Cost GuideBy Chad Yates, Owner·Updated June 2026·9 min read
New architectural asphalt shingle roof replacement on a Madison, WI home
Quick answer

For a standard asphalt shingle roof on a 1,500-2,500 sq ft home in south-central Wisconsin, most homeowners pay somewhere in the $8,000-$18,000 range. Larger homes, steeper pitches, premium materials, or multiple tear-off layers push that number higher. Every roof is different - the only honest answer comes from a free on-site estimate.

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Your roof held up through another Wisconsin winter. Ice dams, freeze-thaw cycles, that one week in February where it didn't get above zero - and now you're standing in the attic with a flashlight, wondering if it's time.

Maybe a contractor knocked on your door after the last hailstorm. Maybe your shingles are curling and your gutters are full of granules. Either way, you want a straight answer: what does a roof replacement actually cost in Wisconsin right now?

Here's the honest version - no bait-and-switch numbers, no fake guarantees.

The Real Price Range for a Wisconsin Roof Replacement in 2026

There is no single "average" number that applies to every home. Anyone who quotes you a price without seeing your roof is guessing.

That said, here's what most south-central Wisconsin homeowners pay for a full roof replacement in 2026:

  • Small home (under 1,500 sq ft, simple gable roof): roughly $7,000-$11,000
  • Mid-size home (1,500-2,500 sq ft, moderate pitch): roughly $10,000-$18,000
  • Larger or more complex home (2,500+ sq ft, steep pitch, multiple valleys): $17,000-$30,000+

These are installed costs - materials, labor, tear-off, disposal, and standard underlayment. They're not guarantees. Material prices, labor availability, and fuel costs have all shifted over the past few years, and your specific roof will have its own variables.

If your quote comes in significantly below these ranges, ask questions. Low bids usually mean something is getting cut - often the underlayment quality, the ventilation work, or the decking repairs that should happen once the old shingles are off.

Roof replacement cost by home size (Madison, 2026)

HomeRoof sizeTypical total
Small ranch / bungalow14-18 squares$9,000-$13,000
Average two-story18-26 squares$12,000-$18,000
Large or complex (steep)26+ squares$17,000-$25,000+

Cost by roofing material (average Madison home, installed)

MaterialLifespanTypical total
Architectural asphalt (standard)25-30 yrs$12,000-$18,000
Impact-resistant (Class 4)30+ yrs$15,000-$22,000
Standing-seam metal40-50 yrs$25,000-$45,000

Common add-on costs

ItemTypical cost
Extra tear-off layer$500-$1,500
Decking replacement$50-$80 per sheet
New flashing & pipe boots$300-$700
Seamless gutters$1,000-$2,500

Typical Madison-area 2026 ranges. Your exact price depends on an on-site inspection. A new asphalt shingle roof recoups about 61% of its cost at resale on average (2024 Remodeling Cost vs. Value Report).

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What Actually Moves the Price Up or Down

1. Roof Size (Squares)

Roofers measure in "squares" - one square equals 100 square feet of roof surface. Your roof surface area is almost always larger than your home's footprint because of pitch and overhang. A 2,000 sq ft house might have 22-28 squares of actual roof.

More squares = more materials + more labor. Simple math, but homeowners are often surprised by the difference.

2. Pitch (Steepness)

A low-slope ranch is fast and safe to work on. A steep Victorian or a two-story colonial with a 10/12 or 12/12 pitch takes more time, more safety equipment, and more physical effort. Expect a labor surcharge on steeper roofs - it's not contractors padding the bill, it's the reality of the work.

3. Material Choice

Architectural (dimensional) asphalt shingles are the most common choice in Wisconsin - good performance, reasonable cost, and they hold up well against our freeze-thaw cycles. They're what most homes in Brodhead, Madison, Janesville, and Monroe are wearing.

Premium asphalt shingles (impact-resistant, Class 4) cost more upfront but can lower your homeowner's insurance premium and handle hail better. Worth asking your insurance agent about before you choose.

Metal roofing - standing seam or metal shingles - runs two to three times the cost of asphalt but can last 40-60 years and sheds Wisconsin snow beautifully. If you're planning to stay in your home long-term, the math often works out.

