For HOA boards & community managers
Condominium roof replacement, done by the board’s playbook.
Phased installs. Board-approved scope. Reserve-study fit. CC&R-compliant materials. We handle California condo roofs from 12-unit to 200-unit communities — without upending the residents who live there.
Condo roofing across the Central Valley.
How it works
Your condo roof project in four steps.
Every condo project we run follows the same four-step rhythm. Boards trust it because it is open, easy to audit, and built around the people who live there.
Inspection & condition report
We walk every building roof. We log the wear with photos. Then we hand your board a written report that fits right into the meeting minutes.
Board approval & scoping
We join the board meeting in person or by video. We share phased pricing. We answer owner questions on the spot. Boards leave with a clear, solid vote.
Resident notification
Each building gets a 72-hour written notice. It lists the start time, parking rules, and a project-manager contact. Notices go up on doors, into email, and out by text.
Coordinated install
Crews work one building at a time. We sweep nails each day, haul off debris, and send weekly updates to the board. Most communities never have more than one building active at once.
Built for shared ownership
Condos are not just bigger houses.
A single-family playbook will fail in a condo. Shared walls, shared parking, shared budgets, and shared votes all need a new plan. Here is how we adapt.
Phased install schedule
We line up the work so the community is never one big job site. Phased timing also lets boards match cash flow with reserves and the assessment cycle.
Common-area access
Pool decks, mailrooms, walkways, and shared parking all need cover. We map each one into the daily plan so residents can still use their building.
Resident disruption planning
Work hours, noise windows, crew parking, and pet safety are part of the pre-build packet. They are not bolted on after the first complaint.
Manufacturer credentials
The highest warranty tier — backed in writing for your association.
Most roofers can install the parts. Few can lock in the system warranties that guard the HOA for decades. We are GAF Master Elite, Owens Corning Platinum Preferred, and CertainTeed Select ShingleMaster. Your HOA can claim the top warranty tiers: GAF Golden Pledge (50 years materials, 25 years labor), OC Platinum Protection (lifetime, non-prorated), and CertainTeed 5-Star.
Each warranty goes to the HOA, not to one owner. It moves with the unit when it sells. Boards get a digital binder with signed, numbered certificates — the kind of file your reserve specialist and HOA attorney both want to see.
Warning signs
Signs your HOA roof needs board action.
If two or more of these show up in your community, put a roof talk on the next board agenda.
- Buildings 18+ years old on asphalt, or 20+ years on tile or low-slope membrane. Most California condo roofs hit end of life in that window.
- Repeat leak fixes in the same units. The underlayment, flashings, or deck have failed — not just the surface.
- Granule loss, blistering, or bare underlayment in drone photos or in reports from top-floor owners.
- The reserve study flags the roof as “underfunded” or “due” in the next two to five years.
- Your insurance carrier raises the premium, asks for an inspection, or warns of non-renewal over roof age or condition.
- Owner complaints about ceiling stains, attic mold, or weak HVAC are reaching the board through the property manager.
- Unit sales are stalling because lenders or buyers flag the roof as deferred maintenance.
Common board questions
Common condo roofing questions, answered.
How much does a condominium roof replacement cost in California?
Condo roof projects in California usually run from $200,000 to $2,000,000 or more. The price moves with the number of buildings, total roof area, system type, and site access. Per unit, most HOA roof jobs in the Central Valley land near $150 to $300 per unit per year of useful life. Boards fund the work from reserves, a special assessment, or a mix of both. We hand over written board decks and itemized phased bids so reserve studies and budget cycles line up cleanly.
Do you handle the HOA approval process?
Yes. We join board meetings in person or by video. We bring a written board deck. We answer owner questions on the spot. We also work with property managers on RFP replies, bid leveling, and scope notes. As GAF Master Elite roofers with California license #749551, our paperwork is built for fiduciary review.
How do you minimize disruption to residents during a condo roof replacement?
We work one building at a time. Most residents go untouched on any given day. We post 72-hour notices on each building before crews start. We set daily start and stop times. We guard parking, walkways, and landscaping. At the end of each shift, we run a magnetic nail sweep. Owners get a punch-list call once their building is done.
Special assessment vs reserves: which is right for our roof project?
That call is the board's, not ours. We build the bid so either path works. If your reserve study shows full or near-full funding for the roof, the job can come straight from reserves with no owner assessment. If reserves are short, boards often pair reserves with a phased special assessment so cash flow lines up with the install. We give you year-by-year phased pricing. Your reserve specialist and CPA can then model both paths.
Do you have experience with CC&R and architectural-committee compliance?
Yes. CC&Rs often set roof color, profile, and material for the whole community. Our project manager pulls the recorded CC&Rs and the architectural guidelines as part of the pre-build packet. The bid lists the exact maker, line, and color we plan to install. If your architectural committee wants a sample or a written variance, we put the package together for the board.
What manufacturer warranty do condominium boards get?
