Alpha Elite Contracting
111 E Mauller Rd , Columbia, MO 65202-7210
Remodel Contractors, Roofing Contractors, General Contractor. BBB Rating A+.
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
Read real roof replacement reviews reviews from Kansas City homeowners before you hire. Compare ratings across 67 local contractors and choose the highest-rated pro for your job.
Typical cost in Kansas City
$8,000–$25,000 / project
67 contractors in Kansas City
111 E Mauller Rd , Columbia, MO 65202-7210
Remodel Contractors, Roofing Contractors, General Contractor. BBB Rating A+.
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
Kansas City, MO 64119-4007
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Roofing Contractors, Fence Contractors, Siding Contractors ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
222 W 20th St, Kansas City MO 64108
Roofing contractor serving Kansas City MO and surrounding areas. Services include roof replacement, installation, and repair. BBB Accredi¦
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
Kansas City MO 64127
Roofing contractor serving Kansas City MO and surrounding areas. Services include roof replacement, installation, and repair. BBB Accredi¦
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
4601 E 12th St , Kansas City, MO 64127-1785
BBB Accredited A rated. Roofing Contractors, Siding Contractors, Gutters ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
107 W 9th St Fl 2 , Kansas City, MO 64105-1705
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Flat Roofing Contractors, Roofing Contractors, Metal Roofing Contractors ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
Kansas City, MO 64116-1837
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Residential General Contractor, Roofing Contractors, General Contractor ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
2300 Main St, Kansas City MO 64108
Roofing contractor serving Kansas City MO and surrounding areas. Services include roof replacement, installation, and repair. BBB Accredi¦
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
6324 N Chatham Ave PMB 271 , Kansas City, MO 64151-2473
BBB Accredited A rated. Roofing Contractors, Siding Contractors, Gutters ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
4601 E 12th St , Kansas City, MO 64127-1785
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Flat Roofing Contractors, Roofing Contractors, Siding Contractors ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
851 NW 45th St Ste 101 , Kansas City, MO 64116-4613
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Roofing Contractors, Siding Contractors, Drywall Contractors ...
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
140 Raceway Park Drive , Moscow Mills, MO 63362
Roofing Contractors, Construction Services, Gutters. BBB Rating A+.
Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more
For: 1,800-2,000 sq ft single-family home
Kansas City roofs work hard. The metro receives 38–42 inches of precipitation per year, including 10–15 inches of snow and ice in winter, combined with the nation's most active severe convective storm corridor from April through October. The National Storm Damage Center consistently ranks Kansas City among the top 10 metros for annual hail damage claims. A KC roof replacement is not just a maintenance expense — it is often an insurance-driven project triggered by a major hail or wind event. Understanding what drives cost helps you evaluate contractor quotes and maximize your insurance settlement.
| Roofing Material | Product Grade | Installed Cost per Square (100 sf) | Typical 2,000 sf Home (20 squares) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3-tab asphalt shingle | Economy | $350–$500/square | $7,000–$10,000 |
| Architectural asphalt shingle | Mid-grade (GAF Timberline HDZ, Owens Corning Duration) | $450–$650/square | $9,000–$13,000 |
| Impact-resistant (IR) asphalt shingle | Class 4 (GAF Timberline ArmorShield II, Owens Corning TruDefinition Duration IR) | $550–$800/square | $11,000–$16,000 |
| Metal standing seam | Premium (steel or aluminum) | $900–$1,400/square | $18,000–$28,000 |
| Metal stone-coated steel | Mid-premium (DECRA, Gerard) | $700–$1,100/square | $14,000–$22,000 |
| Cedar shake (new) | Natural wood | $700–$1,200/square | $14,000–$24,000 |
| Concrete tile | Mid-grade | $800–$1,200/square | $16,000–$24,000 |
Most common replacement in Kansas City: Architectural asphalt shingle at $9,000–$13,000 for a standard 2,000 sf home. Impact-resistant Class 4 shingles are strongly recommended and increasingly required by insurance carriers.
Class 4 impact-resistant shingles have been independently tested to withstand a 2-inch steel ball dropped from 20 feet — the UL 2218 standard. In Kansas City's hail environment, where golf ball-size hail (1.75-inch diameter) is documented multiple times per season, Class 4 shingles provide measurably better performance than standard architectural shingles.
