Homeβ€Ί Construction & DIYβ€Ί Outdoorβ€Ί Roof Calculator

Roof Calculator

Contractor-grade estimates for shingles, underlayment, and total project costs.

Roof Sections
Project Settings
$140/sq Β· 25–30yr lifespan
Project Estimate
🏠
Enter Roof Dimensions
Fill in your length, width, and pitch above to generate a contractor-grade estimate.
TOTAL PROJECT COST
$0
Total Area: 0 sq ft
-- Typical Range --
Costs vary by region, season & contractor
Cost Breakdown
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Materials
Materials
Labor & Disposal
Top-Down View
πŸ“¦ Material Manifest

Material Cost Comparison

Your current selection vs. other common roofing materials

Market Cost Scenarios

Material prices fluctuate β€” here’s how your budget could shift

Gable vs Hip Roof

Side-by-side cost impact of roof type choice

DIY vs Professional Installation

Estimated savings if you self-install (materials only)

Cost Sensitivity β€” Pitch Γ— Roof Size

Total material cost at current material type. Your config is outlined.

Project Timeline

Estimated schedule for a crew of 3 at industry average pace (4 squares/day)

Work Phases

Full Project Budget

Includes materials, labor, permit fees, disposal, and 10% contingency

Budget Breakdown

Contractor Bid Comparison

Enter up to 3 contractor bids to compare value. Best score = lowest price + fastest + longest warranty.

Contractor Total Bid ($) Days Warranty (yr) Value

How to Use This Calculator

1

Enter Roof Dimensions

Input the roof footprint area and the pitch (slope) of the roof. The pitch is expressed as rise-over-run, such as 6/12.

2

Select Roofing Material

Choose from 9 material types β€” asphalt shingles, metal, tile, wood shake, or TPO flat membrane β€” to get accurate coverage and cost estimates.

3

Review Material Quantities

See the number of squares (100 sq ft each) of roofing material, underlayment rolls, and accessory items needed.

Formula & Methodology

Roof Area

Roof Area = Footprint Area Γ— Pitch Multiplier

The pitch multiplier converts flat footprint area to actual sloped surface area. A 6/12 pitch has a multiplier of 1.118.

Squares Needed

Squares = Roof Area / 100

One roofing square covers 100 sq ft. This is the standard ordering unit for shingles and other roofing materials.

Pitch Multiplier

Multiplier = √(1 + (Rise/Run)²)

Calculated from the pitch ratio. Steeper roofs have higher multipliers and require more material.

Key Terms

Roofing Square
A unit of area equal to 100 sq ft. Three bundles of standard 3-tab shingles cover one square.
Pitch
The slope of a roof expressed as inches of rise per 12 inches of horizontal run. A 6/12 pitch rises 6 inches for every 12 inches of run.
Underlayment
A water-resistant barrier (felt paper or synthetic) installed over the roof deck before shingles. It provides a secondary moisture protection layer.
Drip Edge
A metal flashing installed along the edges of the roof to direct water away from the fascia board and into the gutters.
Ridge Cap
Special shingles or trim pieces installed along the peak (ridge) of the roof to seal the joint where two roof planes meet.

Real-World Examples

Example 1

Ranch Home Re-Roof

Footprint: 1,500 sq ft, Pitch: 4/12 (multiplier 1.054)

Result: 1,500 Γ— 1.054 = 1,581 sq ft = 15.81 squares. Order 16 squares (48 bundles) of shingles plus 5 rolls of underlayment. Material cost: approximately $2,400–$4,000.

Example 2

Two-Story Colonial

Footprint: 1,200 sq ft, Pitch: 8/12 (multiplier 1.202)

Result: 1,200 Γ— 1.202 = 1,442 sq ft = 14.42 squares. The steeper pitch adds nearly 250 sq ft compared to a flat roof of the same footprint.

