Can I do a roof inspection myself?
Yes, you can do a basic roof inspection yourself, but it has significant limitations compared to professional inspections. DIY inspections are useful for routine maintenance checks and spotting obvious problems, but they cannot replace professional inspections for insurance claims, home purchases, or detecting hidden damage. Most importantly, walking on your roof carries serious injury risk.
What You Can Safely Inspect Yourself
From the ground with binoculars:
- Missing, cracked, or curling shingles
- Visible sagging or uneven areas
- Damaged or missing flashing
- Debris accumulation in valleys
- Condition of chimneys and vents
- Moss or algae growth
From inside your attic:
- Water stains on roof decking
- Daylight coming through roof boards
- Moisture or mold on rafters
- Adequate insulation and ventilation
- Proper ventilation airflow
- Sagging between rafters
From gutters and downspouts:
- Shingle granules in gutters (sign of deterioration)
- Proper water drainage
- Gutter attachment to fascia
- Downspout functionality
Safety Warnings for DIY Inspection
Why professionals recommend against walking on roofs:
- Fall risk – Falls from roofs cause 50% of construction fatalities
- Steep pitches – Roofs over 6:12 pitch are especially dangerous
- Wet or icy conditions – Slippery surfaces dramatically increase risk
- Edge hazards – Easy to misjudge distance to edge
- Hidden damage – Weak spots can break through under weight
- Shingle damage – Walking can break or dislodge shingles
If you must access your roof:
- Use proper ladder with standoff brackets
- Have someone hold the ladder
- Wear rubber-soled shoes with good grip
- Only in dry, calm weather
- Work during daylight hours only
- Consider using safety harness
- Stay away from roof edges
- Never work alone
DIY Roof Inspection Checklist
Exterior (from ground level):
- Missing shingles or visible gaps
- Cracked, curled, or buckled shingles
- Dark or discolored areas (moisture damage)
- Damaged or missing flashing around chimneys, vents, skylights
- Sagging ridge line or roof sections
- Moss, algae, or plant growth
- Damaged or loose gutters
- Excessive shingle granule loss
- Condition of roof vents and pipes
- Damaged fascia or soffit
Interior (from attic):
- Water stains on roof decking or rafters
- Active leaks or moisture
- Mold or mildew presence
- Daylight visible through roof
- Sagging roof deck between rafters
- Proper insulation coverage
- Adequate ventilation (soffit and ridge vents)
- Pest evidence (animals, insects)
- Ice dam damage (in cold climates)
- Proper chimney clearances
What You’ll Miss Without Professional Training
- Hidden hail damage – Requires expertise to identify
- Improperly installed flashing – Not visible to untrained eye
- Ventilation inadequacy – Requires airflow calculations
- Subtle moisture damage – Early signs before obvious leaks
- Manufacturing defects – Requires brand-specific knowledge
- Code violations – Need familiarity with local codes
- Structural issues – Requires engineering assessment
- Warranty status – Understanding of installation requirements
When DIY Inspection Is Appropriate
- Routine maintenance – Monthly or quarterly visual checks
- Post-storm assessment – Initial damage survey before professional visit
- Gutter cleaning – Checking for granule loss
- Seasonal prep – Before winter or storm season
- Between professional inspections – Annual self-checks
- Leak investigation – Tracking water entry point from inside
When Professional Inspection Is Required
- Home purchase or sale – Professional report required
- Insurance claims – Documentation for coverage
- Major repairs – Accurate damage assessment needed
- Roof age over 15 years – Hidden problems common
- After severe storms – Proper damage documentation
- Suspected structural issues – Engineering expertise needed
- Warranty claims – Manufacturer may require professional inspection
Tools for DIY Roof Inspection
- Good binoculars – For ground-level inspection
- Flashlight – For attic inspection
- Camera or smartphone – Document issues
- Ladder – If accessing gutters (not roof)
- Moisture meter – Check for hidden water damage ($30-$100)
- Notebook – Record findings and dates
Drone Inspection Alternative
Growing in popularity:
- Cost – $100-$300 for drone service, or own drone $400-$1,500
- Safety – No need to climb on roof
- Quality – High-resolution photos and video
- Limitations – Cannot assess roof firmness or interior issues
- Legal – May need FAA registration and neighbor permission
DIY Inspection Limitations
- No warranty – Cannot certify for insurance or sales
- Liability – Your risk if you miss critical issues
- No documentation – Informal findings not accepted by insurers
- Limited expertise – May miss 50-70% of issues professionals find
- Safety risk – Injury potential
- Equipment limits – No infrared or moisture detection tools
Hybrid Approach: DIY + Professional
Best practice for homeowners:
- Conduct monthly visual inspections from ground
- Check attic seasonally
- Hire professional inspection every 3-5 years
- Get professional inspection after major storms
- Professional inspection for home sales/purchases
- Document DIY findings with photos for professional follow-up
Red Flags That Require Immediate Professional Inspection
- Visible sagging or structural deformation
- Large areas of missing shingles
- Active leaks inside home
- Extensive mold or water damage
- Multiple shingles with exposed nails
- Significant granule loss across roof
- Daylight visible through roof from attic
- Recent severe storm or hail event
While DIY roof inspections can supplement professional maintenance, they should not replace certified inspections for critical situations. The combination of safety risks and limited expertise makes professional inspections worth the $200-$400 cost for peace of mind and proper documentation, especially for insurance and real estate transactions.