We are GAF Master Elite, Owens Corning Platinum Preferred, and CertainTeed Select ShingleMaster. Your HOA can claim the top system warranties: GAF Golden Pledge (50 years materials, 25 years labor), OC Platinum Protection (lifetime, non-prorated), and CertainTeed 5-Star. Each warranty goes to the HOA, so it moves with the unit when it sells.
What we mean by
About commercial condominium roofing.
Commercial condominium roofing sits at the intersection of multi-family residential construction and commercial property management. The roofs themselves can be steep-slope architectural shingle on stick-framed condo buildings, low-slope TPO or modified bitumen on flat-roofed garden apartments, or a hybrid mix across a single community. What makes the work “commercial” is not the material — it is the buyer.
The buyer is the homeowners association, represented by an elected board that owes a fiduciary duty to every owner. That changes everything. Pricing has to be defensible enough to survive an owner challenge. Materials have to satisfy recorded CC&Rs. Schedules have to respect every working resident. Warranties have to register to the association, not to a single homeowner. Phasing has to align with the reserve study and the assessment calendar.
We have spent thirty years building a process specifically for that buyer. Boards across Stanislaus, Merced, and San Joaquin Counties hire us because the proposal we hand them is the same one their attorney, their reserve specialist, and their property manager want to see — written down, phased, and bonded by a licensed California contractor. License #749551, founded 1996, GAF Master Elite, OC Platinum Preferred, CertainTeed Select ShingleMaster.
Our method
How we approach condominium replacements.
- 1Pre-engagement walk. Before we ever quote, we walk the community with the board president, property manager, or reserve specialist. We confirm building count, roof systems, access constraints, and any active leak history.
- 2Reserve-study integration. We share our scope and per-building pricing with the association’s reserve specialist, so the funding plan and the install plan agree before the board ever sees a number.
- 3Written board presentation. We deliver a board-ready PDF with scope, pricing, alternates, schedule, insurance certificates, license verification, manufacturer credentials, and warranty terms in one document.
- 4Board meeting attendance. Mario or a senior project manager attends the board meeting, presents the proposal, and answers owner questions. Owners get answers from the contractor — not filtered through staff.
- 5Phased install plan. Once approved, we publish a building-by-building install calendar. Residents always know which week their roof is active and which weeks it is not.
- 6Resident-facing communication. Each building gets a 72-hour notice. Residents get a single project-manager phone number for any concern that comes up during the build.
- 7Closeout binder. At completion, the association receives a digital closeout binder with photos, warranty certificates, lien releases, manufacturer registration confirmations, and a maintenance schedule.
For HOA boards
Ready for your association’s roof estimate?
We will walk every roof in the community, deliver a written condition report, and present scope to your board — at no cost and no obligation.
Or call (209) 668-6222 · License #749551
Services that pair
Services that pair with condominium roofing.
Property management roofing →
Multi-property programs for property management companies running portfolios of HOAs and apartment buildings under one roof contractor.
Multi-family roofing →
Apartment buildings, townhomes, and rental complexes — same phased-install discipline, with the owner of record as the buyer rather than an HOA board.
Commercial roofing →
Office buildings, retail centers, and industrial properties — TPO, EPDM, modified bitumen, metal, and SPF coatings with full system warranties.
Read before you decide
Three things every board should think through.
1. Special assessment vs reserves. A roof project is the single biggest deferred-maintenance line item most communities will fund in a decade. If reserves are healthy, the board’s job is to verify the reserve study’s remaining-life assumption and approve the draw. If reserves are short, the board has a fiduciary duty to consider a special assessment rather than defer the project into deeper structural damage. Either path is defensible — not deciding is not.
2. CC&R compliance. Recorded CC&Rs in most California condominium communities specify roof color, profile, and material to preserve community appearance. Substituting a non-compliant material — even an upgrade — can expose the board to architectural-committee challenge or owner litigation. Confirm in writing before approving any scope. Our proposals always cite the specific manufacturer, line, and color against the recorded CC&R.
3. Board fiduciary duty. California Civil Code §5500 and the business-judgment rule require directors to act in good faith, with the care of an ordinarily prudent person, in the best interests of the association. That means written competing bids, documented scope, and meeting minutes that reflect the board’s rationale. The cheapest bid is not always the prudent bid — especially when a contractor cannot register a manufacturer warranty in the association’s name.
When to call us
When to call us for your condominium roof.
- Your reserve study calls out the roof in the next two-to-five-year window and the board needs current pricing to update funding levels.
- Your property management company is running an RFP and needs a credentialed bidder with HOA-specific paperwork.
- An insurance carrier has flagged your roof age and you need a written condition report for renewal.
- A storm event has caused damage to multiple buildings and the board needs both temporary protection and a full claim-aligned scope.
- Owner complaints about active leaks are stacking up and the board needs to move from repeated repair to replacement.
- A neighboring association just completed a roof project and your board wants competing pricing for benchmarking.
- Your community is preparing for a refinance, sale, or large-scale renovation, and lenders or buyers are flagging roof condition as a contingency.
