrete tile roofing is one of the strongest residential roof systems for Arizona because the tile itself can last 50–100 years or more, while the real performance of the system depends on the underlayment, battens, flashing, fastener schedule, ridge details, and valley metal beneath it. Manufacturers such as Eagle Roofing Products and Westlake Royal Roofing Solutions produce concrete roof tiles with Class A fire-rated assemblies, high wind-performance testing, and profiles engineered for heat, UV exposure, monsoon rain, and long-term curb appeal.

Clay Tile Roofs

Clay tile roofs are a premium steep-slope roofing system commonly used on Spanish, Mediterranean, Mission, and Southwest-style homes because fired clay delivers permanent color characteristics, strong thermal stability, and long-term architectural value. Clay and concrete roof tiles have an average moisture absorption rate of less than 1%, making them naturally resistant to rot, insects, mold growth, and desert-climate weathering when installed over a properly detailed waterproofing system.

Asphalt Shingle Roofs

Asphalt shingle roofing should be evaluated by shingle class, mat construction, granule retention, nail-zone design, wind rating, fire rating, and compliance with ASTM D3462, the U.S. product standard for fiberglass-mat asphalt shingles surfaced with mineral granules. Premium architectural shingles such as GAF Timberline HDZ®, Owens Corning Duration®, and CertainTeed Landmark® use technologies like LayerLock®, SureNail®, laminated dual-layer construction, ASTM D3161 Class F wind resistance, ASTM D7158 Class H uplift resistance, and ASTM E108 / UL 790 Class A fire ratings.

Spray Polyurethane Foam (SPF) Roofing

Spray Polyurethane Foam, or SPF roofing, is a seamless, closed-cell roof system that combines waterproofing, insulation, and slope-correction capability in one monolithic application. Roofing foam is commonly installed at densities around 2.5–4.0 lb/ft³ and delivers approximately R-5.5 to R-6.5 per inch, making it valuable on Arizona flat and low-slope roofs where insulation value, UV exposure, coating maintenance, and penetration sealing are critical.

Flat Roofing

Flat roofing is technically a low-slope roof system, and NRCA generally classifies low-slope membrane roofing as roofs installed at slopes of 3:12 or less. On residential flat roofs, performance depends less on the visible surface alone and more on slope-to-drain, scuppers, crickets, parapet wall flashing, membrane transitions, roof coatings, HVAC curb details, and penetration waterproofing.

Metal Roofs


Residential metal roofing is a high-performance steep-slope system that may include standing seam panels, exposed-fastener panels, stone-coated steel, aluminum, or coated Galvalume® steel assemblies. Standing seam systems are especially strong because raised seams and concealed clips reduce exposed fastener penetrations, and the Metal Construction Association has reported projected service life of 60 years or more for certain 55% aluminum-zinc coated steel standing seam roof systems.

Rolled Roofing


Rolled roofing is an asphalt-based low-slope material commonly used on patio covers, porch roofs, sheds, garages, carports, and small residential roof sections where a full multi-ply membrane system may not be required. Mineral-surfaced roll roofing is typically a glass-fiber reinforced, asphalt-coated sheet finished with ceramic granules to resist UV exposure, weathering, and physical surface wear.

Built-Up Roofing (BUR)


Built-Up Roofing (BUR) is a multi-layer flat roofing system designed for long-term waterproofing, with a typical service life of about 15–30 years depending on installation quality, climate, maintenance, drainage, and roof traffic. Unlike many single-ply systems, BUR uses multiple layers of asphalt and ply sheets, creating redundant protection that improves puncture resistance, weather resistance and durability on flat or low-slope roofs.

Slate or Synthetic Slate Roofs

Natural slate is a premium steep-slope roofing material valued for density, stone durability, and exceptional useful life; ASTM S-1 Grade slate has a minimum estimated life expectancy of 75 years, with many slate roofs lasting well beyond 100 years and up to 150 years when properly installed. Synthetic slate systems, such as Brava Old World Slate, are designed to replicate the slate profile while reducing weight and adding engineered performance attributes such as Class A fire options, Class 4 impact resistance, and high-wind tested assemblies.

