State Licensed “SINCE 1982”

CSLB C-39 #432352

Full Workers Comp. & $2M Liability Insurance
OUR EMPLOYEE ROOFERS ARE FACTORY CERTIFIED
*Serving most of Southern California*
State Licensed “SINCE 1982” CSLB C-39 #432352
Full Workers Comp. & $2M Liability Insurance
OUR EMPLOYEE ROOFERS ARE FACTORY CERTIFIED.

*Serving most of Southern California*

Roofer in Los Angeles, CA

When LA's Winds Hit, Your Roof Tells the Truth

If Santa Ana season has you second-guessing your roof, you’re not being paranoid you’re paying attention. We’ve been the roofer Los Angeles homeowners and property managers call when it actually matters, and we’ve been doing it since 1982.
Two workers wearing safety gear are standing on the roof of a house. A roofing contractor Orange & Los Angeles County team member is on a ladder while another walks on the shingles, performing roofing work under a clear blue CA sky.
A roofing contractor Orange & Los Angeles County, dressed in a yellow hard hat, gloves, plaid shirt, and orange pants, uses a hammer on the edge of a wooden roof under CA’s partly cloudy sky and trees.

Residential Roof Replacement Los Angeles

A Roof Built to Survive Los Angeles Weather

Los Angeles roofs take a beating that most people don’t think about until something goes wrong. From October through March, Santa Ana winds push hard against every fastener, flashing, and seam on your roof. When those winds are followed by an atmospheric river event which has become increasingly common any weakness that existed quietly for years shows up fast, usually through your ceiling.

If you’re on the Westside, in Brentwood, Venice, or near Pacific Palisades, you’re also dealing with salt air off the coast working against your metal flashings and sealants year-round. That’s a different kind of wear than what a homeowner in the San Fernando Valley deals with, and it requires someone who knows the difference and specs materials accordingly.

After a proper roof replacement or repair, you stop managing leaks and start ignoring your roof which is exactly what it should feel like. No more watching the weather with anxiety. No more wondering if that water stain in the corner is getting worse. You get a roof that’s documented, permitted through LADBS, and built to the material and fire-rating standards your neighborhood actually requires.

Certified Roofer Serving Los Angeles County

Four Decades Operating in Los Angeles, Zero License Violations

We’ve been operating out of Bell Gardens since 1982 which puts us squarely in the middle of Los Angeles County, not driving in from somewhere else. Our C-39 License #432352 has been active the entire time, with zero violations, zero citations, and zero complaints on record with the CSLB. You can verify that yourself at cslb.ca.gov in under a minute.

Our crews are direct employees not subcontractors rotated in by job. Many of them have been with us for years, some for decades. That matters because the person on your roof in Koreatown or Hancock Park or South LA has done this work before, in this city, under these conditions. Our GAF Master Elite Certification held by fewer than 3% of roofing contractors in the country means we can also offer manufacturer-backed warranties that most contractors simply cannot access.

A roofing contractor Orange & Los Angeles County installs asphalt shingles on a roof using a pneumatic nail gun, with roofing materials and trees visible in the background.

Emergency Roof Repair Process Los Angeles

No Surprises From First Call to Final Inspection

It starts with a real inspection not a sales pitch. A dedicated Employee Project Manager walks the roof, documents what they find with photos, and gives you a clear picture of what’s going on and what your options are. If you’re dealing with wind damage from a recent Santa Ana event or a leak that showed up after a storm, that documentation also becomes the foundation of your insurance claim file organized the way Los Angeles adjusters actually need to see it.

From there, you get a detailed, itemized estimate. No vague line items, no surprises at the end. If the project requires a permit through LADBS which most re-roofing jobs in the City of Los Angeles do we handle that. If your home falls within a Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone, like many hillside properties in Los Angeles, we’ll confirm your material selections meet the Class A fire-rating requirement before anything gets ordered.

Once work begins, the same crew sees it through. Your Project Manager stays in contact throughout, and the finished job gets photo-documented from start to finish. That record matters for your warranty, your insurance carrier, and any future home inspector who pulls the file. When it’s done, you know exactly what was done, how it was done, and what it’s backed by.

A roofing contractor Orange & Los Angeles County kneels on a roof in CA, installing dark gray asphalt shingles with a nail gun. Some shingles feature a dotted blue guideline, and roofing materials are scattered around the work area.

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About Royal Roofing Company

Affordable Roofing Company Los Angeles CA

Every Roofing System Los Angeles Throws at Us, Covered

Los Angeles is not a one-roof city. You’ve got clay tile on Spanish Colonial homes in Los Feliz, flat roofs on Mid-Century Modern houses in Silver Lake, hot mop systems on apartment buildings throughout Koreatown, TPO and EPDM on commercial properties across South LA, and composition shingle on tract homes throughout the San Fernando Valley. We work across all of it residential roof replacement, commercial roofing, hot mop systems, cool roof coatings, maintenance programs, and 24/7 emergency roof repair.

The hot mop specialization is worth calling out specifically. It’s a flat-roof technique that’s common throughout Los Angeles and Orange County, and not every contractor carries the right insurance to cover it. Some homeowner policies have exclusions tied to exactly this. Our coverage explicitly includes hot mop work, which closes a gap most property owners don’t know exists until they need to file a claim.

