Your Hills Roofing Experts
In Hills, the roofing calendar runs on storm season. Whether it's spring hail or the late-summer systems that track up from the Gulf, the question isn't whether your roof will face a serious weather event — it's whether it's ready when one arrives. We've seen what happens to roofs that looked serviceable right up until the moment a storm exposed every deferred repair and aging component at once. The time to address those vulnerabilities is before the season, not after.
Our inspectors have assessed thousands of Minnesota roofs across every climate zone in the state. That experience informs every recommendation we make — we know what conditions actually look like, not just what the manual says.
A 1962-vintage Hills home carries a roof that has been through 64 years of Rock County weather cycles. Freeze-thaw stress, UV degradation, and repeated precipitation events affect every component of the roofing system cumulatively. The visible surface of an aging roof routinely understates the actual condition of the underlayment, decking, and flashing below it — professional assessment reaches what a visual check from the ground cannot.