ROOFING CONTRACTRS IN EUGENE, OREGEON
Home Pros Construction is Eugene’s most-reviewed roofing team, with 551+ five-star reviews from homeowners across South Eugene, Cal Young, Bethel, Santa Clara, and surrounding Lane County communities. We deliver 12 specialized roofing services engineered for Eugene’s 46-inch annual rainfall and the moss pressure that comes with it. Licensed, bonded, and insured in Oregon (CCB #246874) — free roof inspections, same-week estimates.
- 551+ five-star reviews from Eugene homeowners
- 12 specialized roofing services for Eugene homes
- Oregon CCB licensed, bonded, insured CCB #246874
- GAF / Owens Corning certified installer
- Free Eugene roof inspections with same-week estimates
Our Memberships and Certifications
What Makes Roofing in Eugene, Oregon Different?
Roofing in Eugene means building for 46 inches of annual rain, year-round moss growth, and a city where most homes are 45 years old.
Here’s what that actually means for your roof.
Eugene gets more rain days than any other major city on Oregon’s I-5 corridor: 155+ per year. That’s a lot of water and a steady, persistent dampness that keeps your roof surface dark and wet almost year-round. That environment is exactly what moss needs to take hold. On a north-facing slope in Eugene, moss can start growing into your shingles within 2–3 years of a new installation, not 10 or 15 years like you might see in drier parts of Oregon.
Those same wet conditions shorten shingle life. An asphalt shingle rated to last 30 years in Central Oregon typically lasts only 20–25 years in Eugene. The math is simple: 155 soaking-and-drying cycles every year wears shingles out faster than the manufacturer’s test conditions assume. Add moss working its way under shingle edges, and you can lose years off your roof before anything looks wrong from the street.
On elevated Eugene neighborhoods like Crest Drive and the South Eugene hillsides, there’s an additional problem: ice dams. When ice builds up at the eaves and then melts, the water has nowhere to go except backward, up under your shingles. That happens regardless of how new or intact your shingles are.
Most Eugene homes were built in the 1960s through 1980s, and their attics weren’t built to modern standards. The average home in Eugene is about 45 years old, and that 1960s–1980s build era predates Oregon’s current requirements for attic airflow by 20 to 30 years. On a typical Cal Young or Harlow home from that era, the attic venting is 30–50% below what’s required today. Most homeowners have no idea because the damage it causes happens out of sight.
Without enough airflow, warm air from inside your home rises into a cold attic on wet winter days and turns into condensation on the underside of your roof deck. Over 5–10 years, that moisture quietly weakens the wood, sometimes to the point where the decking needs full replacement before a single shingle shows any sign of trouble on the outside.
That’s the Eugene roofing problem in plain terms: more moisture than most of Oregon, moss that moves fast, aging homes with under-ventilated attics, and materials that need to be specified for these conditions, not for drier markets across the Cascades.
There are more than 60 roofing companies serving the Eugene-Springfield market. The average local competitor has about 85 Google reviews. Home Pros Construction has earned 551+ five-star reviews from Eugene-area homeowners — 6× the local market average — from customers who’ve seen first-hand what it looks like when a Eugene roof is done right.
Below, you’ll find every roofing service we offer for Eugene homes, each built around these conditions.
What Roofing Services Do We Offer for Eugene, OR Homes?
Home Pros Construction provides 12 specialized roofing services across Eugene, each built around the city’s 46-inch annual rainfall, IECC Zone 4C Marine code requirements, and a median housing age of 45 years across approximately 74,000 households.
