Should you trust the home inspector's roof report?
A general home inspector is a generalist by definition. They walked the roof (or looked from a ladder, or used binoculars from the ground) and gave a snapshot. That snapshot is useful, but it is not a roofing assessment. Inspectors typically note visible shingle wear, obvious flashing issues, and gutter condition. They are not pulling shingles to check nail patterns, examining attic ventilation against code, or evaluating hail bruising that takes a trained eye to spot. If your report said the roof has 5 to 10 years of life left, that is a guess based on appearance. A roofing specific evaluation gives you the real picture, and Greens Fork Roofing offers free roof inspections for exactly this reason.
It is also worth remembering that the home inspector works on a tight schedule and covers the entire house in a few hours. The roof is one item on a long checklist that includes plumbing, electrical, HVAC, foundation, and appliances. Even an experienced inspector cannot give the roof the same attention a roofer does in a dedicated visit. Treat the inspection report as a starting point, not a final verdict.
How soon after closing should you have the roof looked at?
Within the first 60 to 90 days. Two reasons. First, if there is hidden damage from a recent storm, you have a tighter window to file an insurance claim under your new policy. Insurers in Greens Fork often require claims within 12 months of the date of loss, and proving when damage happened gets harder the longer you wait. Second, small problems found early stay small. A lifted shingle in April becomes a soaked decking board by August. Schedule the inspection before your first severe weather season, which in Greens Fork usually means before late spring storms arrive.
What about storm damage you did not know about at closing?
This is more common than people realize. Hail and wind events in the months before you closed may have caused damage the seller never noticed or never disclosed. If a storm hit during your ownership window and your inspection turns up bruising, lifted shingles, or granule loss consistent with that event, you have a legitimate insurance claim. Document the date of the storm, take photos, and call your insurer. We help homeowners navigate this regularly through our work on storm claims.
Keep in mind that your homeowner policy covers damage that occurred after your effective coverage date. If a roofer can pinpoint damage to a storm that hit two weeks after closing, that is your claim to file. If the damage clearly predates closing, that is a separate conversation with the seller or your title insurance, depending on what was disclosed. A clear inspection report with dated photos is your best tool either way.
How do you tell if you need a repair or a full replacement?
Age is the biggest factor. A standard 3-tab asphalt roof lasts 18 to 22 years in this climate. A dimensional architectural shingle lasts 22 to 28 years. If your roof is past those ranges, repairs are putting money into a system that is finishing its life. If the roof is mid life and the damage is localized (one slope, a single flashing, a few wind lifted shingles), repair makes sense. We walk through the specific signs in our guide on signs your roof needs replacement, which is worth reading before you make the call. The honest answer often falls somewhere in between, and a good contractor will lay out both options with real numbers.
Does a roof warranty transfer when I buy the home?
Sometimes, but never assume it does automatically. Many manufacturer roofing warranties on a recent Greens Fork roof are transferable, but only if the transfer is formally filed within a set window after the sale, often measured in months. Miss that window and the enhanced coverage can be lost, leaving you with far less protection than you thought you inherited. The workmanship portion from the installing contractor may have its own separate terms. The smart move right after closing is to gather the roof paperwork, identify the manufacturer and warranty, and confirm whether a transfer is required and by when. If it is, file it promptly. That small step can preserve years of valuable coverage that otherwise quietly expires.
What does a roofer actually check that an inspector misses?
A roofer climbs on the roof with the assumption that something is wrong until proven otherwise. We check granule loss in the gutters, which tells us how the shingles are aging. We look at the sealant strips on the back of shingles to see if the bond has broken from wind. We measure attic ventilation against the square footage of the home because poor airflow cooks shingles from underneath. We pull back flashings around chimneys, skylights, and sidewalls to check for rust and gaps. We look for hail bruises, which appear as dark soft spots that do not show in photos but show under a thumb. None of that fits in a 90 minute general home inspection.
We also spend time inside the attic when access allows. Daylight visible through the decking, dark staining on rafters, compressed or missing insulation near the eaves, and rusted nail tips all tell a story the exterior cannot. A roof is a system, and the underside is half of it.
What should you budget for in the first year?
Plan for an inspection (free with us), possibly a tune up in the $300 to $800 range to address minor flashing or sealant issues, and gutter cleaning twice a year. If a repair is needed, most fall in the $500 to $2,500 range depending on scope. A full replacement on an average Greens Fork home runs significantly more, and we break that down in detail in our post on roof replacement cost. Setting aside a small annual reserve, even $500 to $1,000, keeps you from being caught off guard when something does come up.
What if the previous owner just replaced the roof?
Get the paperwork. You want the contractor name, the install date, the shingle manufacturer and product, and any transferable warranty documents. Many manufacturer warranties (including Owens Corning and Malarkey) allow a one time transfer to a new homeowner, but only if you submit the transfer paperwork within a set window after closing, often 30 to 60 days. Miss that window and the warranty drops to the standard limited coverage or disappears entirely. Even on a recent roof, ask for an inspection. Workmanship issues show up in the first few years, and you want to know before the installer's labor warranty expires.
If the original contractor is still in business, call them and confirm the warranty is on file under the old address. Some contractors keep detailed records and will honor labor coverage for the new owner as a courtesy, especially if they want the future business. If the contractor has closed up shop, the manufacturer warranty becomes your only protection, which makes that transfer paperwork even more important.
What roof problems are most common on older Greens Fork homes?
Greens Fork has a particular set of issues. Older homes (anything pre-1990) often have inadequate attic ventilation by current standards, which leads to ice dams in winter and shortened shingle life in summer. Many homes built in the 1990s and early 2000s have organic mat shingles that fail earlier than modern fiberglass products. Chimney flashing on brick chimneys is a frequent leak point, and chimney flashing repair is one of the most common calls we get from new homeowners. Pipe boots crack around the 10 to 12 year mark and leak quietly into ceilings. None of these require a full replacement, but all of them require attention.