Sandy, Utah Roofing Contractor

Blue-gray two-story home with a two-car garage, Sandy, Utah style
Rooval Roofing · Sandy, UtahFrom the east benches down to the valley, Sandy roofs take the storms first - we inspect and fix them right.Get My Free Quote →Call (385) 424-8810
About a 7-minute read · free inspections in Sandy

Need roof repair in Sandy, UT? Rooval Roofing repairs hail, wind, and leak damage — and replaces aging roofs — from Sandy’s east benches to the valley floor. Free inspections, a 5.0★ Google rating, and a workmanship warranty on every job. Call (385) 424-8810 or get an instant quote online.

Sandy Roofing Built for the Foot of the Wasatch

Sandy sits on the southeast edge of Salt Lake County, where the valley floor tips up into the benchland below the Wasatch and the mouth of Little Cottonwood Canyon. Drive past Dimple Dell Regional Park on a February morning and you can read the pattern in the rooflines: snow still packed on the north slopes long after the south-facing pitches have cleared. That split is the whole story of roofing here. A Sandy roof spends its winter shedding heavy bench snow and its summer baking under high-elevation sun, and it has to be built for both. Rooval Roofing is a local, family-run crew that has spent years learning how these roofs actually wear, and we bring that to every inspection, repair, and replacement we do in town.

Whether your home is a 1970s brick rancher in White City, a larger place up near Willow Creek, or newer construction on the east bench, we treat the roof as part of the house rather than a product to move. That means honest answers, clean work, and a crew that shows up when we say we will.

Roofing Services We Handle Across Sandy

Most of what a Sandy homeowner needs falls into a handful of jobs. Here is what we do most often, and how we think about each one.

  • Roof replacement and tear-offs — When a roof is past saving, we strip it to the deck, check the wood underneath, and rebuild it properly in asphalt, architectural shingle, or standing-seam metal. No shingling over old layers to bury the problem.
  • Metal roofing — A standing-seam metal roof sheds heavy bench snow better than almost anything and holds up for decades against Sandy’s freeze-thaw swings. It is a favorite for the steeper, more complex roofs common in the foothill neighborhoods.
  • Roof repair — Wind-lifted shingles, cracked flashing around a chimney or skylight, a leak that only shows up during spring melt. We track down the real source instead of patching the stain.
  • Roof tune-up and maintenance — A yearly once-over that catches small failures, reseals worn flashing, and clears the valleys before winter sets in. On a roof that is otherwise sound, a tune-up buys you years and pushes the cost of a full replacement further down the road.
  • Gutters and drainage — Proper gutters and downspouts move melt away from your fascia, foundation, and basement, which matters a lot on the bench where runoff volume spikes fast in spring.

What Sandy Roofs Are Up Against

Conditions in Sandy are not the same as they are on the valley floor a few miles west, and a roof that would be fine out in the flats can struggle up here.

Bench snow and ice dams

Sandy’s east-side and foothill neighborhoods sit hundreds of feet higher than the valley center, close enough to Little Cottonwood and Bell Canyon to catch heavier, wetter snow and hold it longer. When warm air escaping the attic melts that snowpack and it refreezes at the cold eave, you get an ice dam — a ridge of ice that backs water up under the shingles. We look hard at attic ventilation and insulation, not just the shingles, because that is where ice dams actually start.

Canyon wind

The canyon mouths funnel strong downslope wind onto the east bench, and those gusts find any shingle that was not fastened well or any ridge cap that has aged loose. Proper nailing, starter strips, and wind-rated materials are the difference between a roof that shrugs off a windstorm and one that loses a section of shingles overnight.

High-elevation sun

Not sure how bad the damage is?
Get a free Sandy roof inspection. We document any wind or hail damage with dated photos and a written report you keep - no pressure, no obligation.

At Sandy’s elevation the UV load is intense, and it ages asphalt faster than most homeowners expect — you see it as brittle, curling shingles and granules collecting in the gutters. It is one more reason we talk honestly about whether a roof has real life left or is simply being propped up.

The age of Sandy’s rooftops

Sandy filled in as a family bedroom community through the 1970s and 1980s, one pocket subdivision at a time. A lot of those homes are on their second or even third roof now, and plenty of the coverings from the last big re-roof wave are reaching the end of an asphalt shingle’s normal life. If your home is from that era and you are not sure when the roof last went on, it is worth a look.