Asphalt Shingle Roof Replacement in Eugene, OR
Architectural asphalt shingle covers approximately 78% of Eugene’s single-family homes, from Bethel to South Eugene. Standard asphalt shingles rated for 30 years in Central Oregon deliver only 20–25 years of service life in Eugene’s Zone 4C Marine climate, where 155+ annual rain days sustain the moss growth that begins penetrating granule layers within 2–3 years on untreated north-facing slopes. Every Home Pros asphalt replacement in Eugene specifies algae-resistant (AR) granule shingles (such as Owens Corning Duration Storm) and CertainTeed Landmark AR synthetic underlayment rated for marine climate thermal cycling, and ice-and-water shield at all eaves and valleys as a non-negotiable baseline. For Eugene homes built in the 1960s–1980s, deck-level attic inspection before shingle selection is mandatory: OSB sheathing carrying cumulative condensation damage requires replacement before new shingles can perform to rated life. The City of Eugene Building & Permit Services re-roof permit ($180–$320) is pulled by Home Pros on your behalf and is included in every project scope.
See our asphalt shingle roofing process for Eugene homes →
Roof Repair in Eugene, OR
Roof repair demand in Eugene peaks across two seasonal windows: February through April, when post-winter storm damage reveals itself after ice loads clear from elevated Eugene properties, and September through November, when homeowners schedule preventive assessments before Eugene’s 155-rain-day season resumes. Eugene’s 1960s–1980s housing stock generates recurring repair needs at three specific failure points: step flashing at dormers degrades to open gaps within 15–20 years as sealant dries under repeated wet-dry cycling; open valleys on hip roofs from the same era fail as the original sealant cracks under Zone 4C thermal movement; and ridge cap on low-slope sections below 4:12 pitch lifts under 40–60 mph Willamette Valley frontal system winds. Same-week estimates and 48-hour emergency tarping are available year-round across all Eugene ZIP codes (97401–97408, 97440).
See our Eugene roof repair services →
Storm Damage Roof Repair in Eugene, OR
Willamette Valley windstorm events generate sustained winds of 40–60+ mph across Eugene’s hillside neighborhoods, enough to displace architectural shingles when fastener patterns are off-standard or adhesive strips have aged beyond their 10–15-year activation cycle. South Eugene, Crest Drive, and Cal Young properties under mature Douglas fir and Oregon white oak canopies average one qualifying storm-damage event every 3–5 years. Storm damage in Eugene presents as four documented failure types: missing or lifted shingles on west and south-facing exposures, cracked or displaced ridge cap, branch-impact puncture on steep-pitch South Eugene roofs, and debris-blocked valleys generating water infiltration within 24–48 hours of a storm event. Home Pros provides Xactimate-formatted photographic damage documentation, direct communication with Eugene-area insurance adjusters throughout the claims process, and 48-hour emergency tarping anywhere within our Lane County service radius to contain damage between the storm event and the permanent repair.
Get Eugene storm damage repair help →
Roof Inspection in Eugene, OR
A Home Pros Eugene roof inspection evaluates eight documented failure categories:
- moss and algae colony coverage by slope orientation
- granule loss depth at valleys and eaves
- deck saturation indicators visible during attic access
- ventilation net free area versus the IECC Zone 4C Marine minimum of 1:150
- flashing condition at all dormers and penetrations
- ridge and hip cap integrity
- gutter integration at the eave perimeter
- ice-and-water shield coverage status
Most inspection services in Eugene’s 60+ contractor market complete surface-only visual assessments without attic access. Attic inspection is the highest-value component for Eugene’s 1960s–1980s housing stock, where condensation-driven OSB saturation is the most frequently discovered hidden cost in a replacement estimate. Free inspections are available with same-week scheduling across all Eugene ZIP codes (97401–97408, 97440).
Schedule your free Eugene roof inspection →
Metal Roofing Installation in Eugene, OR
Metal roofing adoption in Lane County is growing at approximately 12% year-over-year, driven by Eugene homeowners replacing second asphalt shingle roofs who want a 40–70-year system rather than a third 20–25-year shingle cycle. Standing seam steel eliminates the three primary failure modes of asphalt in Eugene’s climate: granule bond breakdown from 155 annual wetting cycles, moss rhizoid penetration of the shingle surface, and adhesive strip failure on north-facing exposures. For elevated Eugene properties on Crest Drive and near Hendricks Park, where elevation-driven ice events occur 3–5 times per decade, metal roofing’s snow-load rating and self-shedding profile address structural risks that asphalt shingles cannot. Metal installation requires full deck removal, saturation assessment, and re-sheathing where OSB moisture content exceeds acceptable tolerances; wind-uplift calculations required by the City of Eugene Building & Permit Services are included in our permit package at no additional cost.