Commercial Roof Types We Replace & Repair at Chandler Superior Roofing

TPO Roofing (Thermoplastic Polyolefin)

Thermoplastic Polyolefin — TPO — roofing is a heat-weldable, single-ply commercial membrane commonly specified on warehouses, retail centers, office buildings, and low-slope roofs where solar reflectance, seam integrity, and UV stability matter. TPO membranes are governed by ASTM D6878, which covers reinforced TPO sheet roofing exposed to weather, and leading systems such as Carlisle Sure-Weld® TPO and Johns Manville TPO are commonly available in 45-mil, 60-mil, and 80-mil configurations, with typical commercial roof planning lives around 20–30 years depending on thickness, attachment method, drainage, maintenance, and exposure.

PVC Roofing (Polyvinyl Chloride)

Polyvinyl Chloride — PVC — roofing is a premium thermoplastic membrane used where chemical exposure, rooftop grease, animal fats, exhaust discharge, and welded seam performance are major design considerations. PVC systems from manufacturers such as Sika Sarnafil, Holcim Elevate, and other commercial membrane manufacturers are known for heat-welded seams, high reflectivity, chemical resistance, and strong performance on restaurants, medical buildings, food-service properties, schools, and industrial facilities; typical commercial planning life is often 15–30 years depending on formulation, membrane thickness, installation quality, and roof traffic.

EPDM Rubber Roofing

Ethylene Propylene Diene Monomer — EPDM — roofing is a thermoset synthetic rubber membrane widely used on low-slope commercial buildings because of its flexibility, large-sheet availability, and long track record in fully adhered, mechanically attached, and ballasted systems. ASTM D4637 covers EPDM sheet used in single-ply roof membranes, including non-reinforced, scrim-reinforced, and fabric-backed membranes; EPDM is commonly sold in 45-, 60-, and 90-mil thicknesses, and has an expected service life of 38 years for properly designed, installed, and maintained EPDM roof membranes.

Modified Bitumen Roofing

Modified bitumen roofing is an asphalt-based commercial membrane system engineered with polymer modifiers, most commonly SBS for rubber-like flexibility and APP for plastomeric heat and UV resistance. The major ASTM product standards include ASTM D6162, D6163, and D6164, with reinforcement options such as fiberglass, polyester, and composite mats, and surfacing grades such as Grade G mineral-surfaced cap sheets or Grade S smooth-surfaced sheets; typical commercial service-life planning ranges from 10–30 years depending on SBS vs. APP, number of plies, surfacing, attachment, and maintenance.

Commercial Tile Roofing

Commercial tile roofing is used on hotels, restaurants, office complexes, clubhouses, retail centers, churches, multifamily buildings, and Southwest-style commercial properties where steep-slope architecture, curb appeal, fire resistance, and long-term durability matter. Clay and concrete tile roofs have an average moisture absorption rate of less than 1%, are naturally resistant to rot, insects, and mold growth, and have been tested to withstand wind speeds up to 150 mph when installed as a qualified tile roofing system.

Built-Up Roofing (BUR)

Built-Up Roofing — BUR — is the traditional multi-ply commercial flat roof system made from alternating layers of asphalt and reinforcing ply sheets, then finished with gravel, a mineral cap sheet, or a reflective coating. BUR has been used in the United States for 100+ years and is valued for redundant waterproofing, puncture resistance, and heavy-duty protection because failure must typically pass through multiple plies rather than a single membrane layer; generic commercial roof planning life is often listed around 15–30 years, but performance depends heavily on ply count, asphalt type, surfacing, drainage, and maintenance.

Spray Polyurethane Foam (SPF) Roofing

Spray Polyurethane Foam — SPF — roofing is a seamless, closed-cell, thermoset commercial roof system that creates both insulation and waterproofing in a monolithic application, making it useful around irregular substrates, penetrations, parapets, drains, and HVAC curbs. Roofing spray foam typically has a density of about 2.5–4.0 lb/ft³, provides approximately R-5.5 to R-6.5 per inch, commonly exceeds 40 psi compressive strength, and is protected with elastomeric coatings because the foam itself must be shielded from long-term UV exposure.