Cedar shake and slate are beautiful and long-lasting but significantly more expensive and harder to find qualified installers for. Not common in south-central Wisconsin, but available.

4. Number of Tear-Off Layers

If your home already has two layers of shingles (common in older Wisconsin homes), you're looking at a full tear-off no matter what - codes won't allow a third layer. Even with just one existing layer, we almost always recommend a complete tear-off. Here's why: once the old shingles are off, we can actually see your decking. Rotted or soft spots that were hidden underneath get replaced before the new roof goes on. Skipping that step is how you end up with a new roof over a failing foundation.

Tear-off and disposal adds cost - typically a few hundred to over a thousand dollars depending on layers and roof size - but it's money well spent.

5. Decking Condition

Old Wisconsin homes sometimes have board sheathing (1x6 planks) instead of plywood or OSB. If it's solid, it can stay. If it's rotted, cupped, or damaged, it needs to go. Decking repairs are usually priced per sheet or per board - your contractor should be able to give you an estimate once they're up there, but surprises do happen once tear-off starts.

6. Ventilation and Underlayment

A roof that's not properly ventilated will fail early - full stop. In Wisconsin, attic heat and moisture cause ice dams, mold, and premature shingle failure. A good contractor will assess your ridge venting, soffit venting, and attic airflow as part of the job, not as an afterthought.

The same goes for ice and water shield. Wisconsin code requires it at the eaves, but quality contractors run it further up the roof - especially in valleys and around chimneys and skylights. If a bid skips this or uses the cheapest possible underlayment, that's a red flag.

Storm Damage: When Insurance Covers the Cost

If you've had a hailstorm or significant wind event in the last year or two, your roof replacement might be partially or fully covered by your homeowner's insurance. Hail damage isn't always obvious from the ground - it shows up as bruised or cracked shingles, damaged ridge caps, and dented metal on vents and flashing.

We meet your insurance adjuster on-site to make sure nothing gets missed. Adjusters aren't trying to cheat you, but they're also working fast and covering a lot of ground. Having a contractor there who knows what to document makes a real difference in what gets approved.

If you've had recent storm activity in your area, it's worth getting your roof looked at before you file - or before your claim window closes. Our storm damage team handles this regularly across south-central Wisconsin.

Completed roof replacement on a Dane County, WI home funded by an approved insurance hail claim

How to Evaluate a Roofing Estimate

Get it in writing. Every line item - materials, labor, tear-off, disposal, underlayment, decking allowance, cleanup - should be spelled out. If a contractor hands you a single number on a sticky note, walk away.

Compare apples to apples. One bid might use 30-year architectural shingles; another might spec a 50-year impact-resistant product. Make sure you know what you're comparing.

Check how long they've been around. Storm chasers - out-of-state contractors who flood into areas after a big hail event - are real. They take deposits and disappear, or do work that fails within a few years. A contractor who's been doing business in Wisconsin for decades has a reputation to protect.

Buckshot Exteriors has been locally owned and operated since 1979 - that's 47 years of roofs in Brodhead, Madison, and the communities in between. You can read what our neighbors have said about working with us on our customer reviews page.


> Not sure if your roof needs repair or full replacement? We offer free, no-pressure inspections across south-central Wisconsin. We'll tell you exactly what we see - and if it doesn't need replacing yet, we'll tell you that too.

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Want a straight answer on your roof?

We'll inspect it, document everything, and tell you honestly what you're looking at, even if the answer is patch it for now. No pressure.

Choosing the Right Shingle for a Wisconsin Roof

For most homeowners, architectural asphalt shingles hit the sweet spot of cost, performance, and longevity. Look for products with good wind ratings (60 mph or better) and impact resistance if hail is a concern in your area - and in Wisconsin, it should be.

We're proud to offer GAF roofing products as part of our residential roofing services. GAF is one of the most widely used and trusted shingle manufacturers in North America, and their warranty programs offer real protection - not just the fine-print kind.

As a GAF Master Elite contractor, we can offer enhanced warranty options that most contractors simply can't. That matters when you're making a 25-30 year investment in your home.

