Home / Roofing by City / Colorado Springs, Colorado

Roofing in Colorado Springs, Colorado

Front Range hail belt

Colorado Springs, Colorado sits on the hail-prone Front Range. This hub aggregates Colorado Springs's roofing permit and contractor-registration requirements, local roofing suppliers, and impact-resistant material options — every fact linked to its sourced directory record.

Roofing permits & building code in Colorado Springs

Roofing permit and contractor-licensing rules in Colorado Springs are set locally by Pikes Peak Regional Building Department. Colorado has no statewide roofing license, so registration is handled at the local level — always confirm the current requirements with the authority before starting work.

Roofing permit
Required
Contractor registration
Required
Adopted building code
International Codes with Pikes Peak regional amendments; verify the current adopted edition with the department.
Registration details
  • license: Pikes Peak Regional Building Department contractor license required to perform roofing work in the region
Permit process
A roofing permit is required, and roofing materials may not be stocked on the driveway or roof before the permit is issued (stocking early results in a triple permit fee and stop-work order). PPRBD serves El Paso County and its municipalities including Colorado Springs.
Inspections
Typical asphalt roofing and direct-to-deck metal shingles on residential homes do not require a mid-roof inspection. Properties above 7,000 ft elevation require an ice barrier of two cemented layers of underlayment or a self-adhering polymer-modified bitumen sheet from the eave edge to at least 24 inches inside the exterior wall line.

View the full Colorado Springs permitting authority record →

Roofing suppliers in Colorado Springs

5 roofing distributor branches serving Colorado Springs are cataloged in the directory:

All roofing suppliers in Colorado Springs →

Impact-resistant roofing materials for Colorado Springs hail

Colorado Springs sits on Colorado's Front Range, part of the hail-prone corridor insurers call "hail alley." For hail exposure, the highest impact rating a roof covering can earn is UL 2218 Class 4. These cataloged material categories reach Class 4:

Browse every option on the Class 4 impact-resistant materials hub, and read the Class 4 impact-resistant shingles buyer's guide. Many Colorado insurers offer a premium credit for a documented Class 4 roof — confirm terms with your carrier.

Sources