Learn about metal roofing for Eugene homes →
Gutter Installation and Gutter Guards in Eugene, OR
A 1,800-square-foot Eugene home receiving 46 inches of annual rainfall generates approximately 28,000 gallons of roof runoff per year, a volume that exceeds the flow capacity of standard 4-inch K-style gutters during the 1–2 inch-per-hour rain events that occur 8–12 times per year in Eugene’s wet season. Eugene’s mature urban tree canopy (Douglas fir needle drop September through November and big-leaf maple leaf fall October through December) can fill a 5-inch K-style gutter to capacity in under 30 days during peak fall season in heavily canopied neighborhoods including Cal Young, South Eugene, River Road, and Harlow. Overflowing gutters direct water against fascia and soffit boards rated for incidental moisture contact, not 46 inches of annual splash-back loading. Home Pros installs seamless 5-inch and 6-inch K-style aluminum systems and matches gutter guard media (micromesh, reverse-curve, or brush-type) to the specific leaf-load composition of each Eugene neighborhood’s canopy rather than applying a single-system default.
See our Eugene gutter installation options →
Flat Roofing (TPO and EPDM) in Eugene, OR
Eugene’s commercial districts, including Whiteaker, 5th Street Public Market, downtown, Oakway Center, and the Gateway corridor at the Springfield city limit, house a large inventory of flat and low-slope roofing systems operating on a 15–25-year membrane replacement cycle. EPDM membranes achieve a documented service life of 20–25 years in Eugene’s Zone 4C Marine climate, with verified thermal cycling performance across the 35–90°F temperature range characteristic of Lane County winters and summers. TPO heat-welded seams achieve pull resistance of 35+ lbs/inch, superior to adhered EPDM lap joints on flat roofs with complex penetration fields, which are common in Whiteaker’s mixed-use commercial building stock. Both systems require annual seam inspection in Eugene’s climate. A single undetected membrane seam failure allows water infiltration that averages $8,000–$25,000 in interior remediation cost on a commercial flat roof.
See our Eugene commercial flat roofing services →
Siding and Exterior Services in Eugene, OR
Eugene’s 46-inch annual rainfall compromises the full building envelope, not the roof alone. Original T1-11 siding on Eugene homes built in the 1970s–1980s carries an effective moisture-resistance life of 20–30 years; hardboard lap siding from the same era begins delaminating within 15–20 years when end-grain sealing fails under repeated wetting cycles. Both siding types are present in high concentrations in Bethel, Santa Clara, and River Road. These are the same neighborhoods where we most frequently encounter interior moisture damage when opening walls during roofing projects. Home Pros installs James Hardie fiber cement siding (warranted for 30 years and rated for Zone 4C Marine conditions) and LP SmartSide engineered wood, which carries a 50-year substrate warranty and a 5/50 finish warranty in Oregon’s marine climate zone. Coordinating siding replacement with a re-roof in a single mobilization allows integrated flashing at the roof-wall interface, eliminating the handoff failures common when roofing and siding trades sequence separately.
When We Work, What We Install, and What’s Always Included

The best time to replace a Eugene roof is late May through mid-September
That 16-week stretch is Eugene’s driest window: monthly rainfall drops below 3 inches, and we get the consecutive dry days that a proper installation actually needs. Adhesives need time to cure, the ice-and-water shield that protects your eaves needs to bond correctly, and the sealant around chimneys, vents, and dormers needs dry conditions to set. Outside that window, full replacements are harder to schedule, but repairs, inspections, moss treatments, gutter work, and ventilation fixes run all year long.