Insurance benefit: Most major carriers serving Kansas City — State Farm, Farmers, American Family, USAA — offer premium discounts of 15–30% for Class 4 impact-resistant roofing. Contact your insurer before final material selection; the annual premium savings sometimes offset the cost difference in 5–8 years.
Most popular Class 4 products in KC (2025):
A complete roof replacement from a legitimate KC contractor includes:
Steep pitch premium: Roofs above 6:12 pitch require additional safety equipment and slow installation speed. Expect 10–25% surcharge for 7:12 and steeper.
Multi-story premium: Two-story homes add 10–20% for additional safety requirements.
Valley count: Complex rooflines with many valleys (common in KC's 1980s–2000s suburban construction) increase labor and material cost vs. simple gable roofs.
Decking repair: Older KC homes with original OSB decking often have sections softened by years of ice dam moisture infiltration. Budget $75–$150/sheet for replacement; a reputable contractor points out problem areas during inspection rather than surprising you mid-job.
Chimney and skylight flashing: Complete reflashing of chimneys ($400–$800) and skylights ($200–$500 each) is recommended at the time of roof replacement.
Missouri requires roofing contractors who bid projects over $30,000 to hold a Missouri general contractor license through the Missouri Secretary of State. Below that threshold, roofing is minimally regulated at the state level — but Kansas City and Johnson County municipalities have local business licensing requirements. Always verify:
BLS SOC 47-2181 documents roofer wages in the Kansas City MSA at $24–$48/hr — anchoring the labor cost component of the quotes above.
The City of Kansas City, Missouri requires a building permit for roof replacement when structural repair is involved. Many residential re-roofing projects are permit-exempt in KCMO for simple shingle-over-shingle replacement, but any deck repair, structural modification, or addition of a skylight requires a permit. Johnson County municipalities (Overland Park, Leawood, Shawnee in Kansas) have their own permit requirements and may require permits for all replacement work. Your contractor should know the local requirements and pull any required permits as part of the project.
After every major Kansas City hail event, the metro is flooded with out-of-state storm chasers — contractors from Texas, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and beyond who descend on impacted neighborhoods, knock doors, and pressure homeowners to sign contracts on the spot. The Kansas City Better Business Bureau documents hundreds of roofing complaints annually, with storm-chasing contractors accounting for the majority. Choosing correctly protects your home, your insurance claim, and your investment.
| Credential | Why It Matters | How to Verify |
|---|---|---|
| MO SOS business registration | Local business entity; can be held accountable in Missouri courts | sos.mo.gov/business |
| Physical Kansas City address | Storm chasers use P.O. boxes or out-of-state addresses | Google Maps the address to confirm real office location |
| General liability insurance ($1M minimum) | Covers damage to your home during installation | Request COI; call insurer to verify active policy |
| Workers' compensation | Required under RSMo §287 for employees; covers installer injury on your roof | Ask for WC certificate or statutory exemption |
| Kansas City BBB membership/rating | Local accountability | bbb.org — search contractor name |
| Manufacturer certification | GAF Master Elite, Owens Corning Platinum Preferred, CertainTeed ShingleMaster | Each manufacturer's website has a certified contractor search tool |
| 5+ years in KC metro | Experience with local storm patterns, building departments, insurance adjusters | Ask about KC-specific project history |
Most Kansas City roof replacements triggered by hail damage involve an insurance claim. Here is how the legitimate process works — and where unscrupulous contractors exploit homeowners:
Legitimate process:
Where homeowners get hurt:
GAF, Owens Corning, and CertainTeed each offer enhanced system warranties (up to 50 years for labor and materials combined) — but only when installed by certified contractors:
A standard contractor installing Owens Corning Duration shingles provides the manufacturer's standard limited warranty. A Platinum Preferred contractor installing the same shingles provides a 50-year system warranty covering both materials and labor — at no additional product cost. Always ask which tier of manufacturer certification the contractor holds.
Proper attic ventilation is not optional — it is required by the International Residential Code (IRC Section R806) and by every major shingle manufacturer as a condition of warranty. The formula: 1 square foot of net free area per 150 square feet of attic floor space, split equally between low eaves (intake) and high ridge (exhaust).
Many KC homes built in the 1970s–1990s have inadequate ventilation. A contractor who installs new shingles over an inadequately ventilated attic voids the manufacturer warranty from day one. A legitimate contractor assesses ventilation as part of the inspection and includes any necessary upgrades in the quote.
