When something goes wrong with a roof, the first question is almost always the same: do I repair it, or is it time for a full replacement? It’s an important decision — repair saves money today, but replacing a roof that’s near the end of its life can save you from throwing good money after bad.
There’s no single right answer. The smart choice depends on a handful of practical factors, and a documented inspection makes the decision clear. Here’s how Front Range homeowners think it through.
Start with the age of your roof
Roof age is the single biggest factor. A standard asphalt shingle roof typically lasts 15 to 25 years, though Colorado’s UV, hail, and freeze-thaw cycles can shorten that.
- Under ~10 years old: Repair is usually the right call for isolated damage. The roof has plenty of life left.
- 15+ years old: Replacement deserves serious consideration, especially if damage is widespread or you’re seeing repeat problems.
- Near or past its expected lifespan: Repairs become a short-term patch on a roof that will need replacing soon anyway.
Weigh the extent of the damage
A few missing shingles or a single leak around a vent is a repair. Damage that’s spread across multiple slopes, or that reaches the underlayment and decking, points toward replacement.
Ask yourself — and your contractor — whether the damage is localized or systemic. One bad valley can be repaired. A roof that’s losing granules everywhere and leaking in several spots is telling you something. Hail is a common driver of widespread damage; our hail damage roof repair page covers how to recognize it.
Count the repairs you’ve already made
If you’ve patched the same roof two or three times in the last few years, the math usually favors replacement. Frequent repairs are a sign the roof system is failing, not just having bad luck. Each repair also blends old and new materials, which rarely matches and can create new weak points.
Not sure which side of the line your roof is on? A free, documented inspection settles it. Call Green Slate Roofing & Siding at 720-537-1149 or request one online.
Compare the true cost over time
Repair is cheaper up front — that’s never in question. The better comparison is cost over time:
- A repair on a young, healthy roof is excellent value.
- A repair on an old roof buys you a year or two, then you pay for the replacement anyway.
- A replacement is a larger investment, but it resets the clock and often comes with better materials and improved energy performance.
Think in terms of cost per year of service, not just the sticker price of the repair.
Consider Colorado’s weather
The Front Range is hard on roofs. Intense high-altitude sun degrades shingles faster than in many climates. Hail can bruise and fracture shingles invisibly. Freeze-thaw cycles work water into small cracks and widen them. If your roof has weathered several Colorado seasons and multiple storms, its real condition may be worse than its age alone suggests — another reason a close inspection matters.
Don’t forget resale and curb appeal
If you’re planning to sell in the next few years, a roof at the end of its life is a known sticking point for buyers and inspectors. A newer roof can be a selling point; an old one can become a negotiation tool against you. For homeowners staying put, a replacement simply removes years of worry.
A simple decision checklist
Lean toward repair if:
- The roof is relatively young (under ~10–15 years)
- Damage is localized to one area
- It’s the first issue you’ve had
- The rest of the roof is in good shape
Lean toward replacement if:
- The roof is at or past its expected lifespan
- Damage spans multiple slopes or reaches the decking
- You’ve repaired it repeatedly
- You’re seeing widespread granule loss or recurring leaks
Get an honest assessment
The best decisions come from seeing the actual condition of your roof, documented with photos, rather than guessing. A trustworthy contractor will tell you when a repair is genuinely the smarter, cheaper choice — and will only recommend replacement when the evidence supports it. When replacement is the right move, our roof replacement page walks through the process, and our residential roofing page covers materials and options.
Frequently asked questions
Is it cheaper to repair or replace a roof? Repair is always cheaper up front. Replacement can be the better value over time if the roof is old or repeatedly failing, because repairs on an aging roof only delay the inevitable cost.
How do I know if my roof is too old to repair? Roof age, widespread damage, and a history of repeat repairs are the key signs. A documented inspection gives you a clear answer based on the roof’s actual condition.
Can I replace just part of my roof? Partial replacement is sometimes possible, but it can create mismatched materials and seams that become weak points. An inspection helps determine whether a partial approach makes sense for your situation.
Does hail damage mean I need a full replacement? Not necessarily. Isolated hail damage can often be repaired. Widespread bruising and granule loss across the roof are more likely to point toward replacement.
How long does a roof replacement take? Most residential replacements are completed in a matter of days, depending on the size of the roof, the materials, and the weather.
Make the call with confidence
Repair or replace doesn’t have to be a guess. Look at the age, the extent of the damage, your repair history, and the long-term cost — and let a documented inspection fill in the rest.
Green Slate Roofing & Siding serves Golden and the greater Denver metro and Front Range. Call 720-537-1149 or request your free inspection online, and we’ll give you an honest, photo-backed recommendation — repair or replace.