The two busiest times of year for inspections and repairs are September through November and February through April. The fall rush is mostly homeowners wanting a professional set of eyes on their roof before the rains arrive. The spring rush is the opposite: homeowners dealing with what the winter left behind. And if a storm damages your roof in the middle of January, we offer emergency tarping anywhere in our Lane County service area within 48 hours.

Every roof we install in Eugene is specified for Eugene
not for Eastern Oregon, not for a generic Pacific Northwest climate. That means every installation includes algae-resistant granule shingles, synthetic underlayment rated for the wet/dry thermal cycling that Eugene’s marine climate produces, and ice-and-water shield at every eave and valley. These aren’t upgrade options we charge extra for; they’re the baseline, because standard materials spec’d for drier Oregon markets typically fall 5–8 years short of their rated life here.
Every re-roof in Eugene also requires a City of Eugene building permit, which we pull for you. The cost runs $180–$320 depending on the scope of the project. That’s it. Nothing falls on you to track down, fill out, or follow up on.

Moss prevention is built into every installation we do
It’s not a line item, and it’s not optional. We install a zinc strip at the ridge of every roof, which releases a low-level biocide down the entire roof surface with every rainfall. We also correct attic ventilation to meet the minimums required for Eugene’s climate. A poorly ventilated attic creates the warm, humid underside conditions that help moss thrive from below, even when the top of the roof looks clean. Together, these two measures add an estimated 5–10 years to the working life of a new Eugene roof compared to a shingle-only replacement that skips ventilation and moss control entirely.
SCHEDULE YOUR FREE ROOF INSPECTION
Which Eugene Homeowners and Businesses Need Our Roofing Services?
Eugene’s distinct housing eras and commercial districts create a range of specific roofing conditions, from 1920s South Eugene Craftsman homes requiring period-appropriate shingle matching to Whiteaker commercial buildings running annual TPO and EPDM maintenance cycles on a 15–25-year membrane replacement schedule.
Homeowners in South Eugene and Friendly neighborhoods
Typically own 1920s–1950s Craftsman, Tudor, and bungalow properties where cedar shake and period-appropriate shingle selection must satisfy HOA design requirements before work begins, and where a 5/8-inch minimum butt thickness and stainless fastener specification is required for Zone 4C Marine cedar warranty coverage. Cal Young, Harlow, and Gilham residents predominantly own 1970s–1990s single-family homes with attic ventilation running 30–50% below current IECC Zone 4C Marine minimums, making ventilation correction a standard component of second-cycle replacement work. Bethel, Santa Clara, and River Road homeowners frequently have mid-century properties with original board sheathing rather than OSB, which changes fastener pattern requirements and deck repair specifications for new shingle installation.
Commercial property owners
In Whiteaker, 5th Street Public Market, downtown Eugene, Oakway Center, and the Gateway district operate flat roofing systems (primarily TPO and EPDM) that require annual seam inspection to maintain manufacturer warranty validity and prevent the $8,000–$25,000 interior remediation costs associated with an undetected membrane failure under 46 inches of annual rainfall.
Property managers
Overseeing Lane County rental portfolios and multifamily housing benefit from biannual inspection contracts timed to Eugene’s two peak damage windows: September–November and February–April.
Rural Lane County homeowners
In Creswell (approximately 15 miles south of Eugene), Veneta (20 miles west near Fern Ridge Reservoir), and Pleasant Hill and Cottage Grove in south Lane County specify metal roofing at above-metro-average rates, driven by its 40–70-year lifespan and snow-load ratings appropriate for higher-elevation properties with longer eave configurations and greater exposure to Coast Range gap wind events.
Why Do Eugene Homeowners Choose Home Pros Construction?
Home Pros Construction holds 551+ five-star reviews from Eugene-area customers. That’s 6x the approximately 85-review average across Eugene-Springfield’s 60+ roofing competitors.