Roof replacement is among the most consequential home improvement projects a Kansas City homeowner undertakes. A failed roof installation allows water intrusion that causes $10,000–$50,000 in structural and interior damage. This comparison is designed to give an honest assessment of what is and is not appropriate for DIY in the Kansas City climate — not to discourage capable homeowners, but to ensure decisions are made with accurate information.
| Factor | DIY | Licensed Professional |
|---|---|---|
| Fall risk | Kansas City trauma centers treat ladder and roof fall injuries every week; fatal falls are documented every roofing season | Professional crews with OSHA-compliant fall protection (harnesses, anchor systems, safety nets) |
| Material cost | Similar — you pay contractor pricing at distributors if you have a contractor account; retail markup at big-box stores is significant | Contractor buys at wholesale; savings partially offset labor cost |
| Manufacturer warranty | Standard limited manufacturer's warranty only; no labor warranty | Enhanced system warranty up to 50 years when installed by certified contractor (GAF Master Elite, OC Platinum Preferred) |
| Installation quality | Starter strip placement, nail depth, and nailing pattern are frequently wrong in DIY installs — all void warranty and reduce life | Installed to manufacturer's specifications with proper tools (pneumatic nailer set to correct depth) |
| Ice and water shield | Often under-applied | 24-inch minimum per Missouri code + valley and penetration coverage minimum |
| Ventilation assessment | Typically not assessed | Part of every legitimate KC contractor's pre-inspection |
| Flashing installation | Highest DIY failure point — improper step flashing at walls and kickout flashing at rake-wall junctions is the #1 cause of water intrusion | Proper step flashing, kickout, pipe boot installation per NRCA guidelines |
| Insurance claim documentation | Cannot credibly represent the claim scope | Experienced KC contractors work directly with adjusters; produce Xactimate-compatible estimates |
| Permit compliance | Often skipped | Pulled where required; ensures final inspection |
| Timeline | 3–7 days for a DIY crew working weekends | 1–2 days for a professional crew; critical during KC storm season when tarped roofs are a target for secondary hail damage |
Minor repairs (not replacement):
A small shed or detached garage:
Any home with ice dam history: Ice dams require proper ice and water shield installation beyond the code minimum, plus ventilation correction. DIYers almost always get this wrong, and the damage from a single KC winter with improper ice protection can cost $20,000+ in interior repairs.
Any two-story or steep-pitch roof: Fall risk at this level requires fall protection that most DIYers do not own. OSHA 29 CFR 1926.502 fall protection standards exist for a reason — Kansas City emergency rooms see DIY roofing falls every spring.
After an insurance-covered hail event: Your insurance company requires the work to be performed by a licensed contractor and documented per their requirements. DIY work on an insurance claim may invalidate the claim and is not reimbursable.
Cedar shake or tile replacement: These materials require specialized installation training and experience. DIY cedar shake installation with improper interlay or fasteners causes premature failure and voided warranty.
The strongest argument for a DIY minor repair in Kansas City is this: a 3-tab shingle replacement on one or two damaged shingles is better DIY work than signing with an unlicensed storm chaser who installs incorrectly and disappears. For minor repairs, a capable homeowner with a YouTube tutorial and proper safety equipment will outperform a fly-by-night operator.
For full roof replacement, a manufacturer-certified local KC contractor who has been in business 5+ years, carries proper insurance, and pulls permits is the correct choice — not because DIY is impossible, but because the fall risk, warranty value, insurance documentation requirements, and workmanship complexity all weigh decisively toward professional installation at this project scale.
| Shingle Type | Wind Rating | Impact Rating | Expected Life in KC Climate | Cost Difference vs. 3-Tab |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3-tab asphalt | 60 mph | None | 15–20 years | Baseline |
| Architectural (laminated) | 110–130 mph (meets IRC wind zone) | Standard | 25–30 years | +$20–$40/square |
| Class 4 Impact-Resistant | 130 mph | UL 2218 Class 4 (2-inch steel ball) | 30–40 years | +$80–$150/square |
| Metal standing seam | 140+ mph | Excellent | 50+ years | +$400–$700/square |
For Kansas City: 3-tab shingles should not be installed on any primary residence in the KC metro given the documented hail risk. Architectural minimum; Class 4 IR strongly recommended. The insurance premium savings from Class 4 IR classification (15–30% reduction with most KC carriers) typically covers half the cost difference within 5 years.
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