How Class 4 Shingles Can Cut Your Texas Insurance Premium by 28%
May 7
Real roof replacement costs for McKinney and DFW in 2026. Breakdown by material, size, and what affects your final price — from a local roofing contractor.
“How much will a new roof cost?” is the first question every homeowner asks — and the hardest to answer without seeing the property.
But we can give you real ranges based on current 2026 pricing in the McKinney and DFW market, so you walk into estimates with realistic expectations instead of sticker shock.
Here’s what roof replacements actually cost in our area right now.
| Roof Size | Asphalt (3-Tab) | Architectural Shingles | Impact-Resistant (Class 4) | Metal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1,500 sq ft | $5,100 – $8,100 | $7,500 – $11,000 | $9,500 – $14,000 | $14,000 – $21,000 |
| 2,000 sq ft | $6,800 – $10,800 | $10,000 – $14,500 | $12,500 – $18,500 | $18,500 – $28,000 |
| 2,500 sq ft | $8,500 – $13,500 | $12,500 – $18,000 | $15,500 – $23,000 | $23,000 – $35,000 |
| 3,000 sq ft | $10,200 – $16,200 | $15,000 – $21,500 | $18,500 – $27,500 | $27,500 – $42,000 |
The average DFW roof replacement in 2026 falls between $10,000 and $18,000 for a standard residential home with architectural shingles. That’s based on the area’s average roof size of roughly 2,500-3,200 square feet (including pitch factor) and current local material and labor rates.
These ranges include tear-off of the existing roof, new underlayment, new shingles, flashing, and cleanup.
Two homes on the same McKinney street can have quotes $5,000 apart. Here’s why:
Roofers measure in “squares” — one square equals 100 square feet. A 2,000 sq ft roof footprint might actually be 25-30 squares once pitch is factored in, because a steeper roof has more surface area than its footprint suggests.
| Pitch | Multiplier | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 4/12 (low) | 1.06x | Minimal — easy to walk |
| 6/12 (moderate) | 1.12x | Standard pricing |
| 8/12 (steep) | 1.20x | Higher labor cost — safety equipment required |
| 10/12+ (very steep) | 1.30x+ | Premium labor, slower work, scaffold may be needed |
A 10/12 pitch can add 15-25% to your total cost compared to a 6/12. Steep roofs take longer, require more safety equipment, and slow the crew down.
3-Tab Asphalt Shingles — $3.00–$5.00/sq ft installed
Architectural (Dimensional) Shingles — $4.50–$7.00/sq ft installed
Class 4 Impact-Resistant Shingles — $6.00–$9.00/sq ft installed
Standing Seam Metal — $9.00–$14.00/sq ft installed
Texas building code allows a maximum of two layers of asphalt shingles. If your home already has two layers, both must be torn off before the new roof goes on.
Once the old shingles come off, the crew inspects the plywood decking underneath. Rotted or damaged decking must be replaced before new shingles are installed.
A reputable contractor will tell you before the job starts that decking repairs are a possibility, and will call you for approval if they find damage during tear-off — not surprise you with an inflated final bill.
Every cut, angle, and penetration adds labor time and material:
A simple ranch-style home with a single ridgeline is faster and cheaper to roof than a two-story home with multiple dormers, valleys, and a chimney.
Roofing costs vary slightly across the metroplex based on demand, contractor density, and housing stock:
| City | Avg. Cost Range (2,500 sq ft, architectural) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| McKinney | $12,500 – $18,000 | Newer homes, high demand post-storm |
| Frisco | $13,000 – $19,000 | Premium market, newer construction |
| Plano | $12,000 – $17,500 | Established neighborhoods, mixed roof ages |
| Allen | $12,000 – $17,000 | Similar to Plano pricing |
| Dallas | $11,000 – $17,000 | More competitive contractor market |
| Fort Worth | $10,500 – $16,000 | Slightly lower labor rates |
McKinney and Frisco tend to run 5-15% above the DFW average due to newer construction standards, active HOA requirements, and high post-storm demand.
If your roof was damaged by a covered peril (hail, wind, fallen tree), your homeowner’s insurance may cover most or all of the replacement cost. Your out-of-pocket expense depends on your policy type:
In McKinney, most wind/hail deductibles are percentage-based: 1% or 2% of your home’s insured value. On a $350,000 home, that’s $3,500-$7,000 — a significant amount regardless of your coverage type.
When comparing quotes, watch for:
Want an accurate estimate for your home? Good Work Roofing provides free, detailed roof inspections and written estimates for homeowners across McKinney, Plano, Frisco, Allen, and the DFW metroplex. No pressure, no obligation.
Get your free estimate or call (214) 836-4511.
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