Quick Answer
After buying a home in Brookshire, schedule an independent roof inspection within 30 to 60 days, gather any roofing paperwork from the seller, and create a simple maintenance and budget plan based on the roof's age and condition. If the roof is under 10 years old and intact, focus on annual upkeep. If it is 15+ years old or shows storm wear, start planning for repair or replacement before a leak forces the timeline.
The First 90 Days: Roof Priorities for New Homeowners
Step 1: Pull Together What You Already Know
- Home inspection report (roof section and attic notes)
- Seller's disclosure form, especially leak or repair history
- Receipts, warranties, or permits left in closing documents
- Insurance binder showing roof age and material on file
- Any prior storm claim history on the property
If the seller cannot produce a roof age, the underwriter on your homeowners policy may already have estimated it. That number affects your premium and your future claim eligibility, so confirm it is accurate. Many manufacturer warranties are also transferable within a set window after closing, but only if you register the transfer and provide proof of the original installation. It is worth a phone call to the manufacturer in your first month of ownership.
Step 2: Schedule an Independent Inspection
A second look from a roofer is not redundant. It is calibration. We recommend a free roof inspection within the first two months, especially if the home changed hands during storm season. A roofing specific inspection covers shingle condition, granule loss, flashing at chimneys and walls, pipe boots, valleys, ridge vents, attic ventilation, and signs of prior repair work that may not match manufacturer specs. General home inspectors do a solid overview, but they rarely walk the roof, and they are not trained to spot hail bruising or improper flashing laps that a roofer catches in minutes.
Budgeting Based on Roof Age
0 to 8 Years Old
- Annual visual check and gutter cleaning
- Replace pipe boots if rubber is cracking
- Touch up caulk and sealant at flashing
- Typical annual upkeep: $150 to $400
9 to 15 Years Old
- Professional inspection every 1 to 2 years
- Plan for boot, flashing, and minor shingle repairs
- Begin a replacement reserve fund
- Typical repair range: $400 to $1,800
16+ Years Old
- Inspect annually and after every major storm
- Get a written replacement quote for budgeting
- Asphalt replacement in central Indiana commonly runs $9,000 to $18,000 depending on size and pitch
- Review the signs your roof needs replacement to time the project before a leak forces it
A simple way to build the reserve is to set aside a small monthly amount based on your roof's remaining life. If a replacement is eight years out and likely to cost $14,000, putting away around $145 a month gets you there without a scramble.
What a Post-Purchase Roof Inspection Should Cover
| Area | What We Look For | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Field shingles | Granule loss, cracking, hail bruising, lifted tabs | Indicates remaining service life |
| Flashing | Rust, separation, missing sealant, short laps | Most leaks start here, not in the field |
| Penetrations | Cracked pipe boots, loose vent collars | Boots typically fail at 8 to 12 years |
| Valleys | Wear patterns, exposed nails, debris dams | High water flow zones |
| Attic | Ventilation balance, insulation, daylight, stains | Reveals leaks invisible from outside |
| Gutters | Granule buildup, fascia rot, pitch | Drainage failures damage roof edges |
Choosing a Roofer You Can Call Again
The roofer you pick for your first inspection often becomes the one you call for the next ten years. Look for a contractor with local Brookshire references, proof of liability and workers comp insurance, manufacturer certifications, and a written scope rather than a verbal handshake. Brookshire Metal Roofing keeps inspection notes and photos on file for every home we touch, so when you call us after the next storm, we already know what your roof looked like before it.
Buying a home is the right moment to get ahead of roof issues instead of reacting to them. A short inspection now, a clear budget, and a maintenance rhythm will save you thousands over the years you own the place.
Common Issues We Find on Recently Purchased Homes
- Old hail damage the previous owner never claimed
- Pipe boots cracked along the rubber collar
- DIY caulk repairs at chimneys instead of proper step flashing
- Missing or undersized intake ventilation in the soffits
- Reused flashing left from a prior re roof
- Nail pops along ridges and hip lines
- Algae streaking on north facing slopes
- Satellite dish mounts left in place with no sealant under the brackets
Hail is the one we flag most often in central Indiana. If the home took a storm hit before you bought it and the seller never filed a claim, your new policy may not cover that pre existing damage. Documenting the roof's condition early protects you when the next storm rolls through. Our breakdown of storm damage insurance claims walks through how timing and documentation affect coverage.
Setting Up a Simple Maintenance Routine
- Spring: inspect after freeze thaw and storm season
- Summer: check attic temperature and ventilation
- Fall: clear gutters and trim overhanging branches
- Winter: watch for ice dams along eaves and valleys
- After every named storm: walk the perimeter and look for shingles in the yard
Keep a folder, paper or digital, with inspection reports, photos, and any work orders. When you eventually sell, that record raises buyer confidence and supports your asking price.
Repair, Maintain, or Replace: How to Decide
| Condition | Best Path |
|---|---|
| Isolated leak, roof under 12 years old | Targeted repair |
| Storm damage with multiple slopes affected | Insurance claim, likely replacement |
| Multiple repairs in 2 years, roof 15+ years | Plan replacement |
| Cosmetic algae, sound shingles | Cleaning and maintenance |
| Ventilation imbalance with no leaks | Add intake or exhaust, no replacement needed |
If your roof does not need replacement, we will tell you. Plenty of homes we inspect after a sale need nothing more than a boot swap and a gutter cleaning to be set for several more years.