Fast, Reliable Roof Repair Across Las Vegas
If you’re a Las Vegas homeowner staring at a water stain on your ceiling after last night’s monsoon — and your concrete tile roof looks completely untouched from the street — you’re not imagining things. That’s the signature failure pattern we see on hundreds of homes across this valley every July through September. Our Roof Repair crew knows exactly where to look, and we move fast. Call (725) 220-2716 for a same-day assessment.
Why Vortex Roofing & Construction Las Vegas Valley Is Las Vegas’s Preferred Roof Repair Company
David Rogers doesn’t just run the company — he runs the job site. As Owner and Lead Technician at Vortex Roofing & Construction Las Vegas Valley, David is the person who climbs your roof, lifts your tile, and makes the call on what your repair actually needs. That level of direct accountability is rare in a market flooded with franchise crews and subcontracted labor, and Las Vegas homeowners who’ve been burned once by a no-show contractor notice the difference immediately.
Our Las Vegas reputation isn’t built on a handful of hand-picked testimonials — it’s 231 verified reviews averaging a perfect 5-star rating, earned one roof at a time across Summerlin, Henderson, Green Valley, and every zip code in between. Five years working exclusively in high-heat, high-UV, monsoon-season conditions means we understand failure modes that a roofer relocating from the Pacific Northwest simply hasn’t seen. When a monsoon cell tracks across the valley and the phones start ringing at 6 a.m., we’re already moving — not building a schedule for next week.
Our Roof Repair Services in Las Vegas
Leak Repair
Leak repair in Las Vegas is rarely as simple as finding a cracked tile. The overwhelming majority of leak calls we handle trace back to failed underlayment or separated flashing — not to any visible tile damage. We stage and lift the affected courses, inspect the felt layer directly, and address the actual failure point rather than caulking over a symptom. A targeted leak repair in Las Vegas typically runs $350–$850, depending on how far the moisture intrusion has tracked and whether valley flashing replacement is needed alongside the re-felt work.
Valley Repair
The roof valley — where two pitched planes meet — is the highest-volume water channel on any tile roof, and on Las Vegas homes that have been through seventeen or more monsoon seasons, it’s almost always where failure concentrates first. Thermal cycling works valley flashing fasteners loose over the years, and once the seam separates, a two-inch cloudburst drives water directly under the tile field with nowhere to go except your ceiling. Valley repairs in Las Vegas run $400–$950 for a single valley, with re-bedding included. We use high-temp materials rated for sustained desert surface temperatures — not standard products that blister off in a single summer.
Flashing Repair
Chimney, pipe, and wall flashing on Las Vegas homes fails faster than the same products in any northern market because the extreme UV and 115°F+ surface heat degrade standard rubber and EPDM compounds in two to three years rather than the expected decade. We’ve replaced flashing on Summerlin homes where a general contractor used off-the-shelf caulk to “repair” the joint — a fix that looked clean in spring and was leaking by August. Flashing repairs in Las Vegas range from $200–$600 depending on the flashing type and accessibility.
Flat Roof Patch
Commercial properties and single-story additions throughout central Las Vegas frequently carry flat or low-slope sections alongside tile fields, and those membranes take a brutal beating from UV and standing water after monsoon events. We patch and reseal flat roof sections using materials specified for the Las Vegas UV envelope — not generic coatings rated for moderate climates. A flat roof patch in Las Vegas typically costs $300–$700 for a contained repair area, with full re-coating scoped separately based on square footage.
Vent Boot Repair
Vent boots — the rubber or lead collars that seal plumbing penetrations through the roof — are one of the most commonly overlooked failure points in Las Vegas. Standard EPDM boots rated for moderate climates can blister, crack, and pull away from the pipe in a single Las Vegas summer when surface temps regularly exceed 150°F on a dark tile field. We spec and install boots rated for sustained high-heat exposure, and we don’t just drop a new collar over a deteriorated one — we inspect the surrounding felt before we seal. Vent boot repairs in Las Vegas run $150–$350 per penetration.
Shingle Replacement
Asphalt shingles are comparatively rare on Las Vegas residential roofs — the city’s 1990s–2007 building boom was almost entirely concrete and clay tile — but they do appear on some older mid-century homes near downtown and on certain commercial accessory structures. When we do shingle work in Las Vegas, we reach for products like Owens Corning or IKO lines that carry meaningful temperature ratings, not builder-grade materials that have no business being in a desert climate. Shingle replacement in Las Vegas runs $4.50–$9.00 per square foot installed, with the full scope depending on deck condition and material grade.
