How Much Does a New Roof Cost in Corvallis, OR?

Complete Corvallis pricing guide: roof replacement, repairs, materials, neighborhood cost breakdowns, Willamette Valley moss pressure, and Benton County permit guidance.

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$14,800
Avg. Corvallis architectural AR asphalt replacement (2,000 sq ft home)
42″+
Annual Willamette Valley rainfall feeding moss colonization
60–90
Productive dry-install days per year in Corvallis
18–25
Years of AR asphalt life under Corvallis moss pressure

Roofing cost in Corvallis, OR typically runs $11,200 to $19,500 for an architectural algae-resistant (AR) asphalt replacement on a 2,000 sq ft home, with the average landing near $14,800. Standing-seam metal roofs — increasingly popular for shedding moss and Douglas fir needle debris — push that range to $22,000–$32,000 for the same footprint. The biggest local driver here is not snow or hail; it is the persistent moss, algae, and lichen pressure created by 40 to 50 inches of annual Willamette Valley rainfall and roughly 150 cloudy days per year, which forces every honest Corvallis bid to spec AR shingles and copper or zinc ridge strips as baseline value engineering.

This guide covers roofing cost Corvallis end to end: home-size and material pricing, neighborhood-by-neighborhood variation from College Hill to Witham Hill to Timberhill, Benton County permit requirements, the short Pacific Northwest install season, CCB contractor licensing, repair pricing, financing, and a Corvallis-calibrated cost calculator. When you are ready to compare real Corvallis bids side by side, use the free quote tool or browse the where we serve directory for neighboring Oregon cities including Bend and Beaverton.

Corvallis Roofing Cost Estimator by Home Size & Material

Ranges reflect Corvallis installed pricing including tear-off, synthetic underlayment, algae-resistant (AR) shingle premium where applicable, copper or zinc ridge strips, standard flashing, ridge ventilation, Benton County or City of Corvallis permit, and disposal. Roof surface area in Corvallis typically runs about 1.30× living-area footprint due to moderately steep pitches and the dormers and cross-gables common on College Hill bungalows and Witham Hill custom homes.

Home Size 3-Tab Asphalt Architectural (AR) Standing-Seam Metal Cedar Shake / Tile
1,000 sq ft $5,000–$7,000 $7,300–$10,500 $11,000–$16,000 $15,000–$21,000
1,500 sq ft $7,500–$10,500 $10,900–$15,800 $16,500–$24,000 $22,500–$31,500
2,000 sq ft $10,000–$14,000 $14,500–$21,000 $22,000–$32,000 $30,000–$42,000
2,200 sq ft $11,000–$15,400 $15,950–$23,100 $24,200–$35,200 $33,000–$46,200
3,000 sq ft $15,000–$21,000 $21,800–$31,500 $33,000–$48,000 $45,000–$63,000

Ranges assume single-layer tear-off, 5:12 to 7:12 pitch, AR-grade shingle for architectural rows, and standard residential access. Steeper Witham Hill custom homes, multi-layer tear-offs on older College Hill stock, and cedar-shake legacy roofs trend toward the high end. See also: 800 sq ft guide.

Corvallis Roofing Cost Calculator

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Estimates reflect Corvallis, OR installed pricing. Get exact bids from local CCB-licensed roofers.

Corvallis Roof Replacement Cost: Complete Material Breakdown

Material choice is the single largest driver of your Corvallis roofing bill. Below is the installed price range for every common material in Benton County, with lifespan estimates adjusted for Willamette Valley moss pressure, persistent winter moisture, and the short Pacific Northwest install season. Browse our roof cost by material guide for deeper national comparisons.

Material Installed / sq ft Corvallis Lifespan Corvallis Notes
3-Tab Asphalt $5.00–$7.00 15–20 yrs Shortest lifespan under Willamette Valley moss. Budget choice only; falls behind AR architectural in cost-per-year.
Architectural AR Asphalt $7.25–$10.50 22–28 yrs Most popular Corvallis choice. Copper-granule AR (algae-resistant) variant is the local standard; pair with zinc or copper ridge strips for full moss defense.
Premium / Designer Asphalt $9.00–$12.50 28–32 yrs Thicker laminate profile with enhanced AR coverage and 130+ mph wind rating. Strong match for exposed-pitch Witham Hill and Country Club custom homes.
Standing-Seam Metal $11.00–$16.00 45–60 yrs Best long-term value in Corvallis. Sheds moss, lichen, and Doug fir needle litter cleanly; resists Pacific Northwest moisture without granule loss. Inherently Class A fire-rated.
Stone-Coated Steel $10.50–$15.00 40–55 yrs Metal durability with shake or tile aesthetics. Popular substitute when cedar-shake legacy homes in College Hill modernize.
Cedar Shake $15.00–$21.00 20–30 yrs Legacy Pacific Northwest aesthetic on NW Corvallis bungalows and Craftsman homes. Demands aggressive moss treatment cycle; Class B fire retardant common, Class A required near WUI fringe.
Concrete Tile $12.00–$17.00 40–50 yrs Uncommon in Corvallis — moss collects in tile valleys, weight requires structural review. Best on newer Mediterranean-style custom homes engineered for tile loading.

