Contact

Roofing Experts Network serves contractors, service seekers, researchers, and industry professionals navigating the US roofing sector at a national level. This page describes how to reach the provider network's administrative team, what information to include when submitting a message, and what response timelines apply across different inquiry categories. The provider network covers contractor providers, licensing frameworks, and regulatory reference content spanning all 50 states.

Service area covered

Roofing Experts Network operates as a national-scope provider network resource covering roofing contractor categories, qualification standards, licensing requirements, and regulatory frameworks across the United States. The provider network's geographic coverage extends to all major US jurisdictions, including states where roofing contractor licensing is administered by dedicated boards — such as the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation, the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB), and the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) — as well as states where licensing authority falls to municipal or county-level building departments.

The provider network's structural scope encompasses the following contractor and service categories:

  1. Residential roofing contractors — licensed trades performing replacement, repair, and new installation on single-family and multi-family dwellings under residential building codes
  2. Commercial roofing contractors — firms qualified for low-slope, flat, and membrane roofing systems governed by International Building Code (IBC) provisions and jurisdiction-specific commercial permits
  3. Specialty roofing trades — contractors operating under narrow scope licenses covering materials such as tile, slate, metal panel, and spray polyurethane foam (SPF), where separate endorsements apply in states including Arizona and Louisiana
  4. Roofing inspectors and consultants — professionals providing condition assessments, pre-purchase evaluations, and insurance documentation, often certified through bodies such as the National Roof Certification and Inspection Association (NRCIA)
  5. Storm damage restoration contractors — firms working at the intersection of roofing repair and insurance claims, subject to state-level public adjuster statutes in jurisdictions including Texas and Florida

Inquiries related to providers, contractor qualifications, or regulatory information outside these categories may fall outside the provider network's defined scope. The Roofing Experts Network Providers page provides a structured view of the provider network's coverage and classification boundaries.

What to include in your message

Messages submitted to the administrative team are processed more efficiently when they contain specific, structured information. Vague or incomplete submissions typically require a follow-up exchange before any substantive response can be issued, extending resolution time.

A complete message should include the following elements:

  1. Inquiry category — specify whether the message concerns a provider addition or update, a factual correction to published content, a licensing or regulatory question, a research or data request, or a general operational question about the provider network
  2. Geographic scope — identify the relevant state or jurisdiction; national-scope questions should be labeled as such
  3. Contractor or business name — required for provider-related inquiries; include license number where the jurisdiction issues one (e.g., CSLB license number for California contractors)
  4. Supporting documentation — for provider corrections or additions, attach or reference publicly verifiable documentation such as state license records, insurance certificates, or relevant code citations
  5. Contact information — provide a valid email address and, where applicable, a business phone number

Inquiries citing named regulatory bodies, specific statutes, or code sections — such as International Residential Code (IRC) Chapter 9 (Roof Assemblies) or OSHA 29 CFR 1926.502 (fall protection systems) — receive faster substantive handling because they establish clear factual grounding for the question.

Response expectations

The administrative team handles correspondence across distinct inquiry types, each carrying different processing timelines and handling paths.

Provider submissions and updates are reviewed against publicly available state licensing databases before any change is reflected in the network. In states with online license verification portals — including the CSLB's online license check and Florida's Licensee Search through DBPR — verification is typically completed within 3 to 5 business days. In jurisdictions without centralized digital records, manual verification extends that window.

Factual corrections involving regulatory content, code citations, or licensing framework descriptions are escalated to editorial review. Corrections citing a specific code version (e.g., 2021 IRC vs. 2018 IRC) or a named agency rule change receive priority handling. Response confirmation is issued as processing allows; substantive correction deployment follows editorial review.

Research and data inquiries from industry professionals, journalists, or academic researchers are assessed individually. Requests that fall within the network's published scope — as described on the Roofing Experts Network Provider Network Purpose and Scope page — are prioritized. Requests requiring custom data aggregation beyond published content may not be fulfilled.

General operational questions about how the provider network is structured, how providers are classified, or how to navigate the resource are addressed as processing allows. The How to Use This Roofing Experts Network Resource page resolves the majority of navigational questions without requiring direct contact.

No response pathway constitutes professional, legal, or regulatory advice. The provider network is a reference resource, not a licensed contractor referral service or legal consultation platform.

Additional contact options

The primary contact method for Roofing Experts Network is direct email submission. For administrative and editorial correspondence, submissions directed to the provider network's operational team are handled through the parent network's contact infrastructure.

Researchers cross-referencing roofing standards and regulatory frameworks may also consult roofingstandards.org, a national-scope reference property covering ASTM, NRCA, and building code standards applicable across US jurisdictions. That property operates independently of the provider network function but addresses regulatory context questions that fall outside provider network administration.

For licensing status verification, the authoritative sources are the licensing boards of the relevant state — not provider network staff. State boards with online verification portals include the CSLB (California), DBPR (Florida), TDLR (Texas), and the Arizona Registrar of Contractors (AZROC), each of which maintains publicly searchable license records. Permit history and inspection records are held by county or municipal building departments in the jurisdiction where the work was performed, consistent with International Building Code (IBC) §105 permitting requirements.

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