Commercial Roof Coatings / Cool Roof Systems

Commercial roof coatings are liquid-applied restoration systems used over suitable TPO, PVC, EPDM, modified bitumen, BUR, metal, and spray foam roofs to improve waterproofing, UV resistance, reflectivity, and service life without full tear-off when the existing roof is a viable substrate. Technical coating selection should reference standards such as ASTM D6083 for liquid-applied acrylic roof coatings, along with silicone and polyurethane coating standards where applicable, while cool-roof performance is measured through solar reflectance, thermal emittance, and SRI ratings published by organizations such as the Cool Roof Rating Council — CRRC.

Commercial Asphalt Shingle Roofing

Commercial asphalt shingle roofing is typically used on steep-slope commercial buildings such as offices, churches, clubhouses, retail buildings, multifamily properties, and professional service buildings where the roof design does not require a low-slope membrane. NRCA recommends shingles that comply with ASTM D3462, the U.S. product standard for fiberglass-mat asphalt shingles surfaced with mineral granules, and premium architectural products such as GAF Timberline HDZ®, Owens Corning Duration®, and CertainTeed Landmark® are commonly selected for dimensional appearance, wind resistance, algae protection, and system-based warranty options.

Why Chandler Superior Roofing is a 5-STAR Rated Residential & Commercial Roof Replacement & Repair Company in Chandler, AZ!

20 Years of Experience in Roof Replacement & Roof Repair

Our team understands the details that make a roof last — from underlayment and flashing to ventilation, drainage and installation. We bring proven expertise to every roof replacement and roof repair for homeowners and businesses.

Residential & Commercial Roofing Experts

From home roof repairs to large commercial roof replacements, we deliver dependable roofing solutions built for Chandler properties.


Honest Inspections & Clear Recommendations

Our team gives straightforward guidance, explaining whether your roof needs a repair, replacement, maintenance or a protective coating.

Quality Workmanship From Start to Finish

We focus on every detail, including underlayment, flashing, ventilation, drainage, sealants and final cleanup.


Fast, Reliable Service You Can Count On

We show up on time, communicate clearly, protect your property and work efficiently to complete your roofing project the right way.

High-Performance Roofing Materials


We use high-quality materials designed to handle intense UV exposure, heavy rain, strong winds and desert weather conditions.

Roof Repair Services We Offer for Homes and Buildings

Roof Leak Detection & Repair

Roof leak detection starts with tracing the leak path through the full roof assembly, not just the visible stain, because water can travel along underlayment laps, trusses, decking seams, valleys, pipe penetrations, skylight curbs, and flashing transitions before showing up inside. Our repair process focuses on the actual failure point: deteriorated sealant, failed boot flashing, cracked tile, lifted shingle, compromised underlayment, open counterflashing, or membrane seam failure, then restores the roof’s water-shedding and secondary water-barrier system.

Tile & Shingle Roof Repair

Tile and shingle roof repair includes cracked concrete tiles, broken clay tiles, slipped field tiles, damaged hip and ridge caps, exposed fasteners, missing shingles, lifted tabs, granule loss, and damaged starter or ridge shingles. For asphalt systems, NRCA recommends shingles that comply with ASTM D3462, while premium systems such as GAF Timberline HDZ®, Owens Corning Duration®, and CertainTeed Landmark® use features like LayerLock®, SureNail®, dual-layer laminated construction, and mineral-granule surfacing to improve fastening, wind performance, and long-term weathering.

Roof Underlayment Repair

Underlayment repair is one of the most important roof services in Arizona because the visible tile is often a long-life cladding layer, while the underlayment below functions as the secondary water barrier over the roof deck. TRI Alliance specifically notes that underlayment should be inspected before tile repairs and that new or salvaged tile should not be installed over compromised underlayment, while ASTM standards such as D226 Type I/Type II, D4869, D6757, and D1970 help define asphalt felt, fiberglass-reinforced, and self-adhered underlayment performance categories.

