Econo Roofing Blog

What happens during a professional roof inspection. And why you need one.

Last updated March 30, 2026

By Mario Espindola · Published March 3, 2026

Most homeowners have never seen a real roof inspection. Here's a complete walkthrough of every system a qualified inspector examines, and what happens when they find some thing wrong.

Your roof is the most key weather barrier on your home, most homeowners have no idea what condition it's in. That's not negligence. It's simply that roofs are out of sight, and problems develop gradually rather than dramatically. A small flashing failure or a cracked sealant joint at a vent pipe might let in a teaspoon of water per rainstorm for two years before it shows up as a ceiling stain. By then, you may have damaged sheathing, insulation, and framing that would have cost $200 to fix if caught early. A expert roof inspection closes that information gap.

Before the inspector goes up. Ground-level assessment.

A thorough inspection starts on the ground before any ladder goes up. From grade level, an expert inspector evaluates several things that are actually clearer from a distance than from on the roof.

Roofline geometry. A straight roofline from ridge to eave indicates sound structural framing. Sagging, bowing, or waviness along the ridge or rafters suggests structural compromise: potentially rotted or broken rafters, inadequate support, or settlement. This is one of the few defects visible from the ground that indicates a serious structural problem rather than a surface issue.

Visible surface condition. Granule loss on asphalt shingles can sometimes be spotted from the ground as a matte, rough texture versus the intact shingles' more uniform surface. Curling at shingle edges is visible on lower slopes. Missing shingles, lifted ridge caps, and exposed fasteners are identifiable without binoculars on most Valley home roof pitches.

Gutters and drainage. The inspector looks at downspout placement, gutter condition, and whether gutters are pulling away from fascia. A sign that fascia boards may be rotted or that improper gutter installation is stressing the attachment points. Econo Roofing's inspection includes a gutter assessment as part of the overall drainage picture.

On the roof. What the inspector is examining.

The on-roof portion of the inspection covers five distinct systems. Each one can fail independently of the others, and each failure mode is unique.

1. Roofing surface material.

For asphalt shingles, the inspector checks granule coverage (bare spots indicate advanced UV degradation), shingle flexibility (brittle shingles crack at penetrations and valleys), nail pops (fasteners working up through the shingle surface due to heat cycling), and tab integrity on 3-tab shingles. They check every slope, not just the most visible ones from the street, north-facing slopes often show unique wear patterns than south-facing slopes in Valley conditions.

For tile roofs, the inspection covers cracked, slipped, or missing tiles, mortar condition at ridges and hips, the condition of the underlayment at any exposed tile edges. Tile roofs in our service area (Modesto, Turlock, Ceres, Atwater, and surrounding communities) often outlast their underlayment. This can fail 20–25 years in even when the tile itself is sound.

For flat roofing, the inspector checks membrane seams, surface blistering, ponding water areas (evidenced by debris rings and staining even when the roof is dry), the condition of any existing coating. See our guide on commercial roofing systems for how these assessments differ by membrane type.

2. Flashing. The highest-risk system.

Flashing is the metal or composite material that seals the changes between your roof surface and vertical structures: chimneys, walls, skylights, vent pipes, and roof-to-wall junctions at dormers and additions. It is, by a big margin, the most common source of roof leaks, not the shingles themselves.

In Central Valley conditions, daily heat cycling (those 40-degree swings between morning and afternoon heat) stresses flashing joints constantly. The inspector checks step flashing at walls (each shingle course should have its own flashing piece, individually stepped), chimney counter-flashing and base flashing, pipe boot condition (the rubber collar around vent pipes degrades in UV and heat, usually needing replacement every 10–15 years in our climate), and any skylight edge sealing. Flashing failures found early are usually $200–$600 repairs. Found late (after water has damaged sheathing and framing) the same failure costs $2,000–$8,000+.

3. Valleys and penetrations.

Roof valleys (the channels where two slopes meet) concentrate water flow and debris. They're high-wear areas that fail before the surrounding field of shingles. The inspector checks valley flashing condition (open metal vs. closed shingle valleys handle differently), debris accumulation (leaf and pine needle buildup holds water and speeds up valley wear), and shingle condition at valley edges.