What happens when you call
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A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
The Las Vegas Roof Problem Nobody Sees Coming
Here’s the thing that catches homeowners completely off guard: Las Vegas is dominated by Spanish and Mediterranean-style tract homes built during the 2000–2007 construction boom in master-planned communities from outer Summerlin to Henderson’s newer loops — and virtually every one of them was roofed with concrete tile over 30-lb felt underlayment. The tile itself is nearly indestructible. It still looks factory-fresh after twenty years. But the felt paper underneath has been cooking at 115°F+ every summer, baking under a UV index that ranks among the highest recorded anywhere in North America. In a milder climate, that underlayment lasts 25–30 years. In Las Vegas, it fails in 15–20 — often turning to powder or dry crumble long before any homeowner suspects a problem. The waterproofing layer is simply gone, and nobody knows until the monsoon arrives.
We fielded a call from a Green Valley homeowner the morning after a monsoon cell dropped two inches in forty minutes. Water was running down an interior wall. Every concrete tile on the Boral-capped roof sat perfectly intact and properly lapped — not a single displaced tile anywhere. When we staged and lifted the ridge course, the 30-lb felt beneath crumbled in our hands like dry crackers. The valley flashing underneath had separated at the seam where seventeen summers of thermal cycling had worked the fasteners loose. We re-felted the affected field sections with a high-temp synthetic underlayment rated specifically for the Las Vegas UV envelope, reset the Boral tiles, and re-bedded the open valley. The repair stopped the intrusion the same afternoon. This is not a rare case. This is Tuesday in July.
The compounding problem is what happens when general contractors unfamiliar with Las Vegas tile work attempt a “repair” by caulking or re-grouting tile joints from above. It looks like a fix. It is not a fix. The caulk bridges the surface, the felt beneath continues to desiccate, and the same homeowner calls back after the following monsoon season — except now a larger section of the underlayment field has dried out and the repair scope has grown significantly. If you’re in Henderson or the outer Summerlin loops and your home was built between 2000 and 2008, the question isn’t whether your underlayment is degrading. The question is how far along it is.
Trusted Brands We Service in Las Vegas
Las Vegas tile roofs require materials spec’d for a desert environment, not a general-purpose roofing catalog. When an Atlas or Tamko product is the right fit for a flat section or a shingle application on an older property, we know those lines well and stock common components locally to avoid waiting on distributor orders. On tile roofs — which is the majority of what we repair across Las Vegas — we work directly with materials like Boral and source high-temp synthetic underlayments rated for the conditions your roof actually faces. The right material for Las Vegas is not always the most popular brand on a national chart, and we’ll tell you which product fits your roof rather than defaulting to whatever is cheapest to source.
Common Roof Repair Problems We See in Las Vegas Homes
- Underlayment rot beneath intact-looking concrete tile. The single most common misdiagnosis in Las Vegas — homeowners delay calling because the tile surface looks perfect, while the 30-lb felt underneath has fully desiccated from years of extreme heat. By the time the first monsoon leak appears, the degraded area is often much wider than a targeted patch can address.
- Valley flashing separation on boom-era tile roofs. Homes built in the 2000–2007 surge — particularly in Henderson and the outer Summerlin corridor along US-95 — are all hitting the same thermal fatigue threshold simultaneously. Valley flashing fasteners work loose over repeated heat-expansion and cool-contraction cycles, and the seam opens up exactly where the roof funnels the most water.
- Vent boots cracked and pulling away from the pipe. Standard rubber boots applied during original construction were not rated for sustained Las Vegas surface temperatures. After a decade or more on a south-facing slope, they blister, harden, and lose their seal — often well before the homeowner notices anything inside the house.
- Caulked “repairs” masking deeper felt failure. A pattern we see regularly on Las Vegas homes that have had previous contractor contact: someone ran a bead of caulk along a tile joint or flashing seam, called it fixed, and collected payment. The underlying felt rot or flashing separation continues unchecked. When we show up after the next monsoon, we remove the surface patch and find the real problem waiting underneath.