Asphalt vs Metal: Which Is Better Value in Corvallis?

The Corvallis calculus is different from high-desert Bend or hot-dry Phoenix. Persistent winter moisture, year-round high humidity, moss colonization on every north-facing slope, and Douglas fir needle accumulation along eaves drive material lifespans and maintenance loads in directions that warrant a careful side-by-side. Here is the honest comparison for Benton County homes.

Factor Architectural AR Asphalt Standing-Seam Metal
Upfront cost (2,000 sq ft) $14,500–$21,000 $22,000–$32,000
Corvallis lifespan 22–28 years 45–60 years
Cost per year of service ~$680/yr ~$525/yr
Moss / algae resistance Good (AR + zinc strip) Excellent (sheds naturally)
Doug fir needle / debris shedding Fair (granular surface holds debris) Excellent (smooth surface)
WUI fire rating (Class A) Available (specify on bid) Inherently Class A
Annual maintenance load Moderate (moss spray, gutter clean) Light (rinse, gutter clean)
Energy Trust of Oregon rebate eligible Sometimes (cool-roof spec) Yes (reflective coatings)

Bottom line for Corvallis: metal wins on cost-per-year-of-service and is dramatically easier to live with under Willamette Valley moss pressure. If you plan to keep your home longer than 12 years, standing-seam metal is the stronger long-run value. Architectural AR asphalt remains the right call for short-term ownership and tighter budgets — just be sure the bid includes zinc or copper ridge strips. Review our full metal roofing guide and asphalt roofing guide for deeper material comparisons.

Roof Replacement Cost by Corvallis Neighborhood

Corvallis neighborhoods vary in home age, roof pitch, footprint, tree canopy density, and proximity to the Coast Range and McDonald-Dunn Forest WUI fringe. Tree canopy density — particularly Doug fir, big-leaf maple, and oak overstory — is the variable most homeowners underestimate; heavy canopy doubles annual moss pressure on the north slope. Here is the realistic range by neighborhood for an architectural AR asphalt replacement.

Neighborhood Typical Range (arch. AR asphalt) Key Cost Factors
College Hill $13,500–$22,000 Older bungalows, Craftsman, multi-layer tear-offs common, mature tree canopy, cedar-shake legacy
Witham Hill $16,000–$26,500 NW Corvallis custom homes, larger footprints, steep pitches, premium specs, hill exposure
Country Club $14,500–$23,000 North Corvallis mid-century, mature trees, moderate-to-steep pitches, established stock
Highland View / Bryant (NW) $13,800–$21,000 Tract homes 1970s–1990s, simple gables, manageable access, baseline AR shingle spec
Timberhill (NW) $14,800–$24,000 Newer NW Corvallis builds, varied pitches, HOA aesthetic considerations, near McDonald-Dunn Forest WUI fringe
SW Brooklane / Avery Park $12,800–$19,500 South Corvallis, varied 1960s–2000s stock, larger lots, heavy canopy along Marys River corridor
North Corvallis (NW 9th) $13,200–$20,500 Arterial-adjacent housing, simple footprints, easy access, lower complexity bids
Central / Downtown $12,500–$20,000 Mix of old downtown bungalows and newer infill, tight alley access, occasional historic-review constraints
Cloverridge / Suburbia (NE) $13,500–$21,500 NE Corvallis subdivisions, 1970s–2010s, predictable scoping, moderate canopy density
West Hills / Beca $15,500–$25,000 West-side hill homes near Coast Range edge, larger footprints, WUI fringe class, steep access

Roof Repair Cost in Corvallis, OR

Not every aging Corvallis roof needs full replacement. The roof repair cost depends on damage type and material. Willamette Valley moisture creates a distinct failure profile: moss-driven granule loss, lichen-lifted shingle tabs, ridge-strip degradation, and flashing breakdown where debris dams water against vertical walls. See also our roofing cost per square foot guide for per-unit context.