Oregon CCB #246874 is required on every re-roof permit application filed with the City of Eugene Building & Permit Services. Our license, bond, and general liability insurance are current and verifiable through the Oregon Construction Contractors Board public database at no request required. We provide the CCB number in writing at every project estimate.
Our GAF Master Elite and Owens Corning Platinum certifications are held by fewer than 2% of roofing contractors nationally. These credentials authorize us to issue extended manufacturer warranties of up to 50 years on qualifying systems; a warranty tier that is structurally unavailable through non-certified contractors and a meaningful financial protection on an $8,500–$38,000 Eugene roofing investment.
Home Pros Construction is a family-owned, Oregon-based business. Every project manager holds direct working knowledge of the City of Eugene permit process, Zone 4C Marine material specifications, and neighborhood-level housing stock conditions across Lane County.
Local Eugene references from projects completed in South Eugene, Bethel, and Cal Young within the past 12 months are available on request.
Where Do We Provide Roofing Services Near Eugene?
Home Pros Construction serves all Eugene neighborhoods and surrounding Lane County communities. Same-week scheduling is available across all Eugene ZIP codes: 97401, 97402, 97403, 97404, 97405, 97408, and 97440.
South Eugene — Historic neighborhoods south of 24th Avenue with a concentration of 1920s–1950s Craftsman and bungalow homes; shingle selection must match established architectural character, and HOA design review consultation is available before material specification is finalized.
Cal Young and Coburg Road corridor — Mid-century to 1980s single-family homes across a heavily canopied grid; the majority are entering a second replacement cycle, with attic ventilation running 30–50% below IECC Zone 4C Marine minimums in most homes built before 1985.
Bethel and Santa Clara — West Eugene mid-century housing stock, frequently with original board decking rather than OSB; deck repair specifications and fastener patterns differ from standard OSB replacement procedures.
River Road — North Eugene along the Willamette River corridor; flood-adjacent lots where downspout discharge direction and gutter capacity require site-specific engineering relative to lot grade and proximity to the 100-year floodplain.
Whiteaker — Historic residential and mixed-use commercial; TPO and EPDM flat roofing maintenance, cedar shake restoration, and period-appropriate shingle options for Blair Boulevard and surrounding streets.
Harlow and Gilham — 1970s–1990s subdivisions, majority entering a second roof cycle; ventilation correction from 1:220–1:300 to Zone 4C Marine 1:150 minimum is routine before installation.
Springfield (east) — Adjacent market covering Thurston, Gateway, and Mohawk corridors at Eugene’s eastern boundary; full service available under the same permit and specification standards as Eugene proper.
Creswell (~15 min south) — Rural Lane County properties where metal roofing adoption is growing at approximately 12% year-over-year driven by the 40–70-year lifespan and snow-load ratings relevant to higher-elevation sites.
Veneta (~20 min west) — Fern Ridge area homes with significant wind exposure through the Coast Range gap; metal roofing and ring-shank fastener schedules for wind-uplift resistance.
Pleasant Hill and Cottage Grove — South Lane County mix of mid-century residences and rural properties; full roofing service available.
We also serve homeowners beyond Lane County through our sibling location teams, including roofing contractors in Corvallis, roofing contractors in Roseburg, and roofing contractors in Salem.
Frequently Asked Questions About Roofing Contractors in Eugene, Oregon
1. How much does a new roof cost in Eugene, Oregon?
Asphalt shingle replacement in Eugene costs $8,500–$18,000 for a typical 1,800–2,400 sq ft home. Metal roofing for the same footprint runs $18,000–$38,000. Cedar shake replacement runs $20,000–$30,000. All Home Pros estimates include the City of Eugene re-roof permit ($180–$320), which we pull on your behalf.
Eugene roofing costs run 15–20% higher than comparable projects in Central Oregon or Eastern Oregon markets because Zone 4C Marine conditions require three materials that are optional specs in drier climates but mandatory performance requirements in 46-inch annual rainfall: synthetic underlayment (approximately $0.25–$0.40 per square foot above standard felt), algae-resistant (AR) granule shingles (approximately $15–$30 per roofing square above standard architectural shingles), and ice-and-water shield at all eaves and valleys. Ventilation corrections are required on most Eugene homes built before 1985 and add $800–$2,500 to a typical replacement project cost. These line items are not negotiable in Eugene’s climate. They are the minimum specification for a roof that will perform to rated life.
