Hawaii Roofers
Looking for roofers in Hawaii? Below are 10 top-rated roofers serving Hawaii in 2026 — every one rated 4.0+ stars with 10 or more verified Google reviews. Compare ratings and review counts, then contact them directly by phone or website. No middleman, no lead fees.
Listings are sourced from public Google Business Profiles and sorted by rating. Are you a Hawaii roofer? Add your business free below.
Oahu Roofing & Repairs Honolulu
1138 Kamaile St #3, Honolulu, HI 96814, USA
84 reviews
Reviews via Google
First Class Roofing LLC
94-1028 Molale St, Waipahu, HI 96797, USA
80 reviews
Reviews via Google
Pro Roofing Hawaii
2537 Hoolea Pl, Haiku, HI 96708, USA
44 reviews
Reviews via Google
Gold Pacific Roofing
792 Kalina Pl, Honolulu, HI 96825, USA
36 reviews
Reviews via Google
Hawaii Home Pros
55-565 Naniloa Loop, Laie, HI 96762, USA
14 reviews
Reviews via Google
Kapili Roofing & Painting
94-221 Leonui St, Waipahu, HI 96797, USA
379 reviews
Reviews via Google
R & C Roofing Contractors
3302 Campbell Ave, Honolulu, HI 96815, USA
34 reviews
Reviews via Google
Pamalu Roofing
1308 Hart St Unit A, Honolulu, HI 96817, USA
27 reviews
Reviews via Google
On Top Roofing LLC
99-1421 Koaha Pl Bay 6, Aiea, HI 96701, USA
10 reviews
Reviews via Google
Ohana Construction, Inc.
2144 Kauhana St, Honolulu, HI 96816, USA
157 reviews
Reviews via Google
Data sourced from Google Places. Updated April 12, 2026.
Hiring a Roofer in Hawaii
Buildermuse currently lists 10 roofers in Hawaii, averaging 4.9 stars across 865 verified Google reviews. That is an unusually strong field — when nearly every firm clears 4.8 stars, response time and availability become the real differentiators, so call two or three rather than only the top result. Most of the crews above operate out of Honolulu, Waipahu, and Aiea.
Hawaii requires licensing for all construction work. The state has relatively high insurance minimums. Contractors must also obtain a General Excise Tax license. Confirm credentials with the Hawaii Contractors License Board at (808) 586-3000 before work begins. Licenses renew on a two-year cycle (license issue date). Expect a $510 state application fee. At a minimum, ask for proof of $500,000 in general liability coverage and active workers' comp.
Labor is the biggest line item on most bids, and the Hawaii market sets the floor: construction workers here average $43.67 an hour — about $90,844 a year — across 39,167 workers statewide, per Bureau of Labor Statistics data. That puts Hawaii among the pricier construction labor markets in the country, so expect quotes to reflect it.
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