Flashing, Vent & Penetration Repair

Flashing, vent, and penetration repair targets the most leak-prone areas of the roof: pipe jacks, roof vents, skylights, chimneys, flue stacks, solar mounts, HVAC curbs, parapet walls, roof-to-wall intersections, valleys, and counter flashing details. The Department of Energy’s Building America guidance calls for flashing and sealing around roof penetrations to be integrated with the roof’s air and water control layers, which is why proper base flashing, counterflashing, sealant compatibility, pitch pans, storm collars, and curb transitions matter more than surface caulk alone.

Flat Roof Repair, Coating & Drainage Correction

Flat roof repair is really low-slope roof system repair, and NRCA generally defines low-slope roof systems as weatherproof membrane systems installed on slopes of 3:12 or less. Repair work may include correcting ponding areas, opening clogged scuppers, rebuilding drain bowls, sealing membrane seams, repairing parapet flashing, restoring SPF coating, applying acrylic/silicone/polyurethane coatings, and using cool-roof performance metrics such as solar reflectance, thermal emittance, and Solar Reflectance Index — SRI when a coating system is appropriate.

Solar Panel Roof Leak / Solar Mount Flashing Repair

Solar panel roof leak repair requires diagnosing the full PV attachment assembly, including standoffs, tile hooks, lag penetrations, flashed mounts, butyl seals, compression gaskets, underlayment punctures, and roof-to-racking attachment points. The Department of Energy’s Building America guidance specifically identifies solar panel mounting brackets as roof penetrations that must be flashed and sealed into the roof’s water-control layer, which is why proper repair often requires tile removal, underlayment inspection, flashing replacement, and solar detach-and-reset coordination rather than surface caulking alone.

Emergency Roof Repair & Roof Tarping

Emergency roof repair is a temporary dry-in service used when active water intrusion, storm damage, exposed decking, missing tile, lifted shingles, or punctured membrane areas need immediate stabilization before permanent repairs can be completed. Professional roof tarping should use reinforced sheeting, secure anchoring, protected edges, and proper water-shedding placement; the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Operation Blue Roof program uses fiber-reinforced sheeting to cover damaged roofs after disasters until permanent repairs can be made.

Storm, Wind & Monsoon Roof Damage Repair

Storm and monsoon roof damage repair focuses on wind uplift, displaced clay or concrete tiles, lifted asphalt shingle tabs, broken ridge caps, debris impact, hail bruising, punctured flat-roof membranes, clogged scuppers, and wind-driven rain at penetrations and roof-to-wall transitions. Wind gusts over 58 mph can damage roof coverings, flashing, edge metal, underlayment, decking, and exterior building components.

Skylight Leak Repair

Skylight leak repair should evaluate the entire skylight assembly, including the curb, lens/frame gasket, head flashing, sill flashing, step flashing, counterflashing, roof slope, surrounding underlayment, and nearby tile or shingle laps. Skylights are roof penetrations that require flashing and sealing integrated with the roof’s air and water-control layers, so a proper repair usually means rebuilding the flashing system rather than applying exposed sealant around the skylight frame.

Roof Edge, Fascia & Soffit Repair

Roof edge, fascia, and soffit repair addresses failure at the eaves and rakes, including damaged drip edge, fascia metal, gutter apron, soffit panels, bird blocks, starter course edges, rotted fascia boards, wind-lifted edge metal, and water intrusion behind gutters. For low-slope and commercial roof edges, NRCA’s edge-metal testing resources reference ANSI/SPRI ES-1 tested components such as copings, fascia, and face extenders, which matters because roof edge failure is one of the most vulnerable points for wind uplift and water entry.

Interested in Receiving an Estimate for Your Roof Replacement or Repair?

Roof replacement and repair is a long-term investment, and understanding costs upfront prevents surprises. We provide detailed, transparent estimates with no hidden fees or unexpected change orders.