Every leak (HVAC curbs, exhaust vents, attic fans) gets person attention. These are seamed points in an otherwise steady surface, every seam is a potential entry point for water and pests. In our service area, roof rats are a genuine concern, gaps at penetrations that seem weather-tight may still allow entry for rodents looking for attic space during winter months.

4. Ridge and ventilation.

Ridge cap shingles and ridge vent systems are among the most UV-exposed components of any roof. They take full overhead solar radiation from directly above all day. The inspector checks ridge cap condition, whether ridge vents are open and unobstructed, and whether the ventilation system is balanced between intake (at soffits) and exhaust (at ridge).

Ventilation matters more in the Central Valley than almost any place else. An under-ventilated attic reaches 150–160°F on summer afternoons in Stanislaus County, baking the underside of the roof deck and reducing shingle life significantly. Proper ventilation, 1 square foot of net free ventilation area per 150 square feet of attic floor, balanced between intake and exhaust, can add years to your roof's service life. If the inspector finds a ventilation deficiency, addressing it is usually one of the highest-ROI improvements you can make. For more on this, see our roof maintenance page.

5. Attic inspection.

A complete inspection includes the attic. The underside of the roof system. From the attic, the inspector can see things invisible from above: daylight showing through decking gaps, water staining on rafters (even old stains indicate past or recurring leaks), insulation compression from water, mold or mildew growth, the actual condition of the roof sheathing.

The attic also reveals whether existing repairs have been done properly. A patch of roofing cement applied over a leak source often shows up from below as a dark stain ring even after the patch appears to be holding. Many stain rings on the same rafter tell the story of a recurring problem that has been treated superficially rather than fixed correctly.

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After the inspection. What you receive in writing.

A expert inspection concludes with a written assessment, not a verbal summary. The written report should include:

  • Remaining service life estimate. A realistic range for how many years the current roof has before replacement is necessary, based on saw condition rather than installation date alone
  • Priority items: issues needing immediate attention, with specific locations documented (not just "the flashing needs work" but "the step flashing at the north dormer wall is lifted at three courses")
  • Monitoring items, conditions that are not yet failures but should be watched, with suggested re-inspection timing
  • Recommended repairs or maintenance, specific scope and estimated cost for each found issue
  • Photo documentation: photos of every finding, referenced to location on the roof, so you can share the report with your insurance company if needed

If a contractor conducts an "inspection" that ends with a verbal summary. a replacement bid (without records of what they actually found) that's a sales call, not an inspection. Econo Roofing's free checks produce a written, documented assessment regardless of whether the findings lead to any immediate work.

When to schedule a roof inspection in the Central Valley.

There are five situations where a expert inspection is mainly warranted:

Every 3–5 years proactively. Roofing issues caught during proactive checks cost a fraction of what the same issues cost when found after water damage has occurred. If your roof is under 10 years old and in good condition, a 5-year cycle is reasonable. Over 15 years old, inspect every 3 years.

After significant wind or hail events. Central Valley wind storms (including the Diablo winds that sometimes push through the region) can lift flashing, loosen ridge caps, and damage shingles without leaving obvious visible damage from the ground. If you expert sustained winds over 50 mph, an inspection within 30 days is prudent. Our storm damage page explains how insurance claims for storm damage work and what records you need.

Before purchasing a home. A general home inspector covers roofing at a high level. A dedicated roofing inspection before buy gives you specific, actionable information about remaining life, repair needs, and potential costs, key negotiating information in a home buy.

When you notice an interior stain. A water stain on a ceiling or wall isn't always a roof problem (it could be a plumbing leak or condensation) but it always warrants check. A roof inspection rules the roof in or out and pinpoints the source if it's roofing-related.

Before your roof warranty expires. If your roof is under a maker warranty, inspecting before it expires lets you document any warranty-eligible issues while coverage is still active. Econo Roofing handles warranty repairs and can help document claims for maker review.

Frequently asked questions.

  • How long does a professional roof inspection take?

    For a typical single-family home in Modesto, Turlock, or Merced, a thorough inspection (including attic access) takes 45 minutes to 90 minutes. Larger homes, complex rooflines, or multi-slope configurations take longer. If someone is quoting you a "10-minute inspection," they're not doing a thorough job.

