Georgia Roof Replacement Cost (2026 Guide)

Full roof replacement including tear-off, materials, and installation.

Average in GA

$8,100

Typical Range

$4,950–$13,500

vs National

-10%

Georgia vs National Average

$0.0k$2.5k$5.0k$7.5k$10.0kGeorgiaNational Avg

2026 Bottom Line

In 2026, a new roof in Georgia averages $8,100 (about 10% below the U.S. average), with summer heat and humidity making attic ventilation as important as the shingle itself.

Georgia Roof Cost by Material (2026)

Installed pricing for a typical 2,000 sq ft single-story home in Georgia, including tear-off, underlayment, and labor. Pitch, accessibility, and stories add 10–25%.

MaterialPer Sq Ft (Installed)Avg Total (2,000 sq ft)LifespanBest For
3-Tab Asphalt Shingle$3.15–$4.95$8,10015–20 yrsTightest budget, basic protection
Architectural Asphalt Shingle$4.05–$6.30$10,40025–30 yrsBest value for most homeowners (2026 most-installed)
Standing-Seam Metal$8.10–$12.60$20,70040–70 yrsHail, wildfire, and high-wind regions
Concrete or Clay Tile$9.00–$16.20$25,20050+ yrsHot/sun-belt climates, Spanish/Mediterranean homes
Synthetic Slate / Composite$7.20–$11.70$18,90040–50 yrsSlate look without the structural weight

What Drives Roof Costs in Georgia

  • Atlanta-area labor runs slightly above the rest of the state but Georgia overall is below the U.S. average.
  • Hot, humid summers shorten asphalt shingle life by 2–4 years if attic ventilation is undersized.
  • Hurricane and severe-thunderstorm exposure on the coast adds wind-uplift requirements.
  • Georgia requires roofing contractors to be licensed at the state level — verify before contracting.

Georgia Roof Replacement FAQs (2026)

How much does a new roof cost in Georgia in 2026?

In 2026, a full roof replacement in Georgia averages about $8,100, with most homeowners paying between $4,950 and $13,500 depending on roof size, pitch, and material. Architectural asphalt shingles remain the most common choice; standing-seam metal and tile run roughly 2–3× higher.

How long does a new roof last in Georgia?

Architectural asphalt roofs in Georgia typically last 25–30 years, metal roofs 40–70 years, and tile 50+ years. Local weather (hail, sun load, freeze-thaw cycles) is the single biggest variable — most underperformance traces back to poor flashing or ventilation rather than the shingle itself.

Do I need a permit to replace a roof in Georgia?

Most Georgia jurisdictions require a building permit for full roof replacement, and many require a separate tear-off inspection. Reputable contractors pull the permit themselves and bake the cost into the bid. If a quote is unusually cheap and the contractor wants you to pull the permit, treat that as a red flag.

Is it worth getting a metal roof in Georgia?

Metal pays back fastest in Georgia when you have meaningful hail, wildfire, or high-wind exposure, or when you plan to stay in the home long enough to amortize the 2× upfront cost over its 40-70 year lifespan. For a 10-year horizon, architectural asphalt is almost always the better financial decision.

Is this actually worth it?

A roof replacement in 2026 typically returns 60–80% of project cost at resale within the first 5 years, and avoids 2–4× higher emergency-replacement pricing. Owners with a documented roof timeline negotiate ~$3,800 better at sale on average.

Run the ROI math

Should you replace now or wait?

Break-even rule: if annual repair cost exceeds 8% of replacement cost — or the unit is past 75% of expected life — replacement wins. Below that threshold, deferring 18–36 months and funding a sinking fund usually beats panic timing by $1,800–$5,400.

Run the break-even math

How this impacts your home value

A failing or end-of-life roof typically triggers a $4,000–$12,000 appraiser adjustment in Georgia and shows up in inspection reports as a buyer-negotiation lever. A documented replacement plan inside the last 3 years of life preserves listing price.

Build the resale-ready plan

Roof in Nearby States

Roof Costs by Metro Area in Georgia

How much life is left in your roof?

Use our free Lifespan Estimator to project when your system will need replacement.