2. How long does a roof last in Eugene's climate?
Architectural asphalt shingles in Eugene last 20–25 years.That’s 5–10 years shorter than the 30+ year rated life achieved in Central Oregon. Standing seam metal roofing in Eugene lasts 40–70 years. Cedar shake in Eugene lasts 20–30 years with treatment every 3–5 years. North-facing slopes in Eugene age 20–30% faster than south-facing exposures because of sustained year-round moss pressure.
The shorter service life for asphalt shingles in Zone 4C Marine results from three measurable mechanisms working simultaneously. First, moss rhizoid penetration of the granule layer begins within 2–3 years on untreated north-facing slopes and physically lifts tab edges by 1–3mm, enough to allow water infiltration under Willamette Valley wind-load events. Second, Eugene’s 155 annual wetting cycles accelerate granule bond breakdown at a rate approximately 30% faster than the ASTM D3462 standard test, which uses wet-dry cycles modeled on continental climates. Third, ice-dam formation at the eaves of elevated Eugene properties generates hydrostatic pressure that drives water beneath shingles regardless of granule condition. Metal roofing and treated cedar shake are both viable 40-to-50-year alternatives for Eugene homeowners who have already cycled through one or two asphalt shingle roofs.
3. Do I need a permit to replace my roof in Eugene?
Yes. The City of Eugene Building & Permit Services requires a re-roof permit for most replacement projects within Eugene city limits. Home Pros Construction pulls the permit on your behalf. No action required from you. The permit fee is $180–$320 depending on project scope and square footage.
The permit requirement applies to all work involving removal and replacement of roof covering materials on residential and commercial structures within Eugene. Completing a re-roof without the required permit creates two consequences with direct financial impact: (1) It voids the coverage of Owens Corning, GAF, and CertainTeed manufacturer warranties from the installation date, and (2) Oregon law requires sellers to disclose known permit violations to buyers; an unpermitted re-roof creates a material disclosure obligation that can reduce a Eugene home’s net sale value by $5,000–$15,000 depending on scope. Home Pros pulls every Eugene re-roof permit through the City of Eugene Building & Permit Services portal as a standard project deliverable.
4. What is the best roofing material for Eugene's rain?
Architectural asphalt with AR granules is the Eugene standard, covering approximately 78% of the city’s housing stock and delivering 20–25 years of service life in Zone 4C Marine conditions. Standing seam metal roofing is the best-performing material in 46-inch rainfall, with a 40–70-year lifespan and near-zero moss adhesion on factory-coated panels. Cedar shake suits historic South Eugene and Friendly neighborhood homes with a 3–5-year treatment schedule.
Material performance in Eugene’s climate is determined by four criteria: moss resistance, moisture cycling durability, flashing integrity, and service life relative to installation cost per year.
Algae-resistant (AR) granule shingles suppress rhizoid growth for 8–12 years on Eugene’s north-facing slopes, compared to 2–3 years for standard granules under identical exposure. Standing seam steel with PVDF coating achieves near-zero moss adhesion because the smooth, non-porous panel surface provides no organic foothold in Eugene’s 46-inch rainfall environment; its 40–70-year service life delivers a per-year cost of approximately $150–$300 for an average Eugene home, comparable to or lower than two asphalt shingle cycles over the same period. Cedar shake installed with grade-316 stainless fasteners is viable in South Eugene and Friendly neighborhood homes with established architectural character, provided it is maintained on a 3–5-year treatment schedule; galvanized fasteners begin rust-staining cedar shake in Eugene’s climate within 8–12 years.
