Roofing Contractors in Pike Creek, Delaware
Established 1970s–80s valley neighborhoods northwest of Wilmington. We’ll match you with one vetted, licensed contractor who genuinely works in Pike Creek — not a call center pretending to, and not a list of five strangers.
- One vetted pro — no bidding war, no call list
- Must confirm they work 19808 before matching
- No lead goes out without a checked license & insurance
- Free to you, no obligation to hire
Your roofing quote in Pike Creek
One vetted local pro. Free, no obligation.
What roofing work in Pike Creek actually looks like
Homes built in the 70s and 80s here are typically on roof #2, installed in the late 90s or 2000s, which puts them right at replacement age now. Townhome and duplex roofs bring the shared-roof-plane conversation with them: coordinating with a neighbor or the HOA is often part of the job, and it’s worth knowing before you get three quotes on a roof that isn’t entirely yours.
The housing stock here
Pike Creek is a mature suburb: colonials, splits and townhomes built largely in the 1970s and 80s, arranged around the golf course and the valley. Well-kept, established, heavily owner-occupied — and universally at the age where the second roof and the first window replacement come due.
Neighborhoods we cover in Pike Creek: Linden Hill, Woods at Limestone, Pike Creek Valley, Fox Meadow, Cedars, Skyline.
Permits in Pike Creek: Unincorporated — New Castle County Land Use.
$9,000 – $28,000 for a typical full replacement
Roof pricing in New Castle County moves with square footage, pitch, number of layers to tear off, and whether the decking underneath is sound. Any contractor who quotes you over the phone without seeing the roof is guessing.
This is a county-wide range, not a Pike Creek quote. What your house costs depends on your house — which is exactly why we send contractors to look at it.
Signs you should get quotes
- Shingle granules in the gutters
- A ceiling stain that comes and goes
- Curling, cupping or missing tabs
- Your roof is 20+ years old
Roofing jobs we match for in Pike Creek
- Full roof replacement (asphalt shingle)
- Roof repair & leak tracing
- Storm and wind damage assessment
- Insurance claim documentation
- Flat & low-slope roofing (TPO, EPDM, modified bitumen)
- Metal roofing
- Skylight & chimney flashing
- Ridge vent & attic ventilation
- Ice dam remediation
- Free roof inspections
Roofing in Pike Creek: common questions
Do you have roofing contractors who work in Pike Creek?
That's the bar we hold: a contractor must confirm they actively service Pike Creek (19808) before we hand over your project — we don't pass your details to a company that's an hour away and hoping. Send us the project and we'll match it with one contractor who meets that bar; if the match isn't right, we'll send one more, one at a time. And if we don't have coverage for your job in Pike Creek, we'll tell you that instead of wasting your afternoon.
Who issues the permit for roofing work in Pike Creek?
Unincorporated — New Castle County Land Use. Whichever office it is, the contractor should pull the permit under their own license — if one asks you to pull it as a homeowner, that's usually a sign they can't.
How long does a roof replacement take?
A standard single-family asphalt roof is usually a one- to two-day job once materials are on site. Tear-off happens in the morning, dry-in the same day — a reputable crew will not leave your decking exposed overnight.
Will insurance pay for my roof?
Insurance covers sudden damage (wind, hail, a fallen limb) — not age or wear. If a storm has come through, document it with photos and dates before any repairs, and get the contractor’s assessment in writing. Contractors in our network are used to working alongside adjusters, but be wary of anyone who promises to "get your claim approved" or offers to cover your deductible. That is insurance fraud in Delaware, and it makes you a party to it.
Do I need a permit to replace a roof in New Castle County?
Usually yes — most Northern Delaware jurisdictions require a building permit for a roof replacement, and the contractor should pull it under their own license. If a contractor asks *you* to pull the permit as a homeowner, that is a red flag: it often means they aren’t licensed to.
Should I go with the cheapest quote?
The gap between bids is usually explained by what’s in them — tear-off vs. layover, drip edge and ice-and-water shield, decking replacement allowance, and whether the warranty is manufacturer-backed. Ask each contractor to price the same scope, then the numbers are actually comparable.
Other work in Pike Creek
Roofing in nearby towns
Get your roofing quote in Pike Creek
Tell us about the project once. We'll match you with one vetted, licensed contractor serving Pike Creek — no bidding war, and no obligation to hire anyone.