Repair Type Typical Corvallis Cost Notes
Moss treatment + soft-wash $325–$750 Professional zinc-sulfate or quat-based treatment plus low-pressure rinse. Recommended every 2–4 years in Corvallis. Power washing is banned by most local roofers; it strips granules.
Zinc / copper ridge-strip install $200–$500 Retrofitting zinc or copper at the ridge sheds ions during rain that suppress moss growth downslope. Cheapest single upgrade for any Corvallis asphalt roof.
Flashing repair (chimney, skylight, wall) $275–$800 Debris-dam moisture lifts metal flashing in Corvallis faster than dry climates; inspect every spring after the worst rains. Kick-out flashing at roof-to-wall is the #1 source of interior wall rot.
Shingle patch (moss / wind damage) $325–$900 Lichen and moss can lift tabs and tear shingles during fall windstorms. Patch promptly to prevent underlayment exposure during the wet season.
Leak repair (deck / underlayment) $425–$1,400 Sustained rain finds underlayment failures fast. Deck-level repairs typically require partial shingle removal, decking patch, and synthetic underlayment splice.
Decking replacement (rot / soft sheathing) $70–$110 per sheet Moss-driven moisture migration creates soft decking on 8–20% of boards during tear-off on older Corvallis homes — significantly more than the national average.
Gutter cleaning + downspout repair $175–$550 Doug fir needle litter and big-leaf maple debris clog gutters in Corvallis twice per year; clean before October rains and again in late spring.
Vent / pipe boot seal $180–$425 EPDM boots crack under sun-exposure cycles; replace every 10–15 years regardless of shingle condition to prevent slow drips at every plumbing stack.

How Corvallis’s Climate Affects Your Roof

Corvallis sits in the mid-Willamette Valley at the confluence of the Marys and Willamette Rivers, with the Coast Range climbing immediately to the west and the Cascades a longer reach to the east. The Marine West Coast climate (Koppen Csb, borderline Cfb) is mild but persistently wet through fall, winter, and spring. The four forces that drive every Corvallis roofing decision are moss colonization, sustained moisture, the compressed install window, and freeze-thaw cycling on a smaller scale than higher elevations.

Moss, Algae & Lichen Pressure

This is the #1 local driver of premature asphalt roof failure in Corvallis. North-facing slopes, valleys shaded by tree canopy, and any roof beneath Douglas fir or big-leaf maple overstory accumulate moss within 5 to 8 years on standard asphalt. The remedy is built into every modern bid: specify algae-resistant (AR) shingles with copper-infused granules, and install a continuous zinc or copper strip at the ridge. As rainwater rolls over the metal strip, dissolved ions wash downslope and suppress moss growth across the entire roof plane. The AR-shingle-plus-zinc-strip combo adds roughly $300 to $900 to a typical Corvallis install and extends usable life by 3 to 6 years. Skipping it is the most common false economy in Willamette Valley roofing.

Sustained Rainfall & Moisture Intrusion

Corvallis sees roughly 40 to 50 inches of rain per year, with the overwhelming majority falling between October and May. The roof is wet more often than it is dry for over half the year. That sustained moisture finds any weakness: aging underlayment, lifted flashing, debris dams at roof-to-wall intersections, granule-thin south slopes after a hot September. Synthetic peel-and-stick underlayment is the Corvallis standard, not the budget felt that survives drier climates. At eaves and in valleys, ice-and-water shield is increasingly common as cheap insurance even on lower-elevation homes. Proper kick-out flashing at every roof-to-wall termination is the single most common cause of interior wall framing rot in the Willamette Valley — reusing old flashing to save $400 to $900 upfront is among the most expensive mistakes a Corvallis homeowner can make.

The Short Pacific Northwest Install Season

Corvallis produces roughly 60 to 90 reliably dry install days per year, concentrated June through September with shoulder windows in April, May, and October. Asphalt shingles require ambient temperatures above 40 degrees Fahrenheit and a dry substrate to self-seal properly. From November through March, productive install days are scarce; many reputable Corvallis roofers simply will not install asphalt during these months unless the homeowner accepts the risk that the sealant strip will not bond until the following spring. The practical implication: book your roofer in winter for a spring/summer install, not the reverse. Crews fill the calendar by May and the best installers are routinely 6 to 10 weeks out by July.