Why Homeowners in Sandy Call Rooval

We are based in Lehi, about 20 minutes from Sandy, which keeps us close enough to respond quickly without the overhead of a big out-of-state outfit. Here is what you get working with us:

  • A 5.0-star Google rating from Utah homeowners.
  • Licensed and insured, with experienced in-house crews rather than day-labor subcontractors.
  • A workmanship warranty on every install, on top of the manufacturer’s material coverage.
  • Straight recommendations — if a repair or a tune-up will do the job, we will tell you that instead of pushing a replacement.
  • Free, no-pressure inspections and an instant online quote tool if you want a ballpark before we ever set foot on the property.

If a storm has moved through, we will get up on the roof and document any damage with photos so you have a clear record. Whether you do anything with that documentation is entirely your call — we are here to inspect and tell you plainly what we find.

Sandy Roofing Questions We Hear a Lot

What does a new roof cost on a typical Sandy home?

For most single-family homes in Sandy, a full replacement lands somewhere between $9,000 and $20,000. Where you fall in that range depends on the size and pitch of the roof, the material you choose, and whether we find any rotted decking once the old layers come off. The steeper, more complex roofs common in the foothill neighborhoods sit toward the higher end. We give you a firm number after we have actually looked at the roof, not a guess over the phone.

My house is up on the bench and gets buried in snow — does that change the roof I should put on?

It can. On higher-snow-load benchland roofs we pay extra attention to ventilation, ice-and-water shield along the eaves, and how well the material sheds. Standing-seam metal is worth a serious look up there because it lets snow slide instead of holding it, which cuts down on ice dams. We will walk you through the trade-offs for your specific roof.

How do I tell whether my Sandy roof needs replacing or just a repair?

A few missing shingles or one leak around a vent is usually a repair. When shingles are curling and shedding granules across the whole roof, when leaks keep coming back in different spots, or when the roof is simply old enough that failures are stacking up, replacement is the more honest fix. A free inspection settles it quickly, and we will show you photos of whatever we are describing.

Do you cover the whole city, including the east-bench and canyon-mouth neighborhoods?

Yes. We work all of Sandy — White City and the central neighborhoods, the Willow Creek area, and the foothill streets up near Bell Canyon and the Little Cottonwood Canyon mouth. The bench roofs are exactly the kind of work our crews are built for.

Nearby Cities We Serve

See all our Utah service areas →

Get Your Free Roof Inspection in Sandy, UT

Local, licensed Utah roofers • Workmanship warranty • Financing available — use our money to build your roof.

Schedule My Free InspectionCall (385) 424-8810

Close-up of a roofer installing shingles in Sandy, Utah
A Sandy home with a clean, updated roofline.

Frequently Asked Questions — Roofing in Sandy, Utah

How much does a roof replacement cost in Sandy, Utah?

Sandy homeowners typically invest $9,000 to $20,000 in a full roof replacement. The city's mix of 1970s ranch homes and newer construction means needs vary. Older homes sometimes need decking repairs we identify upfront during the free inspection.

How long does a roof replacement take?

Most single-family homes in Utah are completed in a single day. Larger homes or complex designs may take two days. Our crew arrives early, works efficiently, and does a thorough cleanup before leaving.

What roofing materials work best for Utah's climate?

Utah's hot dry summers, cold winters, UV intensity, and occasional hail demand durable materials. Architectural asphalt shingles with a Class 3 or Class 4 impact rating offer the best value for most homeowners. Metal roofing sheds snow easily and can last 40-70 years. We help you choose the right material for your home and budget.

Does homeowner's insurance cover roof storm damage in Utah?

Most homeowner's insurance policies in Utah cover sudden storm damage including hail, wind, and falling trees. Age-related wear is not covered. Rooval Roofing inspects and documents any storm damage with dated photos and a written report at no cost - you keep the records and decide whether to involve your insurer.

How do I know if I need a repair or a full roof replacement?

Repairs work for isolated damage: a few missing shingles, minor flashing leaks, or limited granule loss. A full replacement makes more sense when your roof is over 20 years old, damage is widespread, or leaks keep recurring. We offer free inspections and always give you an honest recommendation.

Do you serve Alta Canyon, Dimple Dell, and east Sandy?

Absolutely. We cover all of Sandy including Alta Canyon, Dimple Dell, and communities near Little Cottonwood Canyon. If a storm caused damage, we will document any storm damage with photos and a written report for your records at no extra cost.

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