  • Is a free inspection from a roofing contractor reliable?

    It depends on the contractor. An established company with a 30-year reputation (like Econo Roofing) has no incentive to fabricate problems. their business runs on repeat customers and referrals. A contractor new to the area or focused on high-volume sales may shade their assessment toward replacement. Ask for the written report regardless, and compare findings if you have concerns.

  • Will an inspection void my warranty?

    No, and in fact, most maker warranties require periodic expert inspections to remain valid. A qualified inspector knows how to access and evaluate a roof without damaging it. Walking a tile roof incorrectly can crack tiles; an expert inspector knows where to step.

  • Can I inspect my own roof?

    You can do a visual check from the ground and look in your attic, both valuable. But safely accessing and walking a residential roof requires equipment and training. Beyond safety, the trained eye of someone who has inspected thousands of roofs will catch things a homeowner won't. Econo Roofing provides free expert inspections across Stanislaus, Merced, San Joaquin, Tuolumne, Alameda, Calaveras, and Contra Costa counties, there's no reason to attempt it yourself.

Related posts.

How long does a roof last in the Central Valley?

Realistic lifespan data by material, calibrated for Central Valley heat, UV, and heat cycling, not national averages.

10 questions to ask before hiring a roofing contractor.

License, insurance, certifications, warranties, everything you should verify before signing a roofing contract in California.

Storm damage and insurance claims: the complete guide.

How to document storm damage, navigate the insurance process, and avoid contractor scams after a major weather event.

Related Reading

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Written by the licensed roofing professionals at Econo Roofing. With 30+ years serving the Central Valley, our team holds OC Platinum Preferred, GAF Master Elite, and CertainTeed Select ShingleMaster certifications. View our certifications

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Reviewed by Mario Espindola, Founder & GAF Master Elite Installer·Last updated

Why This Matters

Behind every article: 30+ years of Central Valley roofing.

Every article on this blog is written or reviewed by someone who has actually installed, repaired, or inspected the specific roof types and scenarios discussed. That distinction matters. Most roofing content online is written by content marketers who have never set foot on a roof. The advice may sound right, but it misses the practical realities — how shingles age in 110°F Central Valley summers, how tile underlayment fails at year 25-30, how flashing wear compounds over winter Pacific storms, how insurance adjusters evaluate damage claims in Stanislaus County. Field experience changes the answer.

Mario Espindola founded Econo Roofing in 1996 in Delhi, California. Three decades later, our team has installed, repaired, and inspected thousands of Central Valley roofs. We’ve catalogued the failure patterns specific to this region: cracked pipe boots from year 8-10 UV exposure, lifted ridge caps after winter wind events, valley flashing wear at year 15, tile underlayment hitting its 25-30 year service window on 1990s Mediterranean homes. Each of these has a known cause, a known fix, and a predictable cost — but only when diagnosed by someone who has seen it hundreds of times.

The credentials matter for accountability. Econo Roofing is the only Owens Corning Platinum Preferred contractor in Stanislaus County and Merced County — a designation held by fewer than 1% of US roofing contractors. We’re also GAF Master Elite (top 2% of GAF contractors), CertainTeed Select ShingleMaster (top 1% of CertainTeed contractors), and GAF Gold Elite. No other roofing contractor in the region holds all four credentials. That means we can register manufacturer-backed warranties — OC Platinum Protection (lifetime, non-prorated), GAF Golden Pledge (50-year material plus 25-year workmanship), and CertainTeed 5-Star Protection — that simply aren’t available through uncertified roofers. Each manufacturer audits our installs to maintain our certification, which keeps us honest on every project.

If you’re reading this article because you have a real roofing question or concern, the next step is a free on-site inspection. Our certified inspector walks the entire roof, checks all flashing, vents, valleys, and pipe boots, and inspects the attic for moisture and ventilation issues. We document the inspection with photos and deliver a written report within 24 hours. No pressure, no hard sell — if your roof is healthy, we say so in writing. Schedule at (209) 668-6222. License #749551, verifiable at CSLB.ca.gov. Family-owned and operated since 1996, with three regional offices in Delhi, Ripon, and Turlock serving 52 cities across the Central Valley.

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