How Long Does a Roof Inspection Take
What Affects Inspection Duration
Roof Size
A 1,200-square-foot roof on a ranch home has roughly half the surface area of a 2,400-square-foot roof on a two-story colonial. Every additional square foot of roofing requires visual examination, and large roofs simply take longer to walk and photograph. For very large homes above 3,000 square feet of roof area, inspections can extend to 2 hours or beyond.
Roof Complexity
A simple gable roof with one ridge and two slopes is the fastest roof design to inspect. Each additional architectural feature adds time. Hips, valleys, dormers, multiple roof levels, skylights, chimneys, and mechanical penetrations each represent a separate area requiring individual examination. A complex roof with six or eight valleys, two chimneys, three skylights, and multiple HVAC penetrations can take twice as long as a basic gable of the same overall size.
Roof Pitch and Accessibility
Low to moderate pitch roofs (4:12 to 7:12) are easy to walk and inspect quickly. Steep roofs (8:12 and above) require more cautious movement, additional safety equipment setup, and sometimes repositioning of ladders. If the roof is too steep to walk safely, the inspector may switch to a drone or a combination of ladder-edge inspection and drone footage, which changes the time profile of the inspection.
Access to the roof also matters. If the property has landscaping, fencing, or structures that make ladder placement difficult, the inspector spends additional time finding safe access points and repositioning ladders to reach different sections.
Attic Evaluation
A comprehensive inspection includes an attic visit that adds 15 to 30 minutes to the total time. The inspector needs to access the attic through a pull-down stair, ceiling panel, or closet entry, navigate the attic space while checking decking, rafters, moisture, ventilation, and insulation, and then exit and close up. Attics that are difficult to access, have limited headroom, or span a large area take longer to evaluate.
Number of Findings
An inspection on a well-maintained five-year-old roof in good condition will be faster than an inspection on a 20-year-old roof with multiple issues. Each deficiency requires documentation, which means additional photographs, measurements, and notes. A roof with 15 to 20 findings simply takes longer to document than one with 3 to 5 findings.
Time Breakdown by Inspection Phase
Setup and exterior walk-around (5 to 10 minutes): The inspector arrives, unloads equipment, sets up ladders, and does a ground-level visual scan of the overall roof condition. This preliminary assessment helps them plan their approach and identify areas to focus on.
Roof surface inspection (20 to 45 minutes): This is the core of the inspection. The inspector walks the entire roof surface (or flies a drone over it), examining every slope, valley, hip, and ridge. They check every piece of flashing, every penetration boot, every vent, and the overall material condition. They photograph all findings as they go.
Gutter and drainage assessment (5 to 10 minutes): The inspector checks the gutters, downspouts, and overall drainage from the roof edge or from the ground. On flat roofs, they check internal drains and scuppers.
Attic inspection (15 to 30 minutes): Inside the attic, the inspector examines the underside of the decking, checks for moisture with a meter, evaluates the ventilation system, assesses insulation, and looks at structural members. They photograph any findings.
On-site summary (5 to 10 minutes): Many inspectors provide a brief verbal summary before leaving. They walk you through the major findings, point out areas of concern, and give you a preliminary assessment of the roof's overall condition. This is not the full report, but it gives you an immediate picture.
Time by Inspection Type
Standard walk-on inspection: 45 minutes to 2 hours on-site, plus 24 to 48 hours for the written report.
Drone inspection: 30 minutes to 1 hour on-site. The flight itself takes 15 to 30 minutes, but setup, image review, and any supplemental ground checks add time. If the inspector also enters the attic, add another 15 to 30 minutes. The written report typically takes 24 to 48 hours because the inspector reviews hundreds of photographs after the visit.
Infrared thermal inspection: 1 to 2 hours on-site. Thermal scanning requires systematic coverage of the entire roof area, often at a slow pace to ensure accurate readings. The data analysis and thermal image interpretation add time to the report preparation, which can take 48 to 72 hours.
Roof certification inspection: 30 minutes to 1 hour on-site. Certification inspections are focused evaluations rather than comprehensive assessments. The contractor checks the key indicators of roof viability and can often provide the certification document within 24 hours or on the same day.
Plan for 45 minutes to 2 hours for the on-site inspection, depending on your roof's size and complexity. The written report arrives within 24 to 48 hours. Be wary of inspections that seem unusually fast, as they may have skipped critical steps like the attic evaluation.