Hail damage roof inspection in Madison WI showing impact bruising on GAF asphalt shingles

The Bottom Line on Wisconsin Roof Replacement Cost

There's no honest way to give you a firm price without seeing your roof. Anyone who tells you otherwise is guessing - or selling.

What we can tell you is this: a quality roof replacement in south-central Wisconsin is a significant investment, and it's one worth doing right. The difference between a roof that lasts 15 years and one that lasts 30 often comes down to the underlayment, the ventilation, the decking work, and whether the crew actually knew what they were doing.

We've been doing this since 1979. We know what Wisconsin winters do to a roof, we know what insurance adjusters look for, and we know how to build a roof that holds up.

If you're ready to get a real number for your home, reach out to us for a free inspection and estimate. No pressure, no sales pitch - just an honest assessment from a contractor who's been in your neighborhood for decades. Contact us here or give us a call. We'll get out there, take a look, and give you a straight answer.

Red flags: a roofing quote to walk away from
  • A price dramatically lower than every other bid (corners are getting cut somewhere)
  • Pressure to sign on the spot, or a "today only" discount
  • A request to sign over your insurance claim (Assignment of Benefits)
  • An offer to "waive your deductible" (that is insurance fraud, and it puts you at risk)
  • No written, itemized estimate, or no proof of insurance
  • A large upfront payment (more than 30%) before any work begins

Get a straight answer on your Madison roof

Wisconsin storm season and insurance non-renewal letters do not wait. Get a free, no-obligation inspection and an honest assessment of exactly what your roof needs, even if the answer is to wait.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does a typical roof replacement cost in Wisconsin in 2026?
For a standard asphalt shingle roof on a 1,500-2,500 sq ft home in south-central Wisconsin, most homeowners pay somewhere in the $8,000-$18,000 range. Larger homes, steeper pitches, premium materials, or multiple tear-off layers push that number higher. Every roof is different - the only honest answer comes from a free on-site estimate.
How does roof pitch affect the cost of replacement in Wisconsin?
Steeper roofs take longer, require more safety equipment, and are harder to work on - so labor costs go up. A low-slope ranch roof is much faster to reroof than a steep colonial or Victorian-style home. Pitch is one of the biggest variables contractors look at when pricing a job.
Does homeowner's insurance cover roof replacement in Wisconsin?
It depends on the cause. Storm damage - hail, high wind, falling trees - is typically covered under most policies. Normal wear and age-related deterioration usually is not. If you've had a recent storm, it's worth having a professional inspect your roof and meet your adjuster to document the damage properly.
How many layers of shingles can you have on a Wisconsin roof before a full tear-off is required?
Wisconsin follows the International Residential Code, which generally allows up to two layers of asphalt shingles. Most roofing professionals recommend a full tear-off regardless, because it lets you inspect and repair the decking underneath - which is often where hidden problems live.
What's the difference in cost between asphalt shingles and metal roofing in Wisconsin?
Architectural asphalt shingles are the most common and most affordable option. Metal roofing - standing seam or metal shingles - typically costs two to three times more upfront, but lasts significantly longer and handles Wisconsin's freeze-thaw cycles and heavy snow loads exceptionally well. It's a long-term investment.
How do I know if a Wisconsin roofing contractor is giving me a fair price?
Get at least two or three written, itemized estimates. A fair contractor will break down labor, materials, tear-off, disposal, and any decking repair separately. Be cautious of extremely low bids - they often mean cut corners on materials, underlayment, or ventilation. Check local reviews and ask how long they've been operating in your area.

Get a real number for your project

Cost ranges only get you so far. Tell us your address, what's going on, and the scope you're considering, and we'll get you a clear, honest estimate with no obligation.

Free, no-pressure estimates. We'll walk the project with you and explain every line of the quote before you decide anything.

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Wisconsin Dwelling Contractor · Lic. #DC-080900045

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About the author

Written by Chad Yates, Owner, Buckshot General Contracting. Chad grew up in Orfordville, Wisconsin and learned the roofing trade from the ground up, working as a laborer alongside his brothers before founding Buckshot. He and his crew replace and restore roofs across Madison and south-central Wisconsin. Every guide is reviewed for accuracy by our local project crew before it goes live.

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