Request a quote to get an accurate estimate on your roofing needs.

Our Chandler Superior Roofing Step-by-Step Roof Replacement Process for Residential & Commercial

A typical roof replacement project can take anywhere from several days to several weeks, depending on the roof size, roof pitch, material type, tear-off requirements, decking condition, flashing complexity, and weather. Standard residential asphalt shingle projects may be completed faster, while tile roof replacements, underlayment replacements, metal roofing, and flat roof systems often require additional time for material staging, deck repairs, flashing details, drainage correction, and final quality inspections.

Step 1

Roof System Inspection & Assessment

Estimated timeline: 1 day


We begin with a full roof system inspection, reviewing the visible roof material, underlayment, decking, flashing, valleys, vents, penetrations, drainage areas, fascia, and signs of water intrusion. For tile, shingle, metal, and flat roofing systems, we identify whether the failure is surface-level or tied to deeper waterproofing components.

Step 2

Roof Replacement Recommendation & Scope Design

Estimated timeline: 1–3 days


After the inspection, we provide a clear roof replacement recommendation based on the roof type, slope, age, damage, ventilation, drainage, and long-term performance needs. The scope may include full tear-off, tile reset, shingle replacement, underlayment replacement, decking repair, flashing upgrades, flat roof coating, or complete

Step 3

Material Selection & Roof Assembly Planning

Estimated timeline: 1–4 days


We help select the proper roofing system for the property, including concrete tile, clay tile, asphalt shingles, metal roofing, SPF foam, TPO, modified bitumen, BUR, or roof coating systems. This phase also includes the hidden components that determine roof performance: synthetic underlayment, leak barriers, battens, fasteners, drip edge, valley metal, pipe boots, ventilation, and flashing details.

Step 4

Permits, Scheduling & Pre-Construction Planning

Estimated timeline: 1–7 days

Before work begins, we confirm project timing, material delivery, disposal containers, access points, HOA requirements, permit needs, and solar detach/reset coordination if applicable. We also plan jobsite protection for driveways, landscaping, windows, patios, pools, HVAC equipment, and tenant or homeowner access.

Step 5

Tear-Off & Existing Roof Removal

Estimated timeline: 1-2 days


Our crew removes the existing roof covering down to the proper substrate, including old shingles, tile, underlayment, battens, flashing, ridge materials, damaged membrane, or failed coating layers. This step exposes the roof deck so hidden damage, rotted sheathing, soft decking, or deteriorated fascia can be properly repaired before the new system is installed.

Step 6

Deck Repair, Dry-In & Waterproofing Installation

Estimated timeline: Same day


Once the roof deck is exposed, we repair damaged plywood, OSB, plank decking, fascia, nailers, or structural substrate areas as needed. We then install the dry-in system, including underlayment, leak barrier, self-adhered membrane, valley protection, edge metal, and other secondary water-barrier components designed to protect the roof beneath the finished surface.

Step 7

Flashing, Ventilation & New Roof Installation

Estimated timeline: 1-3 days


The new roof system is installed according to the roof type, slope, manufacturer specifications, and Arizona weather conditions. This includes field material installation, pipe flashings, skylight flashing, wall transitions, ridge and hip details, ventilation correction, scuppers, drains, parapet flashing, HVAC curbs, and other leak-prone transition points.

Step 8

Final Quality Inspection, Cleanup & Walkthrough

Estimated timeline: Final day


We complete a final inspection of the roof system, checking flashing laps, fastener placement, ridge details, valley alignment, drainage paths, vents, penetrations, edge metal, coatings, and overall workmanship. The project finishes with debris removal, magnetic nail sweep, property cleanup, final walkthrough, and warranty review so the customer understands exactly what was installed and why.

How Much Does Residential Roof Replacement Cost in Arizona?

Typical Residential Roof Replacement Cost Range Per Square Foot

Residential roof replacement in Chandler typically ranges from about $4 to $25+ per square foot, depending on the roofing system. Asphalt shingles and basic foam systems are usually on the lower end, while clay tile, concrete tile, standing seam metal, and specialty systems cost more because of material weight, labor, underlayment requirements, flashing details, and installation complexity.


