Roof Replacement
Cost Mississippi
What to Expect
Honest price ranges for Mississippi homeowners — no fluff, no bait-and-switch. Real numbers for Southaven, DeSoto County, and surrounding areas from a contractor who actually does the work.
The average roof replacement cost in Mississippi ranges from $8,000 to $18,000 for a standard single-family home using architectural shingles. Most DeSoto County homeowners pay $10,000–$14,000 for a full architectural shingle replacement on a typical 1,500–2,000 square foot home. Metal roofing runs $14,000–$28,000 for the same size home. TPO flat roofing averages $6,000–$12,000 depending on the roof area. Designer shingles and specialty materials add 20–40% over standard architectural pricing. The only way to get your exact number is a free on-site estimate — every roof is different, and square footage alone does not determine cost.
8 Factors That Affect Your
Roof Replacement Cost
No two roofs are the same. Here’s what actually moves the number — and why a square footage estimate from a website will never be accurate enough to use.
Roofing is priced by the “square” — one square equals 100 square feet of roof surface area. A 2,000 square foot home does not have a 2,000 square foot roof; pitch, overhangs, and design complexity all increase the actual surface area. Most Mississippi homes fall between 15 and 30 squares. More squares means more material and more labor.
A steep roof requires more labor, safety equipment, and time than a low-slope roof. Contractors typically apply a “steep slope” surcharge for pitches above 6:12. A walkable 4:12 pitch and a steep 10:12 pitch on the same-size house will carry meaningfully different labor costs — sometimes $1,000 or more on a full replacement.
Architectural shingles, standing seam metal, corrugated metal, TPO flat, and designer shingles all price very differently per square. Architectural shingles are the most common and most cost-effective. Metal is significantly more expensive upfront but lasts 2–3x as long. The material decision is one of the biggest cost levers you control.
Once the old shingles are stripped, a contractor can see the actual decking — the plywood or OSB layer underneath. Rotted, soft, or damaged sections must be replaced before new shingles go down. Deck replacement runs $75–$150 per sheet of plywood. Most roofs need at least a few sheets; a severely neglected roof can add $1,500 or more in deck repair.
Every chimney, skylight, pipe, vent, or dormer on your roof requires flashing — the waterproofing detail that seals the junction. Each penetration adds labor time and material cost. A simple 4-in-12 gable roof with no chimneys is quick. A hip roof with two chimneys, three skylights, and multiple dormers takes considerably more time to do correctly.
Mississippi building codes (and good practice) generally require stripping the old roofing before installing new material. If your roof has two existing layers, both must come off. A two-layer tear-off takes nearly twice as long as a single-layer removal and generates more disposal weight. Expect to pay $500–$1,500 more for a two-layer tear-off depending on roof size.
Mississippi roofing labor rates are generally lower than coastal or Northeast markets, which is good news for homeowners. That said, rates vary across the state. DeSoto County’s proximity to the Memphis metro means wages trend slightly higher than rural Mississippi, but still well below what homeowners pay in Atlanta, Nashville, or coastal Mississippi. Peak demand after storm events can temporarily push costs higher.
Spring and early summer represent peak demand for roofing contractors across Mississippi and Tennessee. After a major storm event, contractor availability tightens and scheduling timelines extend. Winter months are typically slower, and some contractors offer pricing incentives for installations during their slow season. Emergency replacements after storm damage carry no scheduling flexibility — you pay what the market bears at the time.
Roof Replacement Cost Tables
These ranges reflect installed cost — material, labor, tear-off, and cleanup — for the DeSoto County and North Mississippi market as of 2026.
| Material | Cost Per Square (Installed) | Typical Total (1,800 sqft home) | Lifespan | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Architectural Shingles | $450–$700 | $10,000–$14,000 | 25–30 years | Most homeowners — best balance of cost, durability, and warranty |
| Standing Seam Metal | $800–$1,400 | $16,000–$26,000 | 40–70 years | Long-term value, hail/wind resistance, energy efficiency |
| Corrugated Metal | $550–$900 | $11,000–$18,000 | 25–40 years | Agricultural, outbuildings, rural homes seeking metal at lower cost |
| TPO / Flat Roofing | $350–$600 | $6,000–$12,000 | 15–25 years | Flat or low-slope roofs, commercial buildings, additions |
| Designer Shingles | $700–$1,100 | $14,000–$22,000 | 30–50 years | High-end homes, curb appeal, HOA requirements, historic styles |
Cost ranges are for the DeSoto County and North Mississippi market as of 2026. Actual costs will vary based on roof complexity, deck condition, and other site-specific factors. These are installed prices inclusive of tear-off, underlayment, shingles, flashing, ridge cap, and cleanup.
