About Speedy Gonzalez Roofing
Antonio Gonzalez has been working Hot Springs roofs since 2003. He was here before the four-inch hailstones that hammered Garland County in June 2023 and before the tornado that cut through the southeast corner in May 2024. He'll be here when the next one comes through. In a market that draws out-of-town crews after every bad storm season, two decades on the same ground is the thing worth paying attention to.
The credentials are practical and clean. The Arkansas contractor's license is active, the BBB file is complaint-free, and the GAF certification covers the residential shingle work that makes up most storm-repair jobs in this area. It's the standard GAF tier, not the manufacturer's top level, which is worth knowing if you're comparing bids closely. That said, the active license and the clean complaint record carry more weight in a storm-repair market than cert level alone.
The Google reviews have grown steadily over the years rather than spiking after a single storm season. That kind of consistent volume from a one-county shop reflects a contractor with a real local following, not a crew that blows in and blows out. The hail-damage and emergency-repair emphasis runs through both the service pages and the customer feedback, which fits a business whose core work is exactly that.
When you call, ask Antonio to walk through the full inspection scope and what the repair estimate will and won't cover before any work starts. A contractor who's managed Garland County roofs through two decades of Arkansas weather will have a straight answer.