Residential Roofing Type
Typical Cost Range ($/sq ft.)
Notes
Asphalt Shingle Roof

$4.00 – $7.00 / sq ft

Common for sloped residential roofs; pricing depends on 3-tab vs. architectural shingles, tear-off, pitch, decking, and ventilation upgrades.

Architectural Asphalt Shingle Roof

$5.50 – $9.00 / sq ft

Higher-end laminated shingles cost more than basic shingles but offer better dimensional appearance, wind performance, and longer warranty options.

Concrete Tile Roof

$9.00 – $18.00 / sq ft

Very common in Arizona; cost depends on tile profile, roof complexity, underlayment, battens, valley metal, ridge details, and whether existing tile is reused.

Clay / Terracotta Tile Roof

$11.00 – $25.00+ / sq ft

Premium tile system often used on Southwest, Spanish, and Mediterranean-style homes; higher material cost and more fragile handling increase labor.

Tile Underlayment Replacement / Lift & Reset

$8.00 – $12.00 / sq ft

Often used when concrete or clay tiles are still usable but the underlayment has aged out; Phoenix-area sources note tile underlayment commonly needs replacement around 20–25 years.

Spray Foam / Residential Flat Roof

$6.00 – $12.00 / sq ft

Common on Arizona flat and low-slope homes; cost depends on existing roof condition, foam thickness, coating system, prep work, and drainage correction.

Standing Seam Metal Roof

$10.00 – $16.00+ / sq ft

Premium long-life option with concealed fasteners, raised seams, and strong heat performance; cost increases with panel gauge, metal type, trim package, and roof complexity.

Rolled Roofing / Low-Slope Patio Roof

$4.00 – $8.00 / sq ft

Usually used on patios, porch roofs, sheds, carports, and smaller low-slope sections rather than main luxury roof systems.

Slate / Synthetic Slate Roof

$15.00 – $35.00+ / sq ft

Specialty residential system; cost depends heavily on structural requirements, roof pitch, product type, fastener system, and installer specialization.


*The cost ranges above represent typical installed roof replacement pricing in Chandler, including standard materials, labor, tear-off, disposal, and normal installation components. Final pricing may vary based on roof size, slope, access, decking condition, underlayment needs, flashing complexity, solar equipment, drainage requirements, permit requirements, and material selection.

How Much Does Commercial Roof Replacement Cost in Arizona?

Typical Commercial Roof Replacement Cost Range Per Square Foot

Commercial roof replacement in Chandler typically ranges from about $5 to $22+ per square foot, depending on whether the project is single-ply membrane, spray foam, modified bitumen, BUR, metal, tile, or a coating/restoration system.


Commercial Roofing Type
Typical  Cost Range ($/sq ft.) 
Notes
Single-Ply TPO Roofing

$5.00 – $14.00 / sq ft

Popular reflective membrane for warehouses, offices, retail centers, and low-slope buildings; cost depends on membrane thickness, attachment method, insulation, tear-off, and edge metal.

Single-Ply PVC Roofing

$8.00 – $15.00 / sq ft

Premium heat-welded membrane often used near restaurants, grease exhaust, kitchens, medical buildings, and chemical exposure areas.

EPDM Rubber Roofing

$7.00 – $13.00 / sq ft

Synthetic rubber membrane used on low-slope commercial roofs; cost depends on 45-, 60-, or 90-mil membrane, adhered vs. mechanically attached systems, and flashing complexity.

Modified Bitumen Roofing

$7.50 – $15.00 / sq ft

Asphalt-based membrane system using SBS or APP polymer modifiers; often selected for multi-ply redundancy, puncture resistance, and heavy-duty flat roof performance.

Built-Up Roofing — BUR

$8.00 – $16.00+ / sq ft

Multi-layer asphalt and ply-sheet system; cost increases with ply count, insulation, gravel or cap sheet surfacing, tear-off depth, and rooftop access.

