The contractor matters as much as the roof
In a place like Miami, who installs your roof matters just as much as which roof you choose. The HVHZ is unforgiving, a commercial roof is a real project, and a tile-to-metal conversion is too — and a roofer who doesn’t truly work in Miami-Dade can get the details wrong in ways you won’t discover until the next storm or the next rainy season. The good news is that you don’t need to be a roofing expert to hire a good one. You just need to know the right questions to ask and the warning signs to watch for. This guide gives you both, whether you’re a homeowner or a contractor sourcing a metal-roofing partner. (This guide offers general guidance; always verify a contractor’s specific credentials and standing directly.)
Ask about NOA and the HVHZ
Start here, because it filters out a lot. Ask whether the systems they install are NOA-approved, and ask to see the documentation. Ask how they detail the assembly for the HVHZ’s wind uplift — the edges, the corners, the fastening. A roofer who works Miami-Dade every day will talk about Notices of Acceptance and the High Velocity Hurricane Zone comfortably and specifically, because it’s the foundation of every job they do. Vagueness here, or a blank look, tells you they’re not the right crew for a Miami roof.
Ask who pulls the permit
In Miami-Dade, every roof needs a permit and county inspections — there are no exceptions and no informal jobs. Ask directly: will you pull the Miami-Dade permits, and will the work be inspected? The right answer is an immediate yes. Be very wary of anyone who suggests skipping the permit to save money or time. An unpermitted roof is a liability that surfaces at the worst moments — when you sell your property, when an inspector looks at it, or when you file an insurance claim — and it may have to be torn off and redone at significant cost. A permit isn’t red tape here; it’s your protection.
Ask about their metal, commercial, and tile experience
Metal roofing is a specialty, and the right contractor has depth in the work you need. Ask how much of their work is metal. If you have a commercial building, ask about their structural standing seam and low-slope panel experience, and how they phase a re-roof to keep a building operating. If you have a tile roof, ask how many tile-to-metal conversions they do. A generalist who mostly does shingle and dabbles in metal is not the same as a company that installs standing seam, 5V-crimp, stone-coated, and commercial systems every week. Match the contractor’s real experience to your project.
Ask how they choose materials for your exposure
A good roofer doesn’t put the same metal on every building. Ask how they’d choose between aluminum and Galvalume for your specific property, and listen for an answer that accounts for your exposure — coastal salt air, slope, and complexity. The more exposed or coastal the property, the more aluminum’s natural corrosion resistance matters. A roofer who recommends a material without asking about your building is selling a spec, not solving your problem. The right answer is tailored to your address, not pulled off a shelf.
Watch for the red flags
A few warning signs should give you pause. Be wary of a quote far below all the others — in Miami-Dade, that gap usually means something important was left out, like the permit, the inspections, or NOA-approved products. Be wary of high-pressure sales tactics, “today only” pricing, and scare tactics about your roof. Be wary of anyone who won’t put the scope in writing, won’t show NOA documentation, or is cagey about permits and inspections. And be cautious with storm-chasers who appear after a hurricane, do fast work, and disappear. A trustworthy roofer is transparent about all of it and never needs to pressure you.
What a good estimate looks like
A solid estimate is written and itemized, not a vague lump sum. It specifies the system and profile, the metal and gauge, whether tear-off and tile disposal are included, how deck repair will be handled if it’s needed, and that permitting, inspections, and NOA-approved products are part of the price. It gives you enough detail to compare it fairly against another estimate. When a contractor hands you something that clear, it’s a sign they work this way on the roof too — carefully, transparently, and to code.
Hire with confidence
The right metal roof contractor for your Greater Miami home or building is fluent in the NOA and the HVHZ, pulls the permits without being asked, has real depth in the work you need, chooses materials for your exposure, and puts everything in writing. If you’d like to put us to that test, call (786) 458-8118 for a free inspection and an honest, written estimate — and ask us every one of these questions.