5. When is the best time to replace a roof in Eugene?
Late May through mid-September is Eugene’s optimal installation window. That’s 16 consecutive weeks with fewer than 3 inches of rainfall per month. Home Pros schedules Eugene replacements 6–10 weeks out during peak season. Inspections, moss treatments, ventilation corrections, and emergency repairs are available year-round across all Eugene ZIP codes (97401–97408, 97440).
The May–September window is required for three time-sensitive installation steps that cannot be completed in wet conditions: AR shingle adhesive strip activation requires a minimum 60°F surface temperature for at least 24 hours post-installation; ice-and-water shield adhesive bonding at the eaves requires a dry deck surface for proper adhesion; and flashing sealant at penetrations and dormers requires a minimum 8-hour cure window before rain contact. Outside this window, installation is possible during dry breaks but may extend project timelines by 20–30% due to weather-monitoring requirements. September through November is our highest-demand period for inspection and preventive repair with homeowners completing pre-rain assessments before Eugene’s 155-rain-day season resumes. February through April drives our second peak in repair volume, as post-winter storm damage on elevated Eugene properties becomes accessible after ice loads clear.
6. How do I get rid of moss on my Eugene roof?
Soft-wash biocide treatment, followed by manual colony removal, followed by zinc or copper strip installation at the ridge. Never pressure washing. Pressure washing removes 30–40% of granule mass per treatment on standard architectural shingles and voids most manufacturer warranties for Zone 4C Marine installations. Eugene north-facing slopes require retreatment every 2–3 years to suppress rhizoid regrowth.
Correct sequencing matters in Eugene’s climate. Biocide application at manufacturer-specified dilution kills active moss colonies within 2–4 weeks; manual removal follows once colonies are dead and fragile enough to remove without granule abrasion. Zinc or copper strip installed with a minimum 6-inch exposure above the ridge cap produces metal-ion runoff across the full roof surface during every rain event. On a standard Eugene home with a 30-foot ridge-to-eave run, a single ridge strip provides effective coverage across approximately 60–70% of the roof surface area within 6–12 months of installation. North-facing slopes on steep-pitch South Eugene hillside roofs with 35-to-40-foot eave runs require intermediate zinc strip placement at 15–20-foot intervals below the ridge to achieve full-surface biocide coverage. Preventive retreatment every 2–3 years costs $300–$600 on a typical Eugene home.
7. Does my Eugene homeowners insurance cover roof damage?
Most Oregon homeowners policies cover storm, wind, and tree-fall damage. These are the three most common roof damage causes following Willamette Valley windstorm events in Eugene. Home Pros delivers adjuster-ready photographic documentation within 48–72 hours of a damage assessment. Wear-and-tear, moss damage, and deferred maintenance neglect are excluded from virtually all Oregon homeowners policies.
Oregon Insurance Division rules require insurers to acknowledge a claim within 10 days and resolve it within 30 days of receiving complete documentation. Home Pros provides:
- Time-stamped photographic documentation of all damaged areas to the granule level
- Written scope of damage formatted to Xactimate standards used by Eugene-area adjusters
- Direct adjuster communication throughout the inspection and estimate review process.
The distinction between covered storm damage and excluded wear-and-tear is the most frequently disputed element of Eugene roof claims, particularly on roofs more than 15 years old where storm damage and pre-existing granule loss exist on the same surface. Home Pros documentation creates a photographic record that separates storm-generated damage from pre-existing wear-and-tear, providing the evidentiary basis required for accurate claim resolution under Oregon Insurance Division standards.
What Oregon Homeowners Are Saying About Home Pros Construction
Ready for a Roof Built for Eugene’s Rain?
Call 541-209-6573 for a free Eugene roof inspection. Same-week estimate available. Home Pros Construction delivers 12 specialized roofing services built for Eugene’s 46-inch annual rainfall, backed by 551+ five-star reviews from Lane County homeowners and an Oregon-licensed team that pulls every City of Eugene permit on your behalf.
Serving Eugene since 2023 · 551+ five-star reviews · CCB #246874