Spray Polyurethane Foam — SPF Roofing

$6.00 – $12.00 / sq ft

Seamless insulated roof system used on flat commercial buildings; cost depends on foam thickness, coating type, substrate prep, drainage correction, and roof penetrations.

Commercial Roof Coatings / Cool Roof Restoration

$2.00 – $7.00 / sq ft

Usually a restoration system rather than a full replacement; acrylic, silicone, or polyurethane coatings may be used when the existing roof is structurally sound.

Commercial Metal Roofing

$12.00 – $22.00+ / sq ft

Used on sloped commercial buildings, warehouses, churches, retail buildings, and industrial properties; pricing depends on standing seam vs. exposed fastener, gauge, substrate, trim, and panel system.

Commercial Tile Roofing

$10.00 – $25.00+ / sq ft

Used on hotels, restaurants, retail centers, offices, churches, clubhouses, and Southwest-style commercial buildings where curb appeal and long-life roof design matter.

Commercial Asphalt Shingle Roofing

$5.00 – $9.00 / sq ft

Used on steep-slope commercial buildings, offices, churches, clubhouses, multifamily buildings, and professional service properties.


*The cost ranges above represent typical installed roof replacement pricing in Chandler, including standard materials, labor, tear-off, disposal, and normal installation components. Final pricing may vary based on roof size, slope, access, decking condition, underlayment needs, flashing complexity, solar equipment, drainage requirements, permit requirements, and material selection.

Our Roofing Installation & Repair Services are Available in Chandler & the Greater Phoenix Valley

Chandler Superior Roofing proudly serves homeowners and businesses throughout Chandler and surrounding area, including:

Gilbert

Scottsdale / Paradise Valley

Goodyear

Peoria

Phoenix

Tempe

Apache Junction

Maricopa

Glendale

Surprise / El Mirage

Mesa

Ahwatukee / Ocotillo

Casa Grande

Fountain Hills

Avondale

Queen Creek

San Tan Valley

Buckeye

Cave Creek / Carefree

Litchfield Park

If your specific city is not listed, please contact us. We frequently extend our services to surrounding communities based on project scope.

Hear it from our Roofing Clients!

a man sitting at a desk in front of a computer

“Chandler Superior Roofing did an excellent job replacing our tile roof. Their team explained the condition of our underlayment, showed us where the roof was failing, and helped us choose materials that made sense for Arizona heat and monsoon weather. The crew was professional, clean, and detail-oriented from the roof inspection to the final walkthrough.”

Michael R., Chandler, AZ

Residential Roof Replacement

woman in orange long sleeve shirt sitting beside table with macbook pro

“We called Chandler Superior Roofing after noticing a roof leak near one of our ceiling vents. They found the issue quickly, repaired the damaged flashing and sealant, and checked the surrounding tiles to make sure there were no hidden problems. I appreciated how honest they were about what needed to be fixed instead of trying to sell us a full roof replacement.”

Danielle M., Chandler, AZ

Roof Repair & Leak Repair

man in gray suit jacket smiling

“Our business needed commercial roof repairs before the summer heat got worse, and Chandler Superior Roofing handled the project professionally. They inspected our flat roof, repaired problem areas around the drainage and roof penetrations, and recommended a roof coating to help protect the building from UV exposure. Their communication, workmanship, and knowledge of commercial roofing systems were excellent.”

Brian T., Chandler Building Owner

Commercial Roof Repair

Residential and Commercial Roofing FAQs

What roofing services are available in Chandler, AZ for residential and commercial properties?

We handle a full range of roofing work for both homes and businesses in Chandler. This includes new roof installations, full replacements, targeted repairs, leak detection, storm damage repair, and routine maintenance.

On the commercial side, we work with flat roofing systems, TPO membranes, and foam roofing. For residential properties, we install and repair tile, asphalt shingles, metal roofing, and foam systems.

Every property we work on gets a customized approach. We assess the structure, existing roofing system, and the owner's budget before recommending any specific service or material.

Which roofing materials perform best in Chandler's heat and monsoon conditions, including tile, asphalt shingles, metal, foam, and TPO?

