Does a Metal Roof Increase Home Value
What the Data Shows
The Remodeling Magazine Cost vs. Value Report consistently ranks metal roofing among the higher-return exterior improvements. The national average return on investment for a standing seam metal roof installation falls between 60 and 85 percent of the project cost, depending on the region and the home's price range. For a $25,000 standing seam installation, that translates to $15,000 to $21,000 in added home value at resale.
The National Association of Realtors reports that a new roof of any type is one of the top exterior features buyers look for, and that metal roofing specifically generates stronger buyer interest in markets where hail, hurricanes, or wildfire are concerns. In these areas, the return on investment can exceed the national average because buyers place a premium on durability and insurance compatibility.
It is important to note that these figures represent averages across thousands of transactions. The actual value increase for any individual home depends on the local market, the home's price point, the condition of the previous roof, and how the metal roof compares to what neighboring homes have installed.
Why Metal Adds More Value Than Shingles
The primary reason a metal roof adds more resale value than a new asphalt shingle roof is remaining useful life. When a buyer purchases a home with a 5-year-old asphalt shingle roof, they are inheriting a roof with roughly 15 to 20 years of remaining life before it needs replacement. When they purchase a home with a 5-year-old standing seam metal roof, they are inheriting a roof with 35 to 55 years of remaining life. That difference represents a future expense the buyer will never have to face during their ownership of the home.
Real estate appraisers account for this when determining a home's value. The appraisal process considers the condition, remaining life, and quality of the roof as part of the overall property assessment. A metal roof with decades of remaining life is rated higher than a shingle roof approaching the end of its service life, which directly affects the appraised value.
Lower ongoing costs also factor into the value equation. A metal roof requires less maintenance than shingles, carries lower insurance premiums in most states, and provides better energy efficiency through solar reflectance. These annual savings compound over the ownership period and make the home more attractive to cost-conscious buyers.
How Appraisers Evaluate a Metal Roof
Real estate appraisers evaluate the roof as part of the property's overall condition rating. They consider three main factors: current condition, remaining useful life, and quality relative to comparable homes in the neighborhood.
A well-maintained metal roof in good condition with 30 or more years of remaining life will receive the highest condition rating. This rating supports a higher appraised value, which matters for both the seller's asking price and the buyer's ability to finance the purchase. A low appraisal can kill a sale, so a roof that appraises well removes a potential obstacle.
Appraisers also compare the subject property's roof to the roofs on comparable homes used in the appraisal. If most comparable homes have asphalt shingle roofs and the subject home has standing seam metal, the appraiser may assign a positive adjustment to reflect the superior roofing material. The size of this adjustment varies by market but typically falls between $3,000 and $15,000 for a standard residential home.
One caveat is that appraisers work within the range established by comparable sales. If no homes in the area have sold with metal roofs, the appraiser has limited data to support a large adjustment. In neighborhoods where metal roofing is common, the appraisal adjustment is more straightforward and better supported.
Regional Differences in Value Impact
The value a metal roof adds varies significantly by geography. In the Southeast and Gulf Coast states, where hurricanes and severe storms are a regular threat, metal roofs command a noticeable premium because they resist wind damage better than any other residential roofing material and qualify for the largest insurance discounts. Homes in Florida, Texas, and the Carolinas with metal roofs often sell faster and closer to asking price than comparable homes with shingle roofs.
In the hail belt states (Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, the Dakotas), a Class 4 impact-rated metal roof is increasingly viewed as essential rather than optional. Insurance carriers in these states offer significant premium discounts for impact-rated roofs, and some carriers have begun requiring them in high-risk zip codes. A metal roof in these markets is not just adding value, it is making the home insurable at a reasonable cost.
In the Northeast and Pacific Northwest, where heavy snow and rain are the primary concerns, metal roofs are valued for their ability to shed snow, resist ice dams, and withstand decades of moisture exposure without the moss, algae, and granule loss that affect shingles in wet climates.
In mild-climate inland markets with low severe weather risk, the value premium for metal roofing is smaller but still positive. Even in these areas, the energy efficiency benefits and the elimination of future roof replacement costs appeal to financially savvy buyers.
Making the Investment Decision
The decision to install a metal roof should not be based solely on resale value. The homeowner who benefits the most from a metal roof is the one who plans to live in the home long enough to realize the full lifecycle cost advantage: lower maintenance, no mid-life replacement, reduced energy bills, and lower insurance premiums year after year.
If you are installing a metal roof primarily for your own long-term benefit and the resale value increase is a bonus, the investment almost always makes sense. If you are installing a metal roof solely to flip a house for a higher price, the math is tighter and depends heavily on the local market's willingness to pay the premium.
For homeowners planning to stay 10 years or more, the combination of direct savings and resale value increase typically makes a metal roof the most cost-effective roofing choice over the full ownership period, even though the upfront cost is higher than asphalt shingles.
A metal roof increases home value by 1 to 6 percent on average, with 60 to 85 percent cost recovery at resale. The value boost is largest in severe-weather markets and for homes where the metal roof's remaining lifespan significantly exceeds what a shingle roof would offer. For long-term homeowners, the combined savings and resale premium make metal roofing the strongest overall investment.