| Home Size | Estimated Roof Squares | Typical Cost Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small Home (~1,200 sqft) | 14–18 squares | $7,500–$10,500 | Single story, simple gable roof with no dormers or skylights |
| Medium Home (~1,800 sqft) | 20–26 squares | $10,000–$14,000 | Most common size in DeSoto County — standard architectural shingles, single-layer tear-off |
| Large Home (~2,400 sqft) | 26–34 squares | $13,000–$18,000 | Two-story or sprawling single-story, may include dormers or multiple valleys |
| Large with Complex Roof | 30–45+ squares | $16,000–$26,000+ | Multiple dormers, chimneys, skylights, steep pitch, or two-layer tear-off — price reflects complexity premium |
Roof square count is always larger than home square footage — add 10–20% for average pitch and overhangs, more for steep or complex roofs. These ranges assume a full system replacement with standard architectural shingles and single-layer tear-off.
What a Professional
Replacement Includes
A complete roof replacement is a system job — not just shingles on top of whatever is there. A professional contractor includes everything listed below. If a bid is missing any of these line items, ask why before you sign.
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Full Tear-Off & DisposalAll existing shingles and underlayment are stripped to the decking. Old material is loaded into a dump trailer and hauled away — not left in your yard or buried in the new roof.
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Deck Inspection & RepairOnce shingles are off, the decking is inspected for soft spots, rot, and damage. Damaged sections are replaced before anything else goes on. A legitimate contractor won’t skip this — it’s where hidden problems live.
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Synthetic UnderlaymentA waterproof barrier layer goes down before shingles. Quality underlayment matters — 15lb felt is not the same as synthetic. Owens Corning-certified installations use underlayment that qualifies for enhanced warranty coverage.
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Ice & Water Shield (Critical Areas)Self-adhering waterproof membrane at eaves, valleys, and penetrations provides an extra line of defense in the most vulnerable roof zones — especially important in Mississippi where ice damming can occur in unusual winters.
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New Shingles, Ridge Cap & StarterFull shingle installation including manufacturer-specified starter course and ridge cap shingles. These details matter for both wind performance and warranty validity.
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Flashing ReplacementAll step flashing, counter flashing, valley flashing, and pipe boots are replaced or resealed. Reusing old flashing is a red flag in a full replacement bid — it’s an invitation for future leaks.
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Site Cleanup & Magnetic Nail PassAll debris is removed from the property. A magnetic roller sweeps the yard, driveway, and landscaping for roofing nails. We leave your property cleaner than we found it — every time.
What Lowball Bids
Often Leave Out
If a bid comes in $2,000–$4,000 below the others, there’s almost always a reason. Here’s what to ask about.
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Installing Over Existing ShinglesSkipping tear-off saves labor cost but traps moisture, hides deck damage, adds weight, and voids manufacturer warranties. It’s also limited by code to two layers maximum.
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Skipping Underlayment or Using FeltLightweight felt tears easily during installation and provides far less moisture protection than synthetic. Many warranty programs require synthetic underlayment.
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Reusing Existing FlashingOld flashing that’s been bent, sealed over, or corroded is a guaranteed source of future leaks. Any full replacement should include new flashing — if it’s not in the bid, ask why.
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No Written Warranty or License VerificationA contractor who can’t show you a Mississippi contractor license or won’t put warranty terms in writing should not be on your roof. No exceptions.
The real cost of a cheap roof: a replacement done without proper tear-off, underlayment, and flashing can fail within 5–7 years — leaving you paying for a second full replacement with no warranty recourse. The cheapest bid is often the most expensive roof you’ll ever have.
Insurance Coverage for
Roof Replacement in Mississippi
Mississippi homeowners file successful roof replacement claims every year. If your roof was damaged in a storm, here’s how the process typically works — and what to expect for out-of-pocket cost.
Wind, hail, or storm debris damages your roof. Most Mississippi homeowner’s policies cover sudden storm damage — wear and tear does not qualify.
A licensed contractor inspects your roof and documents the damage with photos and measurements. This documentation is critical for your claim. Ultimate Roofing provides thorough damage documentation at no charge.
