Craftsman Roofing LLC serves Tuscaloosa, Northport, Birmingham, and surrounding Alabama communities.
Call 205-826-2759

How to Choose a Roofing Contractor in Tuscaloosa

Published May 6, 2026 • By Craftsman Roofing LLC

Choosing a roofing contractor is one of the most important decisions a homeowner makes, and unfortunately, it is also one of the easiest places to get burned. After every major storm in the Tuscaloosa, Northport, and Birmingham area, out-of-state crews show up, knock on doors, and disappear as soon as the check clears. Meanwhile, local contractors with real track records are the ones who will still be here if something goes wrong two years from now.

Here is a practical guide to finding a roofer you can actually trust.

Start with Licensing and Insurance

This is non-negotiable. In Alabama, roofing contractors must hold a valid Home Builders License issued by the Alabama Home Builders Licensure Board. You can verify any contractor's license online through the Board's website.

What to confirm:

  • Active Alabama Home Builders License. Ask for the license number and look it up. If they cannot provide one, walk away.
  • General liability insurance. This protects you if the crew damages your property during the job. Ask for a certificate of insurance, not just a verbal assurance.
  • Workers' compensation insurance. If a worker is injured on your property and the contractor does not carry workers' comp, you could be liable. This matters more than most homeowners realize.

Any reputable contractor will provide these documents without hesitation. If someone gets defensive when you ask, that tells you everything you need to know.

Check Their Local Track Record

A company's Google reviews are one of the most reliable signals of quality. Look for contractors with a substantial number of reviews (not just five or ten) and a rating above 4.5 stars. More importantly, read the actual reviews. Pay attention to comments about communication, cleanup, and how the company handled problems when they came up.

Other ways to verify a local track record:

  • How long have they been in the area? A company that has been working in Tuscaloosa for years is less likely to disappear than one that set up shop last month.
  • Can they show you local projects? A good contractor should be able to point to roofs they have done in your neighborhood or nearby.
  • Do they have a physical address? A P.O. box or out-of-state address is a red flag. You want someone whose office you could drive to if needed.

Understand What Manufacturer Certifications Mean

Certifications from manufacturers like GAF, TAMKO, and CertainTeed are not just marketing badges. They indicate that the contractor has met specific training requirements and follows installation standards set by the material manufacturer. This matters because it directly affects your warranty.

Here is the practical difference: if a non-certified contractor installs GAF shingles on your home, you may only get the basic material warranty. If a GAF-certified installer does the same job, you may qualify for enhanced warranty coverage that includes both materials and workmanship, sometimes up to 50 years.

When comparing contractors, ask specifically which manufacturer certifications they hold and what warranty options those certifications unlock for your project.

Get Multiple Estimates, but Compare Apples to Apples

Getting three estimates is standard advice, and it is good advice. But the cheapest number on paper is not always the best value. When comparing estimates, make sure each one specifies:

  • Scope of work. Does the estimate include tear-off of the old roof, or are they going over existing shingles? Are they replacing damaged decking, or just the surface materials?
  • Materials. What brand and product line? There is a real difference between a basic 3-tab shingle and an architectural shingle from the same manufacturer.
  • Underlayment and ice-and-water shield. Some contractors cut costs by using felt paper instead of synthetic underlayment. In Alabama's climate, synthetic is worth the upgrade.
  • Flashing and ventilation. A complete job includes new flashing around penetrations and adequate ridge and soffit ventilation. If these are not mentioned in the estimate, ask why.
  • Cleanup and disposal. The estimate should include removing all debris, running a magnetic nail sweep, and hauling away the old materials.

A lowball estimate often means corners are being cut somewhere. If one bid is significantly lower than the others, ask what is different about their approach. The answer will be revealing.

Watch for These Red Flags

After years of working in the Tuscaloosa roofing market, here are the warning signs that a homeowner should not ignore:

  • Door-to-door solicitation after storms. Legitimate local companies do not need to canvas neighborhoods. Storm chasers do.
  • Pressure to sign immediately. Any contractor who says you must sign today to lock in a price is using pressure tactics. A real estimate should be valid for at least 30 days.
  • Asking for full payment upfront. A reasonable deposit (10 to 30 percent) is normal. Asking for the full amount before work starts is not.
  • No written contract. Every detail should be in writing: scope, materials, timeline, payment schedule, warranty terms, and what happens if unexpected issues arise during the job.
  • Offering to waive your insurance deductible. This is illegal in Alabama. Any contractor who offers this is willing to commit fraud, which tells you how they will handle the rest of the job.

Questions to Ask Before You Sign

These questions will help you separate the professionals from the pretenders:

  1. What is your Alabama Home Builders License number?
  2. Can I see your certificate of insurance?
  3. Which manufacturer certifications do you hold?
  4. Who will be the crew lead on my project, and will you be on site?
  5. What is the expected timeline from start to finish?
  6. How do you handle unexpected problems, like rotted decking found during tear-off?
  7. What warranty do I get on workmanship, and what does the manufacturer warranty cover?
  8. Can you walk me through the payment schedule?

A contractor who answers these questions clearly and confidently is someone you can work with. If you are weighing whether you need a repair or replacement, the right contractor will help you make that decision honestly instead of pushing you toward the bigger job.

Why Local Matters in Alabama

Roofing in Alabama comes with specific challenges: severe storm season, extreme summer heat, high humidity, and soil conditions that affect drainage and foundation loading. A contractor who has been working in this climate for years understands these factors in a way that an out-of-state crew simply does not.

Local contractors also have relationships with local suppliers, which means better material availability and pricing. And perhaps most importantly, they have a reputation in the community that they need to protect. That accountability matters when you are trusting someone with the most important protective system on your home.

If your roof has been through a rough storm season and you are not sure where things stand, a professional inspection is the best starting point. A trustworthy contractor will tell you what they find, explain your options, and let you decide without pressure.

Ready to Talk to a Local Roofing Team?

Craftsman Roofing LLC holds Alabama Home Builders License No. 31543, carries full insurance, and is certified by GAF, TAMKO, and CertainTeed. We have a 4.9-star rating across 60 Google reviews from homeowners in Tuscaloosa, Northport, and Birmingham. Call us for a free inspection and an honest recommendation.

Related Articles

More from the Craftsman Blog

Call NowFree Estimate