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The Roofing Ledger
A publication of Eaveside

Roofing contractor research · Texas

Best Roofing Contractors in Dallas County, Texas (2026 Guide)

Pre-launch coverage

Research in progress. The contractor cards below show what we’ve verified from public records and what’s still pending phone-based insurance, supplier, and rubric verification. The Roofing Ledger grades are assigned only once every line is verified. If you need to hire today, use the cards as a starting point and apply the questions in our methodology to whoever you call.

Coverage in progress

Research is underway in Dallas County

We’re actively vetting contractors in this market. The candidate pool is below. If you need a roofer today, take the candidate list as a starting point and apply the questions from our methodology to whoever you call.

Frequently asked questions

How does Texas regulate roofing contractors?

Texas does not currently administer roofer licensure at the state level — TDLR licenses many trades but not roofing. We work around this in three ways. First, we strongly prefer RCAT licensing (rcat.net) — about 300 Texas roofing companies hold this voluntary credential, which approximates state licensing. Second, we verify local jurisdiction registration where applicable. Third, we weight manufacturer-tier certifications more heavily on Texas-market scores than we do in license-required states.

What's the storm pattern in Dallas County?

North Texas is the highest-frequency hail region in the United States. The DFW metroplex including Dallas County sits inside the hail belt, with multiple severe events per calendar year. The November 4, 2022 tornado outbreak that produced the EF3 in Idabel, Oklahoma damaged adjacent Texas counties from the same supercell system.

Why isn't [my contractor] in your candidate list?

The candidate list above is what we identified during initial outreach. If you know a Dallas County contractor we should evaluate, email us at editor@theroofingledger.com. We add candidates as we find them.

Do you take money to feature contractors here?

No. We do not accept payment for inclusion or for ranking position. We deliberately do not source rankings from Angi, HomeAdvisor, Thumbtack, or any pay-to-place lead-gen network. Our research relies on Google Business Profiles, BBB records, manufacturer certification directories, public permit pulls, Chamber memberships, and direct phone verification.

Tip the editor

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Market contextAbout roofing in Dallas CountyVerified storm history, state licensing landscape, and the questions we ask any Dallas County contractor before featuring them. Skip if you came for the rankings.

Dallas County, in context

North Texas (the Paris-Sherman-Dallas corridor) is the highest-frequency hail region in the United States. Lamar County (Paris) alone posted 33 spotter reports of on-the-ground hail in the past 12 months and has logged 100 lifetime occasions of radar-detected hail at or near Paris. The November 4, 2022 tornado outbreak that produced the EF3 in Idabel, Oklahoma also damaged Lamar County (Powderly area) from the same supercell system.

How Texas roofer licensing works (and why it doesn't)

Texas does not currently administer roofer licensure at the state level — TDLR licenses many trades but not roofing. We work around this in three ways. First, we strongly prefer RCAT licensing (rcat.net) — about 300 Texas roofing companies hold this voluntary credential, which approximates state licensing. Second, we verify local jurisdiction registration where applicable (City of Paris, City of Dallas, etc.). Third, we weight manufacturer-tier certifications more heavily on Texas-market scores than we do in license-required states. Texas House Bill 3344 (introduced 2025) would create mandatory state licensing through TDLR; status is not yet enacted at this writing.

About this guide

We're actively researching every contractor in the candidate pool above. We'll publish each one's full record as soon as research on that contractor is finished — not before. If you need to hire today, use the candidate list as your starting point and apply the state-specific questions before signing anything.