On the commercial side, we serve HOA boards, property managers, and business owners who need more than just a contractor they need documentation for board approval, compliance evidence for their insurance carrier, and a sequenced plan that doesn’t disrupt tenants. Most Los Angeles homeowners are looking at $11,000–$18,000 for a full residential replacement in 2025, and our approach is built around giving you the full picture upfront so you can make a confident decision, not a pressured one.

A roofing contractor Orange & Los Angeles County kneels on a roof in CA, installing asphalt shingles with a nail gun. He aligns a shingle above a row of nailed shingles, with a stack of new shingles close at hand.

Do I need a permit to replace my roof in Los Angeles?

In most cases, yes. The City of Los Angeles requires a permit through LADBS the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety for re-roofing projects, and inspections are required at key stages of the job. If you’re replacing more than 50% of your total roof area, California’s Title 24 energy code also requires that your new material be a Cool Roof product certified by the Cool Roof Rating Council. That’s not optional it’s enforced at the inspection stage, and a contractor who doesn’t know this can cause your project to fail inspection and require costly corrections.

Beyond the compliance issue, unpermitted roofing work creates real problems down the road. Los Angeles has one of the most active real estate markets in the country, and unpermitted work surfaces during escrow, refinancing, and insurance claims. Getting it done right the first time protects the value of your property, not just the roof itself.

A Class A fire rating is the highest level of fire resistance a roofing material can carry, and in Los Angeles it’s not just a preference it’s a code requirement for homes located in Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones. Those zones cover a significant portion of LA’s hillside and foothill communities, including areas that were directly affected by the January 2025 Palisades Fire. If your home sits in one of those zones and your roof doesn’t meet the Class A requirement, you may face issues with your insurance carrier and with LADBS at permit inspection.

The practical impact is that not every roofing material qualifies. Certain composition shingles, tile systems, and membrane products carry Class A ratings others don’t. Before you commit to a material, it’s worth confirming that what’s being installed is actually compliant for your specific address and zone classification. We know the VHFHSZ map for Los Angeles and handle this before it becomes a problem, not after.

Santa Ana winds create uplift pressure they push up and under roofing materials rather than just across them. That force is enough to loosen shingles that were already aging, displace tiles that weren’t fully secured, and pull flashing away from the edges and penetrations where it’s most critical. The damage isn’t always visible from the ground. You might not see a missing shingle, but the seal underneath it is broken, and the next time it rains, water finds that gap.

The best time to schedule an inspection is before Santa Ana season begins ideally in September or early October. That gives you time to address anything that’s borderline before the first serious wind event. If you’ve already been through a wind event and haven’t had someone on the roof, it’s worth doing even if you don’t see obvious damage. A lot of the failures that show up as leaks in January started as invisible compromises in November.

Filing a roofing insurance claim in California typically takes 30 to 60 days from the initial filing to settlement, and the outcome is heavily influenced by the quality of documentation submitted at the start. Insurance adjusters in Los Angeles are looking for specific things: photos of the damaged area, documentation of the existing roof condition, material identification, and a clear assessment of what caused the damage. A contractor who doesn’t document systematically or who doesn’t know what adjusters actually need can leave you with a lower settlement or a disputed claim.

California’s insurance market tightened significantly in 2024, and carriers operating in Los Angeles are scrutinizing roof age, material type, and documentation more carefully than they were a few years ago. If your roof has Santa Ana wind damage or was impacted by fire or debris from a nearby event, having a contractor who has navigated hundreds of Los Angeles insurance claims and who photographs every project from start to finish puts you in a materially better position than going in without that support.

Hot mop is a built-up roofing method that uses layers of roofing felt and hot-applied asphalt to create a waterproof membrane. It’s been the standard for flat and low-slope roofs throughout Los Angeles and Orange County for decades, and it remains common on residential flat roofs, apartment buildings, and older commercial properties across the city. It’s durable, cost-effective for the right application, and well-suited to LA’s climate when installed correctly.

The reason not every contractor offers it comes down to two things: specialized equipment and insurance. Hot mop requires specific tools and trained application, and more importantly, some general liability policies either exclude hot mop work or carry limitations around it. If a contractor without proper coverage performs hot mop on your property and something goes wrong, you may find out the hard way that the claim isn’t covered. We carry insurance that explicitly includes hot mop work which matters for flat-roof properties throughout Koreatown, Silver Lake, South LA, and anywhere else in the city where this system is common.

The fastest way to check a contractor’s license in California is the CSLB website at cslb.ca.gov. You can search by license number or business name and see the license status, classification, expiration date, and any disciplinary history on record. For roofing work valued over $500, a valid C-39 Specialty Contractor License is required by California law. If a contractor can’t give you their license number or discourages you from checking, that’s a clear signal to move on.

For insurance, ask for a Certificate of Insurance before any work begins. You want to see general liability coverage ideally $1 million or more and workers’ compensation that covers every person working on your property. In Los Angeles, where roofing fraud and unlicensed contractor complaints are consistently among the highest in the state, this isn’t being overly cautious. It’s the standard due diligence that protects you, your property, and your neighbors. A legitimate contractor will have no hesitation providing both documents before the first crew member sets foot on your roof.

Other Services we provide in Los Angeles