Freeze-Thaw & Occasional Snow Events

Corvallis is not Bend or Sisters, but the city does cycle through dozens of overnight freezes each winter and occasionally sees several inches of snow followed by rapid melt. Freeze-thaw lifts flashing at fasteners, cracks aging sealant, and stresses EPDM pipe boots over time. A roof installed without proper attention to drainage at hips and valleys can develop ice-dam-like backup during a snow event even at Corvallis’s lower elevation. Quality installs use butyl tape under flashing (not sealant alone) and freeze-thaw-rated EPDM at all penetrations.

Wildfire & WUI Fringe

The west edge of Corvallis abuts the Coast Range, and McDonald-Dunn Research Forest borders the north. Properties closer to those forest edges sit within Oregon’s Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) classification, where Class A or Class B fire-rated roofing is recommended or required. Most architectural asphalt and all metal roofing qualifies for Class A. Untreated cedar shake does not. If your existing roof is cedar and your parcel is in a WUI zone, a replacement project must spec a compliant material. Verify your parcel’s status with the City of Corvallis Development Services or Benton County Community Development before choosing materials.

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Roof Replacement Financing in Corvallis

A full Corvallis replacement commonly runs $14,500–$21,000 for architectural AR asphalt and $22,000–$32,000 for standing-seam metal. Few homeowners pay cash; here are the most practical financing paths in Benton County. Our national replacement cost overview covers broader financing context if useful for comparison.

Contractor Financing

Most Corvallis roofing contractors partner with GreenSky, Mosaic, or similar consumer-credit platforms. Typical terms: 6–18 months same-as-cash or 8–12% APR amortized over 60–120 months. Quick to arrange at the bid stage — ask your contractor for the lender disclosure form before signing the contract.

Home Equity Line (HELOC)

Steady Corvallis home appreciation has built meaningful equity for long-term owners. A HELOC typically offers lower rates than contractor plans and interest may be tax-deductible if used for home improvement. OSU Federal Credit Union, Citizens Bank, and Umpqua Bank are local options. Allow 3–6 weeks for approval and appraisal.

Energy Trust of Oregon Rebates

Energy Trust of Oregon (ETO) offers rebates for insulation improvements paired with roof work and cool-roof or radiant-barrier upgrades on qualifying projects. If you add attic insulation during tear-off, check current ETO programs at energytrust.org for available incentives. Rebates vary by utility provider (Pacific Power and Consumers Power both serve Corvallis) and by project specifications.

PACE Financing (Oregon)

Oregon’s Property Assessed Clean Energy (PACE) program allows roof-integrated solar and energy-efficient roofing systems to be financed through property tax assessment. Repayment is tied to the property, not the owner, which can be a selling point if you may sell during the financing term. Not every Corvallis project qualifies; cool-roof and solar-integrated upgrades are the most common eligible scopes.

Insurance Claims (Storm / Wind / Tree Damage)

If a fall or winter windstorm tore shingles or dropped a Douglas fir limb on your roof, your homeowner’s policy may cover replacement minus deductible. Document damage with photos immediately after the storm and contact your carrier promptly. Oregon law requires insurers to disclose whether the policy is Actual Cash Value (ACV, depreciated) or Replacement Cost Value (RCV, full new). Request RCV before the next storm season if yours is ACV-only — the difference on a 20-year-old asphalt roof in Corvallis can run $7,000 to $12,000.

When Should Corvallis Homeowners Replace Their Roof?

Corvallis conditions accelerate several roof-failure indicators compared to drier climates. Use the signals below to assess your roof’s actual condition — not just its age. Our roof replacement guide covers the decision framework in depth.

Replace Now

Heavy moss colonization across multiple slopes after repeated treatments. Granule bare spots visible from ground level. Shingles older than 20 years showing curling, cupping, or cracking. Active interior leak in a fall or winter storm. WUI fire-code compliance required (cedar shake in a fire zone). Multiple failed patches in the same area within 3 years.

Plan Within 3–5 Years

Asphalt shingles 18–22 years old with visible weathering. Flashing sealed (not mechanically fastened) at wall connections. Valleys showing wear patterns through granules. North slopes carrying chronic moss return after treatment. Home sale or major renovation planned — replace before listing to simplify inspection contingencies in Corvallis’s competitive market.

Best Time to Replace

June through September is the prime install window in Corvallis, with shoulder dates in April, May, and October when dry-weather windows allow. Asphalt shingles require temperatures above 40 degrees Fahrenheit to seal properly. Book your roofer in winter for a summer install — the best Corvallis crews are routinely 6 to 10 weeks out by July.

