How to check if my roof warranty is still active?
To check if your roof warranty is still active, locate your original warranty documentation, verify the installation date, check the warranty period, and confirm no exclusions apply. Contact the manufacturer directly with your roof’s details, or check their online warranty verification system if available.
Steps to Verify Warranty Status
1. Find Your Warranty Documents
- Check closing documents from home purchase
- Review contractor’s final invoice and paperwork
- Look for manufacturer warranty certificate
- Check home filing system or safe
- Contact original installer for copy
2. Identify Key Information
- Installation date – When roof was installed
- Warranty type – Manufacturer vs. workmanship
- Warranty length – 10, 25, 30, 50 years, or lifetime
- Product details – Brand, model, serial number if available
- Installer information – Contractor name and certification
3. Calculate Elapsed Time
- Count years from installation to present
- Compare to warranty period stated
- Check if within coverage window
- Note any renewal or extension options
4. Contact Manufacturer
- Call customer service with property address
- Provide installation date and product details
- Request verification of coverage status
- Ask about any claim procedures if applicable
Types of Roof Warranties
Manufacturer’s Material Warranty:
- Covers manufacturing defects in shingles or materials
- Length: 25-50 years or limited lifetime
- Transferable: Often to one subsequent owner
- Verification: Through manufacturer directly
Contractor’s Workmanship Warranty:
- Covers installation errors and labor
- Length: 1-10 years typically
- Transferable: Rarely
- Verification: Through original contractor
Enhanced or Extended Warranty:
- Upgraded coverage combining materials and labor
- Length: Varies widely
- Requirements: Often requires certified installer
- Verification: Certificate usually provided at installation
Online Warranty Verification
Major manufacturers with online portals:
- GAF – gaf.com/warranty-lookup
- Owens Corning – owenscorning.com/roofing/warranty
- CertainTeed – certainteed.com/warranty-information
- IKO – iko.com/warranty
- Tamko – tamko.com/support/warranties
You’ll typically need:
- Property address
- Installation date
- Product name or serial number
- Contractor name
Common Warranty Periods
- 10-year warranty – Entry-level coverage
- 25-year warranty – Standard for quality shingles
- 30-year warranty – Premium shingles
- 50-year warranty – High-end architectural shingles
- Limited lifetime – Best products, but prorated after certain period
Warranty Exclusions That Void Coverage
Check if any of these apply:
- Improper installation – Not installed per manufacturer specs
- Inadequate ventilation – Most common void reason
- Non-certified installer – Enhanced warranties require certification
- Wrong climate installation – Product not rated for your area
- Modifications – Unauthorized repairs or alterations
- Walking damage – Improper foot traffic
- Normal wear – Age-related deterioration not covered
- Acts of nature – Wind, hail typically excluded from material warranty
What to Do If You Don’t Have Documentation
- Contact selling agent – If you bought home, they may have paperwork
- Call previous owner – Ask for warranty transfer documents
- Search by address – Some manufacturers track by property address
- Hire inspector – Can identify products and estimate installation date
- Check permit records – County/city may have installation date
- Contact local roofers – May have records if they did the work
Warranty Transferability
When buying a home:
- Request warranty transfer documents at closing
- Manufacturer warranties usually transfer once
- May require transfer fee ($25-$100)
- Workmanship warranties rarely transfer
- Get verification in writing
Transfer requirements:
- Notification within 60-90 days of ownership change
- Completed transfer form
- Proof of home purchase
- Transfer fee payment if required
Prorated vs. Non-Prorated Coverage
Non-prorated (full coverage):
- Full replacement value throughout period
- Example: 10-year non-prorated means full coverage for 10 years
- After period ends, coverage drops to prorated
Prorated coverage:
- Coverage value decreases over time
- Example: 50% coverage after 25 years on 50-year warranty
- Homeowner pays depreciation difference
Signs Your Warranty May Be Invalid
- No ventilation system visible in attic
- Installer wasn’t manufacturer-certified
- Roof installed in extreme temperatures
- Mixed product brands used
- Improper nailing patterns visible
- Previous DIY repairs evident
When to Verify Warranty
- Before buying a home – Confirm transferable coverage
- When damage occurs – Check if covered before paying out of pocket
- Before selling – Add value by documenting active warranty
- After storm damage – Some damage may be warranty-covered
- Routine check – Annually to ensure no issues
Filing a Warranty Claim
If coverage is active and defect is covered:
- Document the issue with photos
- Contact manufacturer’s warranty department
- Provide proof of purchase and installation date
- Schedule inspection by authorized contractor
- Get approval before proceeding with repairs
- Use approved contractor for warranty work
- Submit completed work documentation
Maintaining Warranty Validity
- Follow manufacturer maintenance requirements
- Keep roof clean and clear of debris
- Address issues promptly
- Use only authorized contractors for repairs
- Maintain proper attic ventilation
- Document all maintenance and repairs
- Avoid walking on roof unnecessarily
Warranty verification is essential before filing claims or when purchasing a home. Keep warranty documents in a safe, accessible location and review coverage terms periodically. If documents are lost, most manufacturers can verify coverage by address and installation date, though having original paperwork makes the process much easier.
