Call us today for a free estimate. +1 (385) 424-8810

Call us today for a free estimate. +1 (385) 424-8810

The Straight Answer
The clearest signs are curling or cupping shingles, bald spots where granules have worn away, and a roofline that’s started to sag rather than lie flat — any one of those points to a roof that’s aging out, not just weathering a rough season. Missing shingles after a windy stretch or daylight visible through the attic boards are the more urgent versions of the same story. None of it means panic; it means it’s worth getting a second opinion sooner rather than later.
Utah’s weather is tough on roofs. Intense summer UV, heavy winter snow loads, canyon winds, and the occasional hailstorm can shorten a roof’s life faster than homeowners realize. The catch? Most roof problems start quietly — and they’re a lot simpler, and cheaper, to handle before water ever makes its way into your attic or ceiling.
Here are the most reliable signs that your Utah roof may need replacing soon.
Asphalt shingles — the most common roofing material in Utah — typically last 20 to 25 years. If your roof is approaching or past that age, it’s time for a professional inspection even if it looks okay from the ground.
Walk around your home and look up. Shingles that are curling at the edges or buckling in the middle are a sign of weathering and moisture damage. This is one of the most common issues we see on Utah County roofs.
Asphalt shingles shed granules as they age. If your gutters are filling up with dark, gritty material that looks like coarse sand, your shingles are breaking down and losing their protective coating.
A sagging roof deck is a serious structural issue — not just cosmetic. It usually means moisture has been sitting in the decking for a long time. This requires immediate attention.
A failing roof loses insulation value. If your heating and cooling costs have gone up without explanation, your roof may no longer be doing its job.
Wind is actually the most common storm damage we see on Utah roofs — canyon gusts crease and lift shingles, and plenty of homeowners remember what the 2020 windstorm did along the Wasatch Front. Hail happens here too. Neither one is always visible to the untrained eye, but both can quietly shorten a roof’s remaining life. After any significant storm, a free inspection is worth it.
If you recognize any of these signs, it’s worth getting a second opinion sooner rather than later. Rooval Roofing offers free, no-obligation roof inspections throughout Utah County and Salt Lake County. Our team will give you an honest assessment — no pressure, no upselling.
And if the answer does turn out to be a replacement, you don’t need the whole cost sitting in savings to move forward — plenty of our neighbors choose to get a new roof on our money, with financing that keeps things friendly and pressure-free. Call us at (385) 424-8810 or request your free inspection online — no cost, no obligation, a straight answer.
It depends on how widespread the wear is. A few damaged shingles or an isolated leak can often be handled with a repair or a roof tune-up, but curling across the whole roof, heavy granule loss, or a sagging deck usually point to replacement. The honest way to know is a professional inspection where someone actually gets up on the roof and tells you which situation you’re in, no pressure to replace before it’s time.
You can spot a lot from the ground with binoculars, look for shingles curling at the edges or buckling in the middle, and check your gutters for dark, sandy granules. Please stay off the roof yourself, Utah roofs get slick and steep and it isn’t worth the fall. If you see anything that concerns you, or after a big storm, have us come take a safe, close-up look.
Late spring through early fall is ideal, since shingles seal best in warmer weather and you avoid working around snow and ice. If you’re noticing warning signs now, it’s smart to get inspected before winter, freeze-thaw cycles and bench snow loads are hard on an already-tired roof. Getting ahead of it means you’re not scrambling for an emergency fix during a January storm.
Utah stacks up a rough combination for roofing, intense high-altitude UV bakes shingles all summer, then heavy winter snow and freeze-thaw cycles work moisture into every weak spot. Add canyon and Wasatch Front wind plus regular hail, and materials simply age faster here than in milder climates. That’s why the 20-to-25-year window can shrink, and why regular inspections matter more in Utah.
About the author
Matthew Thompson is the owner of Rooval Roofing, a licensed and insured roofing company based in Lehi and licensed as a Utah general contractor (DOPL license #13861046-5501), serving homeowners across Utah County and the Salt Lake Valley. He and his crew handle roof repair, replacement, metal roofing, gutters, and free storm-damage inspections. Questions about your roof? Call (385) 424-8810 or get an instant quote.
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