Benton Permit Timing

City of Corvallis Development Services Department processes residential permits within city limits; Benton County Community Development handles unincorporated parcels. Turnaround runs 5–10 business days for straightforward replacements. Your contractor should pull the permit — if they ask you to, that is a red flag. Permit fees typically run $150–$350 depending on project scope.

How to Hire a Corvallis Roofing Contractor

Oregon requires every roofing contractor to hold an active Construction Contractors Board (CCB) license under ORS 701. Verify your contractor’s CCB number at oregon.gov/ccb before signing any contract. Here is the Corvallis-specific vetting checklist that goes beyond the license check.

  1. Verify CCB license status — Active license required. Check name, expiration, bonding, and any disciplinary history at oregon.gov/ccb. A license suspended for non-payment of bond is a dealbreaker. Bonded, licensed, and insured is the minimum standard.
  2. Confirm AR shingle + zinc strip is included — Any Corvallis bid for an asphalt re-roof should automatically include algae-resistant (AR) shingles and zinc or copper ridge strips. If a contractor’s scope excludes either, ask why before accepting. The premium is small and the value is overwhelming under Willamette Valley conditions.
  3. Confirm WUI experience if applicable — If your parcel sits near the Coast Range edge or the McDonald-Dunn Forest border, ask specifically whether the contractor has installed Class A fire-rated roofing in WUI zones and whether they can pull the appropriate permit. Not every Corvallis roofer is set up for fire-class material specification.
  4. Get three itemized bids — Corvallis supports enough active CCB-licensed roofing contractors that three bids is realistic. Itemized bids (tear-off, disposal, underlayment, AR shingle, zinc strip, labor, flashing, kick-out, permit, cleanup) let you compare apples to apples. Lump-sum bids are a sign of a contractor who doesn’t want you comparing.
  5. Check the permit pull — Your contractor must pull the City of Corvallis or Benton County roofing permit. If they ask you to obtain it yourself, walk away. Unpermitted work creates problems at resale and with insurance claims.
  6. Verify manufacturer certification — GAF Master Elite, CertainTeed SELECT ShingleMaster, Owens Corning Preferred, or Malarkey Emerald Pro certification means the installer meets the manufacturer’s installation standards and can offer extended material warranties beyond the default 10-year labor warranty.
  7. Ask about install-season scheduling — In Corvallis, when a contractor says they can start “next week” in November, treat that as a red flag — reputable installers do not asphalt in heavy rain. A summer-season backlog is a sign of a roofer the market trusts.

Corvallis Roofing Resources & Related Guides

Explore the full Best Roofing Estimates library for material comparisons, home-size guides, and Oregon-wide pricing context. The Oregon roofing cost guide covers statewide CCB rules, regional variation, and repair pricing across the Willamette Valley, Portland metro, and central Oregon. For comparison shopping across the state and country, visit the where we serve hub, or head back to the homepage for an overview.

Material Guides

Roofing Guides

Roof Size Guides

Oregon Cities

Frequently Asked Questions About Roofing Cost in Corvallis, OR

How much does a new roof cost in Corvallis, OR?

A new roof in Corvallis, OR typically costs $11,200 to $19,500 for architectural algae-resistant (AR) asphalt shingles on a 2,000 sq ft home, with an average near $14,800. Standing-seam metal roofs range from $22,000 to $32,000 for the same size. Costs are driven primarily by Willamette Valley moss pressure, which forces AR-shingle and zinc-ridge-strip specifications as the local standard, plus a short Pacific Northwest install season and college-town labor premiums.

What type of roof is best for Corvallis, Oregon’s climate?

Standing-seam metal is the highest-performing material under Corvallis conditions because it sheds moss, Douglas fir needle litter, and lichen naturally, resists sustained Willamette Valley moisture without granule loss, and carries an inherent Class A fire rating. Asphalt remains the most popular choice for budget and aesthetic reasons; if you go that route, specify algae-resistant (AR) architectural shingles with copper-infused granules and pair them with a continuous zinc or copper ridge strip. The AR-plus-zinc combo is the Corvallis local standard.

Why is moss such a problem on Corvallis roofs?