Pricing for Roof Repair in Las Vegas, NV
Las Vegas roof repair pricing reflects the tile-specialist skill set the work requires — lifting, inspecting, and re-setting concrete tile is a different scope than shingle work, and the underlayment products rated for this climate cost more than generic felt. Here’s what to expect in the current Las Vegas market:
- Vent boot repair: $150–$350 per penetration
- Flashing repair (pipe, chimney, or wall): $200–$600
- Flat roof patch: $300–$700 for a contained area
- Targeted leak repair (field re-felt + tile reset): $350–$850
- Valley repair (flashing replacement + re-bedding): $400–$950 per valley
- Shingle replacement (where applicable): $4.50–$9.00 per sq. ft. installed
What drives cost upward in Las Vegas is almost always scope of underlayment failure — a small exterior patch can expand once the felt is lifted and the full degraded area becomes visible. We give you a clear assessment before any work begins. Estimates are free. Call (725) 220-2716 and we’ll come out and look at it directly.
We Also Serve Cities Near Las Vegas
Our repair crews cover the full Las Vegas Valley. If you’re in Winchester, Paradise, North Las Vegas, or Sunrise Manor, the same owner-on-the-job approach and 231 five-star reviews apply to your address. Response times across these neighboring communities are comparable to central Las Vegas — we’re not adding a drive-time surcharge or a scheduling lag. Call us regardless of which side of the valley you’re on.
Serving Las Vegas, NV — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Las Vegas area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Roof Repair in Las Vegas
The tiles are almost certainly fine — the problem is the 30-lb felt underlayment beneath them, which the Las Vegas heat has degraded far ahead of schedule. Concrete tile is a surface weather barrier, not the waterproofing layer; the felt paper beneath it is what actually keeps water out of your home. After 15–20 years of 115°F+ summers and extreme UV exposure in Las Vegas, that felt can crumble to powder while the tiles above it still look factory-new. The first hard monsoon rain then drives water straight through the dried-out felt and into your ceiling. The only way to confirm it is to lift the tile and inspect the layer beneath — which is exactly what we do on every leak call. Call (725) 220-2716 and we’ll come out and show you what’s there.
Tile repair is a completely different skill set than shingle work, and most Las Vegas homes built after 1990 are tile — not shingle. Lifting, inspecting, and re-setting concrete or clay tile without cracking units requires specific technique and experience; a roofer whose primary background is asphalt shingles in another market can cause more tile breakage during a repair than the original problem caused. We work predominantly on tile roofs throughout the Las Vegas Valley and understand the underlayment replacement work that makes up most of the real repair scope here. Shingles appear on some older or mid-century properties, and we handle those too — but tile is the dominant skill on this market, and that’s where our experience is concentrated.
A valley is the channel formed where two roof slopes meet — it carries the most concentrated water flow of any section of your roof. On Las Vegas tile roofs that are fifteen or more years old, the metal valley flashing beneath the tile tends to separate at its seams as repeated thermal expansion and contraction cycles work the fasteners loose. Once that seam opens, even a moderate monsoon cloudburst pushes water directly under the tile field. A proper valley repair means lifting the adjacent tile courses, replacing the flashing, re-felting if needed, and re-bedding the tile — not caulking from above. Valley repairs in Las Vegas run $400–$950 for a single valley. Call (725) 220-2716 for an exact scope and estimate.
Vent boots fail fast in Las Vegas because standard rubber and EPDM products aren’t rated for the sustained surface temperatures a south-facing tile roof reaches in summer — regularly above 150°F at the surface. The boot cracks, hardens, and pulls away from the pipe, opening a direct water path into the roof deck. Signs to watch for: a dark streak on your ceiling near a bathroom or kitchen stack, visible cracking around a pipe collar when viewed from the roof edge, or a boot that looks sunken or collapsed rather than flush. If your Las Vegas home is more than ten years old and the boots haven’t been replaced, an inspection is worth doing before monsoon season — not after the ceiling shows it. A per-penetration repair runs $150–$350.
Yes — and the reasoning is specific to Las Vegas’s housing stock. If your Henderson home was built between 2000 and 2008, the felt underlayment beneath your concrete tile is approaching or past its expected service life in this climate. Underlayment failure in Las Vegas is silent until the first monsoon rain, at which point you’re dealing with an emergency repair rather than a planned one — and the longer degraded felt goes unaddressed, the wider the re-felt scope becomes. An inspection now, before the July–September monsoon window, gives you options: a targeted repair if failure is localized, or a planned underlayment replacement on your schedule and budget rather than ours. David Rogers handles inspections personally. Call (725) 220-2716 to schedule one.
Written by David Rogers, Owner & Lead Technician at Vortex Roofing & Construction Las Vegas Valley, serving Las Vegas, NV since 2020.