Last updated: June 10, 2026 — fully rewritten and re-verified ahead of monsoon season. We’ve maintained this roofer list since 2018. No company paid to be on this page.
The Best Roofing Companies in Arizona
For most Arizona homes: Lyons Roofing (Phoenix & Tucson metros, since 1993) and Overson Roofing (Mesa, A+ BBB, clean ROC record). For tile work: Canyon State Roofing (Tile Roofing Institute certified) or Almeida Roofing (40+ years, family-owned). For flat and foam roofs: Foam Experts Roofing (Mesa & Tucson, 45+ years, 480-835-5404). Always verify any roofer’s license at azroc.gov before signing.
Arizona roofs don’t fail like roofs in the rest of the country. Our sun cooks underlayment from above 300+ days a year, then monsoon season — which officially runs June 15 through September 30 — throws microbursts, hail, and haboobs at whatever’s left. So this list is organized the way Arizona roofs are actually built: tile, foam, and shingle. Pick your roof type, then your roofer.
Best All-Around Roofing Companies in Arizona
Lyons Roofing • Phoenix & Tucson
One of the few roofers genuinely covering both major Arizona metros — Phoenix and Tucson, plus Mesa, Chandler, Glendale, Tempe, Peoria, and Scottsdale — since 1993. They work every system common to Arizona homes (tile, shingle, foam, flat) for residential and commercial, which makes them the safe statewide first call when you don’t yet know what your roof needs. lyonsroofing.com
Overson Roofing • Mesa / East Valley
Serving Phoenix and Mesa since 2005 with 40+ years of combined roofing experience, an A+ BBB rating, and — the part we weight heavily — a clean record with the Arizona Registrar of Contractors. They’re NRCA and ARCA members, install shingle, tile, and spray foam, and will work your insurance claim and permits with you, which matters a lot after monsoon damage. oversonroofing.com
Tile Roof Repair in Phoenix: The Underlayment Truth
Here’s what most Valley homeowners don’t learn until water hits the drywall: your tile isn’t your roof. Concrete and clay tile can last 50+ years in Arizona, but the underlayment beneath it — the actual waterproof layer — bakes out in 20 to 25 years under our sun. That’s why a tile roof that “looks fine from the street” leaks in the first July storm. The most common big-ticket tile job in Phoenix isn’t a re-tile at all; it’s a lift-and-relay: remove the tile, replace the underlayment, reinstall your existing tile.
Canyon State Roofing • Tile Specialist
One of the few Tile Roofing Institute–certified companies in Arizona, with dedicated tile repair-and-replace crews for homes and commercial properties — and one of the only Valley roofers doing metal systems if you’re going that direction. For cracked tiles, broken ridge caps, and full underlayment replacement, certification here isn’t marketing fluff; tile is a trade of its own. canyonstateroofs.com
Almeida Roofing • North Phoenix & West Valley
Family-owned with over 40 years in the Valley, covering tile, shingle, foam, flat, and coatings from Scottsdale out to Wickenburg and down through Mesa, Chandler, and Gilbert. Most of their work comes by referral, and their maintenance inspections — checking flashing, exposed nails, and drainage before monsoon — are the cheap insurance most homeowners skip. almeidaroofing.com
Foam Roofing in Arizona: The Flat-Roof Standard
If you own a flat-roof home in Tempe, central Phoenix, or Tucson — or any commercial building — odds are you’re on sprayed polyurethane foam (SPF). It’s a uniquely desert-Southwest system: seamless, reflective, and insulating, which is exactly what a 115° rooftop needs. The maintenance rule that keeps a foam roof alive indefinitely: recoat every 5–10 years. Skip two recoat cycles and you’re buying a new roof.
Foam Experts Roofing • Mesa & Tucson • 480-835-5404
We’ve recommended Foam Experts Roofing on this page since 2018, and they’ve only strengthened the case: family-owned, doing polyurethane foam for over 45 years, BBB A+ rated, licensed in Arizona, California, and Nevada, and an approved applicator for BASF, GAF, and other major systems. They cover Phoenix, Mesa, Tucson, and out to Lake Havasu City, with free estimates on foam roofs, flat roofs, recoats, and commercial work.
Tucson: 520-622-0374 — one of the few foam specialists with a true second location down there.
Before You Hire Any Arizona Roofer: 3 Checks
- Verify the ROC license. Look up any contractor in 30 seconds at the Arizona Registrar of Contractors. A licensed roofer also connects you to the state’s Residential Contractors’ Recovery Fund if a job goes sideways — protection you forfeit entirely with an unlicensed crew.
- Get the scope in writing. Tear-off or overlay? Which underlayment? Flashing replaced or reused? Arizona’s heat punishes shortcuts that wouldn’t matter in milder states.
- Confirm they know YOUR roof type. A shingle crew from out of state is not a tile crew, and neither one should touch a foam roof.
⚠️ Monsoon Storm-Chaser Warning
Every July, the day after a big storm rolls through the Valley, the door-knockers appear — out-of-state crews offering “free inspections” and pressuring you to sign an insurance assignment on the spot. Don’t sign anything at the door. Photograph your own damage, call a licensed local roofer from this list, and if water got inside, see our guides to water damage restoration in Phoenix and what Phoenix water damage really costs.
⚡ AZ INSIDER TIP: Book Inspections in May, Not August
Every roofer in this state is buried from the first July microburst through October. A pre-monsoon inspection in late spring costs less, books faster, and finds the cracked tile or thin foam spot before it becomes a 2 AM ceiling stain. If you’re reading this in June — call this week. After June 15, you’re in line behind every leak in Maricopa County.
Arizona Roofing FAQ
How long does a tile roof last in Arizona?
The tile itself can last 50+ years, but the underlayment beneath it typically fails after 20–25 years of Arizona sun. Most “tile roof replacements” in Phoenix are actually lift-and-relay jobs: new underlayment under your existing tile.
Is foam roofing good in Arizona?
Yes — sprayed polyurethane foam is the standard for Arizona flat roofs because it’s seamless, insulating, and reflective. Maintained with a recoat every 5–10 years, a foam roof can last indefinitely; neglected, it fails like any other system.
How do I verify a roofing company is licensed in Arizona?
Search the company name or license number at azroc.gov, the Arizona Registrar of Contractors. Hiring ROC-licensed contractors also gives homeowners access to the state’s Residential Contractors’ Recovery Fund in case of faulty work or disputes.
When should I get my roof inspected in Arizona?
Before monsoon season, which officially runs June 15 through September 30. Spring inspections catch cracked tiles, deteriorated underlayment, and thin foam coating before summer storms turn small flaws into interior water damage.
Run a Roofing Company in Arizona?
This page reaches Arizona homeowners right as monsoon season hits. AZ Charged is hand-curated — no pay-to-rank — and featured placement puts your crew in front of them first.
📞 Got a business to recommend or list? Call (888) 863-7421 — serving all of Arizona