Corvallis sees roughly 40 to 50 inches of annual rainfall plus persistent winter and spring humidity, with around 150 cloudy days per year. North-facing slopes, valleys shaded by tree canopy, and any roof beneath Douglas fir or big-leaf maple overstory accumulate moss within 5 to 8 years on standard asphalt. The biology that thrives in Pacific Northwest cool, wet conditions actively colonizes asphalt granules, traps moisture against the shingle, and lifts shingle tabs over time. The countermeasures are algae-resistant shingles with copper granules, continuous zinc or copper ridge strips that wash ions downslope, and professional treatment every 2 to 4 years.

Do I need a permit to replace my roof in Corvallis, OR?

Yes. Roof replacements in Corvallis require a building permit from either the City of Corvallis Development Services Department (for properties within city limits) or the Benton County Community Development office (for unincorporated parcels). Your CCB-licensed roofing contractor should pull the permit on your behalf. Permit fees typically run $150 to $350. Work done without a permit can create complications at home sale, fail a future insurance claim, and trigger penalties from local code enforcement.

When is the best time of year to replace a roof in Corvallis?

June through September is the optimal window for roof replacement in Corvallis, with shoulder dates in April, May, and October during reliable dry-weather stretches. Asphalt shingles require temperatures above 40 degrees Fahrenheit and a dry substrate to seal properly, both of which are scarce from November through March. Most reputable Corvallis roofers will not asphalt in heavy rain. Book your contractor in winter for a summer install — the best crews routinely run 6 to 10 weeks out by July.

How long does a roof last in Corvallis, OR?

In Corvallis, standard 3-tab asphalt shingles typically last 15 to 20 years, architectural algae-resistant (AR) shingles last 22 to 28 years, and premium designer asphalt extends to 28 to 32 years. Standing-seam metal roofs last 45 to 60 years in Willamette Valley conditions. Cedar shake lasts 20 to 30 years with active moss management. The single biggest variable is whether the asphalt specification included AR shingles and a zinc or copper ridge strip — skipping that combo can shave 3 to 6 years off useful life.

How much does roof repair cost in Corvallis, OR?

Roof repair costs in Corvallis typically range from $175 to $1,400 depending on the type of damage. Moss treatment and soft-wash service runs $325 to $750, retrofit zinc or copper ridge strips run $200 to $500, flashing repairs run $275 to $800, shingle patches $325 to $900, and leak repairs involving deck or underlayment $425 to $1,400. Moss colonization is the single most common driver of asphalt repair needs in the Willamette Valley, and minor repairs are worth doing promptly to prevent costlier interior framing damage during the long wet season.

What is the average cost per square foot for a roof replacement in Corvallis?

In Corvallis, roofing cost per square foot typically runs $5.00 to $7.00 installed for 3-tab asphalt, $7.25 to $10.50 for architectural AR asphalt, $11.00 to $16.00 for standing-seam metal, and $15.00 to $21.00 for cedar shake. The project is usually quoted per roofing square (100 sq ft of actual roof surface), and Corvallis roofs commonly run about 1.30 times the living-area footprint because of moderately steep Pacific Northwest pitches and dormers.

How do I verify a roofing contractor’s license in Oregon?

Oregon requires every roofing contractor to hold an active Construction Contractors Board (CCB) license under ORS 701. You can verify a contractor’s license, bonding, and any disciplinary history at oregon.gov/ccb by searching the contractor’s name or CCB number. An active, bonded, insured CCB license is the minimum standard. Also ask whether the contractor holds manufacturer certifications such as GAF Master Elite, CertainTeed SELECT ShingleMaster, or Owens Corning Preferred — these indicate higher installation standards and access to extended material warranties.

Are there Energy Trust of Oregon rebates available for Corvallis roofing projects?

Energy Trust of Oregon rebates do not generally apply to roofing materials themselves, but they often apply to insulation improvements made at the same time as a re-roofing project. If your contractor adds attic insulation during tear-off, you may qualify for ETO incentives. Cool-roof coatings and solar-integrated roofing systems may also qualify for utility rebates or PACE financing in Oregon. Check energytrust.org for current programs and eligibility, which vary by utility provider (Pacific Power and Consumers Power both serve Corvallis).

Are there WUI fire code requirements for roofing near Corvallis?

Some Corvallis parcels along the west edge of the city near the Coast Range, and along the north side near McDonald-Dunn Research Forest, sit within Oregon’s Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) classification, where building codes recommend or require Class A or Class B fire-rated roofing materials. Most architectural asphalt shingles, metal roofing, and synthetic slate products meet Class A. Untreated cedar shake does not qualify and must be replaced with a compliant material when you re-roof a WUI parcel. Confirm your parcel’s classification with City of Corvallis Development Services or Benton County Community Development before choosing materials.