Your insurer sends an adjuster to assess the damage. You can — and should — have your contractor present during the adjuster visit to ensure the full scope of damage is documented and nothing is missed.
If approved, your insurer issues a payment for the covered work. For newer roofs, this is often replacement cost value (RCV). For older roofs, some policies pay actual cash value (ACV), which accounts for depreciation.
5 Steps to a Quote You
Can Actually Trust
Online calculators give you ballparks. A real quote requires a real inspection. Here’s the process that gets you an accurate, apples-to-apples number.
Get two to three licensed contractors to physically inspect your roof. Phone quotes and online calculators are not accurate enough for a project of this size.
Confirm each contractor holds a valid Mississippi roofing license and carries liability insurance and workers’ comp before they set foot on your roof.
Ask for a written, line-item estimate covering tear-off, deck work, underlayment, shingles, flashing, ridge cap, and cleanup — not a single lump sum number.
A lower bid that skips tear-off, uses lightweight underlayment, or reuses existing flashing is not a better deal. Compare what’s included, not just the bottom line.
Ask what warranty the contractor can offer in writing — workmanship and manufacturer. An Owens Corning Preferred Contractor can offer Platinum Protection. Get warranty terms in the contract.
Roof Replacement Cost
Questions Answered
The average roof replacement cost in Mississippi ranges from $8,000 to $18,000 for a standard single-family home using architectural shingles. Most DeSoto County homeowners pay $10,000 to $14,000 for a full architectural shingle replacement on a typical 1,500 to 2,000 square foot home. Metal roofing runs $14,000 to $28,000 for the same size home. These are honest ranges — your exact cost depends on roof size, pitch, material choice, deck condition, and other factors. The only way to know your actual number is a free on-site estimate from a licensed contractor.
Eight main factors drive roof replacement cost in Mississippi: (1) Roof size — measured in “squares” (one square = 100 sq ft of roof surface); (2) Pitch and steepness — steeper roofs require more safety equipment and labor time; (3) Material choice — architectural shingles, metal, TPO, or designer shingles each carry different price points; (4) Deck condition — rotted or water-damaged decking must be replaced before new shingles go down, at $75–$150 per sheet; (5) Penetrations — each chimney, skylight, or pipe penetration requires flashing labor; (6) Number of existing layers to tear off — a two-layer tear-off costs more than a single-layer removal; (7) Geographic labor rates — DeSoto County runs slightly higher than rural Mississippi; (8) Time of year — peak demand after storms can affect pricing and scheduling.
It depends on the age of your roof and the scope of damage. If your roof is under 15 years old and the damage is localized — a few missing shingles, one active leak, damaged flashing — repair almost always costs less and makes financial sense. A repair in that scenario might run $400–$1,500 versus $10,000 or more for a full replacement. If your roof is 20-plus years old, has widespread granule loss, multiple active leaks, or sagging sections, repeated repairs will likely cost more over the next 3 to 5 years than a full replacement done now. Our free inspection will give you an honest assessment of which category you’re in — we won’t push replacement if repair is the smarter call for your situation.
Yes, in many cases — if the replacement is needed due to a covered peril like wind, hail, or storm damage. Mississippi homeowners file successful roof claims regularly because the state sees significant severe weather. Normal wear and tear, aging, or neglect is typically not covered. If your roof was damaged in a storm, your insurer will send an adjuster to assess the damage, and if covered, you’ll typically pay only your deductible. Ultimate Roofing works with insurance adjusters, documents storm damage thoroughly, and helps ensure your claim reflects the true scope of the damage. We’ve helped many Southaven and DeSoto County homeowners navigate the process successfully.
The most accurate estimate comes from an in-person inspection by a licensed contractor. Online calculators and square footage estimates are useful ballparks but can’t account for deck condition, pitch, number of penetrations, or existing damage. Get at least two to three estimates and make sure each one itemizes what’s included — tear-off, deck inspection, underlayment, shingles, flashing, ridge cap, and cleanup. If a bid comes in significantly lower than the others, ask specifically what’s missing. Ultimate Roofing provides free, detailed, itemized estimates with no obligation to hire — call (662) 331-3000 or request one online.
Get Your Free Roof
Replacement Estimate
No ranges, no guesses — a real number for your roof. Free on-site inspection, itemized quote, no pressure.