Chandler averages over 299 sunny days per year, and summer temperatures regularly exceed 110°F. Monsoon season runs from June 15 through September 30, bringing high winds, heavy rain, and blowing debris that can stress any roofing system.

Tile roofing — both concrete and clay — is one of the most common choices in the Phoenix metro area. It handles UV exposure well and has a long service life, often exceeding 30 years with proper maintenance.

Metal roofing reflects solar heat effectively and holds up well against wind-driven rain. It works for both residential and commercial properties and typically carries strong manufacturer warranties.

Asphalt shingles are a cost-effective option for residential roofs. In Arizona's climate, choosing shingles with a high solar reflectance rating helps extend their lifespan.

Foam roofing (SPF) creates a seamless surface with no seams or fasteners for water to penetrate. It also provides insulation value, which matters in extreme heat.

TPO membranes are widely used on commercial flat roofs. They reflect UV rays and resist pooling water, making them a practical fit for Chandler's flat-roof commercial buildings.

How can cool roofing options help reduce attic temperatures and improve energy efficiency in Arizona homes?

Attic temperatures in Arizona can reach 150°F or higher during summer without adequate ventilation and reflective roofing. That heat transfers into the living space and forces air conditioning systems to work harder.

Cool roofing materials are designed with higher solar reflectance and thermal emittance values. This means they absorb less heat and release more of it back into the atmosphere rather than pushing it into the attic.

  • Reflective tile coatings can be applied to existing concrete tile to improve performance without a full replacement.
  • Cool-rated asphalt shingles carry ENERGY STAR certification and meet specific solar reflectance thresholds.
  • Metal roofing with reflective coatings is one of the strongest performers for energy efficiency in hot climates.
  • SPF foam adds R-value directly to the roof deck, which reduces heat transfer into the structure below.

We recommend pairing any cool roofing material with proper attic ventilation. Intake and exhaust vents work together with the roof surface to keep attic temperatures in a manageable range.

What are the most common warning signs that a roof needs repair or replacement, and how quickly should they be addressed?

Some damage is visible from the ground. Missing or cracked tile, curling or granule-losing shingles, sagging areas, and visible flashing separation are all signs that something needs attention.

Inside the home, water stains on ceilings or walls, mold or mildew growth in the attic, and daylight visible through the roof deck are indicators of active or ongoing damage.

How quickly should you act? In most cases, the sooner the better. Roof damage in Arizona accelerates during monsoon season. A small leak left unaddressed can lead to wood rot, structural damage, and significantly higher repair costs.

We provide straightforward assessments without pushing unnecessary repairs. If a repair is the right call, we'll say so. If a full replacement is more cost-effective given the roof's age and condition, we'll explain exactly why.

What does a typical roof inspection include, and what factors most affect the final cost of a new roof in Chandler?

A thorough roof inspection covers the entire roofing system, not just the surface material. We examine the condition of the shingles or tile, the flashing around penetrations and edges, the underlayment where accessible, ridge caps, gutters, fascia, and attic ventilation.

We also check for signs of previous repairs, improper installation, and areas where water may be pooling or running in the wrong direction. The goal is an honest, complete picture of the roof's current condition.

Factors that affect the final cost of a new roof in Chandler include:

  • Roof size — measured in squares (1 square = 100 sq ft); most Chandler homes range from 15 to 40 squares
  • Roof pitch and complexity — steeper pitches and more valleys or penetrations increase labor time


What should I expect during the inspection process?

During the inspection, we assess your roof's condition honestly — covering materials, flashing, underlayment, ventilation, and any damage from sun, heat, or monsoon storms. You'll receive a clear written recommendation based on what your roof actually needs, not what generates the highest invoice.

To get started, you can reach us by:

  • Phone call Monday through Sunday, 24 hours
  • Online contact form for a callback
  • Email for non-urgent inquiries

We respond quickly and show up when scheduled.

Enhance your Home or Business with the #1 Residential & Commercial Roofing Company in Chandler, AZ