New York Roofers
Looking for roofers in New York? Below are 10 top-rated roofers serving New York 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 New York roofer? Add your business free below.
New York Roofers
431 Davis Rd, Earlville, NY 13332, USA
192 reviews
Reviews via Google
Smart Roofers NY
874 Hancock St, Brooklyn, NY 11233, USA
168 reviews
Reviews via Google
Roman Commercial Roofing
7 Harrison St # 2n, New York, NY 10013, USA
159 reviews
Reviews via Google
Mighty Roofing & Siding
44 Court St 1217 #1004, Brooklyn, NY 11201, USA
103 reviews
Reviews via Google
Daniel's Roofing:Best roofing contractor Queens/Brooklyn Ny
67-04 Myrtle Ave, Glendale, NY 11385, USA
82 reviews
Reviews via Google
City Roofing Company NYC
2203 Hunter Ave, Bronx, NY 10475, USA
66 reviews
Reviews via Google
Roman Roofing NYC
463 Pulaski St #5A, Brooklyn, NY 11221, USA
159 reviews
Reviews via Google
NY Roofing
553 Prospect Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11215, USA
105 reviews
Reviews via Google
Royal Roofing & Siding NYC
605 W 42nd St PH1A, New York, NY 10036, USA
92 reviews
Reviews via Google
Downtown Brooklyn Roofing
183 Bridge St, Brooklyn, NY 11201, USA
68 reviews
Reviews via Google
Data sourced from Google Places. Updated April 12, 2026.
Hiring a Roofer in New York
Buildermuse currently lists 10 roofers in New York, averaging 5.0 stars across 1,194 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 Brooklyn, New York, and Bronx.
New York does not have a state-level general contractor license. NYC has its own Department of Buildings licensing system. Westchester, Nassau, Suffolk, and other counties require home improvement contractor registration. With no statewide license for this work, checking city and county requirements — plus active insurance — falls on you as the hiring party.
Labor is the biggest line item on most bids, and the New York market sets the floor: construction workers here average $42.23 an hour — about $87,828 a year — across 399,155 workers statewide, per Bureau of Labor Statistics data. That puts New York among the pricier construction labor markets in the country, so expect quotes to reflect it.
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