Materials & systems
Materials & systems for condo buildings.
Most California condominium communities mix two or three roof systems across the property. We carry every major manufacturer line and pick the system to the building, not the other way around.
- TPO 60-mil membrane for low-slope roofs on garden apartments and clubhouse buildings — reflective, Title 24 compliant, and warranty-eligible up to 30 years through GAF EverGuard and Carlisle Sure-Weld.
- EPDM rubber membrane for ballasted and fully-adhered low-slope assemblies, especially on older buildings where deck conditions favor a forgiving system.
- Modified bitumen (mod-bit) two- and three-ply systems for low-slope roofs that need walking traffic, mechanical penetrations, or cap-sheet aesthetics that match neighboring buildings.
- Architectural asphalt shingle — OC Duration, GAF Timberline HDZ, and CertainTeed Landmark — for low-rise condo buildings with steep-slope roofs and CC&R-mandated profiles.
- Concrete and clay tile from Eagle, Boral, MCA, and Westlake for Mediterranean-style communities where the original roof was tile and the CC&Rs require it stays tile.
- Standing-seam metal from PAC-CLAD and Englert on accent buildings, mansards, and entry features that need lifetime metal performance.
- SPF (spray polyurethane foam) and silicone restoration coatings as a budget-conscious alternative for low-slope roofs that still have substrate life left.
Underlayment is upgraded across the board. Synthetic peel-and-stick at every valley, eave, and penetration; high-temp ice-and-water shield in vulnerable transitions; and a synthetic field underlayment rated for the warranty tier we are registering.
Process & timeline
What to expect — our condo roofing process.
From the first board walk-through to final warranty registration, every condominium project we run follows the same seven-step process.
- Board walk-through and condition report. We meet the board (or property manager) on site, walk every building roof, and deliver a written condition report with photos, remaining-life estimates, and a recommended scope.
- Reserve-study integration and phased pricing. We work with the association’s reserve specialist to align phased pricing with the funding plan, so the board can choose between reserves, a special assessment, or a hybrid approach.
- Board presentation and approval. We attend the board meeting, present the proposal, answer owner questions, and provide written responses for the meeting minutes.
- CC&R and architectural-committee compliance. We confirm material, color, and profile against the recorded CC&Rs and submit any architectural-committee variances on the board’s behalf.
- Resident notification and access plan. Each building receives a 72-hour written notice with start time, parking instructions, and a project-manager contact. The plan is posted in common areas and emailed through the association.
- Phased install with daily cleanup. Crews replace the roof one building at a time, with daily magnetic nail sweeps, daily debris haul-off, and weekly progress reports to the board and property manager.
- Final inspection, warranty registration, and association handoff. At completion, we walk every roof with the board or property manager, register the manufacturer system warranty in the association’s name, and deliver a digital closeout binder.
Project cost
Condominium roofing cost in California.
Condominium roof replacement projects across California typically run between $200,000 and $2,000,000 or more, depending on the number of buildings, total roof area, system type, and access constraints. On a per-unit basis, most HOA roof projects we estimate in the Central Valley work out to roughly $150 to $300 per unit per year of useful life when amortized across the warranty term.
A few honest cost benchmarks from recent California projects:
- 12-unit garden complex, asphalt shingle: $180,000 to $260,000 turnkey, 8–12 weeks phased.
- 48-unit townhome community, mixed asphalt & tile: $620,000 to $980,000 turnkey, 14–18 weeks phased.
- 120-unit garden community, low-slope TPO: $1.1M to $1.7M turnkey, 16–22 weeks phased.
- 200+ unit master-planned community, multi-system: $1.8M to $3M+ turnkey, multi-phase across two budget years.
Boards typically fund the work through reserves, a phased special assessment, or a combination of both. We provide year-by-year phased pricing so reserve specialists and CPAs can model both paths cleanly. Financing is available for some communities — we walk the board through every option at the proposal meeting.
“Mario’s team replaced 14 buildings in our community over a single summer with zero owner complaints reaching the board. The phased schedule and weekly updates were exactly what we needed.”
“We bid the project against three other contractors. Econo was the only one who attended the board meeting in person and answered owner questions on the spot. The proposal was board-ready out of the box.”
“Our reserve study was a mess. Their project manager sat with our reserve specialist and reconciled phasing to funding before the board even saw a number. That alone saved us a special assessment.”
A note from Mario
Talk to Mario’s team in 30 seconds.
HOA boards have a fiduciary duty their residents are counting on. We’ve handled condominium roofs from 12-unit complexes to 200-unit communities across Stanislaus, Merced, and San Joaquin Counties. Every project gets a written board presentation, reserve-study integration, and a phased install plan that works around your residents — not against them.
Get started
Ready for a worry-free roof?
Free board walk-through. Written condition report. Phased proposal in hand for your next board meeting. Same-day response for active leaks.
License #749551 · OC Platinum Preferred since 2008 · GAF Master Elite
Local pages
Condominium roofing by city.
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