Roofing Material Comparison

MaterialCost per SquareLifespanWeight (lbs/sq)
3-Tab Asphalt$90 – $12015–20 years200–250
Architectural Shingle$130 – $20025–30 years250–350
Metal Corrugated$200 – $30030–45 years100–150
Metal Standing Seam$300 – $60040–70 years100–150
Clay Tile$400 – $70050–100 years800–1,200
Slate$600 – $1,50075–200 years700–1,000

Understanding Roof Replacement Costs

How Pitch Affects Your Budget

A steeper roof requires more material per square foot of building footprint and is more labor-intensive to install. A 12/12 pitch (45 degrees) has 41% more surface area than a flat roof of the same footprint. Roofing contractors charge a steep-pitch premium starting at 8/12 and significant premiums above 10/12 due to safety equipment requirements.

Beyond the Shingles

The material cost of shingles is only part of a roofing project. Tear-off and disposal of old shingles, new underlayment, drip edge, flashing around chimneys and vents, ridge cap, ice and water shield in cold climates, and valley metal all add to the total. These accessories typically add 30–50% to the shingle cost alone.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. 1
    Enter Footprint Dimensions

    Measure the building footprint (length and width) from outside wall to outside wall. This is the horizontal projection of the roof area.

  2. 2
    Enter Roof Pitch

    Input the pitch as rise over 12 (e.g., 6/12 means the roof rises 6 inches per 12 inches of horizontal run).

  3. 3
    Calculate Actual Roof Area

    The calculator multiplies the footprint area by the pitch multiplier to get the true sloped roof area.

  4. 4
    Choose Roofing Material

    Select asphalt shingles, metal panels, tile, or slate to get material-specific quantities and coverage rates.

  5. 5
    Get Squares and Quantities

    Review roofing squares (100 sq ft each), bundle count, underlayment rolls, ridge cap, and starter strip required.

Key Formulas

Roof AreaArea = Footprint x Pitch Multiplier
Roofing Square1 Square = 100 sq ft of roof area
BundlesBundles = Squares x 3
Ridge LengthRidge Cap = Length / 3 linear ft per bundle

Key Terms

Roofing Square β€” The standard unit of roofing material equal to 100 square feet of covered area. All roofing quantities are expressed in squares.
Bundle β€” A package of shingles. Three bundles cover one roofing square for standard 3-tab shingles; heavier architectural shingles may require 4 bundles per square.
Pitch Multiplier β€” A factor applied to the horizontal footprint area to calculate actual sloped roof area. A 6/12 pitch multiplier is 1.118; a 12/12 pitch multiplier is 1.414.
Felt / Underlayment β€” A water-resistant layer installed over the roof deck before shingles, providing secondary protection against water infiltration.
Drip Edge β€” Metal flashing installed at the eave and rake edges of the roof to direct water away from the fascia and into the gutters.
Ice and Water Shield β€” A self-adhesive waterproof membrane installed in valleys and along eaves to prevent ice dam damage in cold climates.

Frequently Asked Questions

What pitch multiplier should I use for my roof?

Common pitch multipliers: 4/12 = 1.054, 5/12 = 1.083, 6/12 = 1.118, 7/12 = 1.158, 8/12 = 1.202, 9/12 = 1.250, 10/12 = 1.302, 12/12 = 1.414. This calculator applies the correct multiplier automatically when you enter your pitch.

Do I need a starter strip for shingles?

Yes. A starter strip is installed along the eave before the first course of shingles. It provides a solid edge for the bottom of the first shingle course and prevents wind uplift by providing adhesive directly at the roof edge. Using shingles upside-down as a starter strip is an older practice -- purpose-made starter strips are faster and more effective.

How is valley flashing installed?

Valleys where two roof slopes meet can be open (metal flashing exposed), woven (shingles interlocked), or closed-cut (one slope of shingles overlaps the other). Open valleys with W-metal flashing are the most water-tight and easiest to replace. Always install ice-and-water shield in the valley under the flashing or shingles for maximum protection.

How many layers of shingles can I have?

Most building codes allow a maximum of two layers of asphalt shingles. A second layer can be installed over a first layer in good condition, saving tear-off costs. However, a third layer is rarely permitted -- the combined weight exceeds what most roof structures are designed to support, and the uneven surface reduces shingle performance and lifespan.