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Full re-roofing in progress with scaffolding and new tiles

Roof Replacement in Birmingham

Re-roofing quotes vary by thousands of pounds for the same house — we connect you with local roofers who survey properly and itemise what you're actually paying for. Covering B4, B44, B42, B6, B13, B8, B9, B16.
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Find Trusted Roofers connects homeowners across Birmingham and its surrounding areas with local roofers who work on the area's roof types.

Roof Replacement in Birmingham

A full re-roof is a major decision anywhere, and in Birmingham it usually means deciding whether to stay with Welsh slate, clay tile or concrete tile — the three materials that dominate the city's roof stock, from Edgbaston's older housing to newer estates further out. We connect Birmingham homeowners with local roofers who survey the roof properly before quoting, rather than guessing from the pavement.

Roof replacement in Birmingham typically means re-roofing in Welsh slate, clay tile or concrete tile — the city's three dominant roof types. A concrete tile re-roof on a typical semi costs roughly £5,500–£9,000 including scaffolding; slate and clay cost more. A local roofer should survey first.

Roofing in Birmingham — what local roofers know

Birmingham City Council's housing stock spans well over a century, and that shows in what needs replacing. Terraces and villas around Harborne, Moseley and Edgbaston were often built with Welsh slate, while later development in areas such as Bournville and Acocks Green tends toward clay or concrete tile — each with different cost and lifespan implications for a full re-roof. The city's moderate exposure rating means it isn't coastal-storm territory, but Storm Eunice (2022) and Storm Henk (2024) both caused enough wind damage regionally that many older pitched roofs in postcodes like B4, B6 and B9 are now being assessed for replacement rather than repeated patch repairs. On a Welsh slate roof, a re-roof is also the point where homeowners often decide whether to source new Welsh slate, reclaimed slate, or switch to a modern tile — a decision a local roofer should walk through honestly rather than defaulting to whatever's cheapest to install.

  • Traditional Welsh slate roofs needing like-for-like repair rather than tile substitution
  • Wind damage from recent named storms (Storm Eunice) loosening tiles, ridges and flashings
  • Older housing stock with original pitched roofs prone to slipped tiles, worn valleys and perished underlay

How it works in Birmingham

  1. 1 Tell us once. Describe the job and your postcode. It takes under two minutes and there's no phone call to sit through.
  2. 2 We match you locally. We pass your request to a roofer in our network who covers B4/B44 and works on your roof type.
  3. 3 You get a proper quote. The roofer surveys the roof and quotes in writing before any work begins. You choose whether to go ahead.

Roof Replacement costs in Birmingham

Every job is quoted after a proper look at the roof — access, materials and condition all change the price, so beware of anyone quoting a fixed figure over the phone. See the Roof Replacement FAQs below for realistic UK price ranges, and request quotes to get real numbers for your roof in Birmingham.

Roofing in Birmingham

Local facts a good roofer factors in before quoting.

Population
1,144,900
Postcode districts
B4B44B42B6B13B8B9B16
Council
Birmingham
Dominant roof types
Welsh slateclay tileconcrete tile
Weather exposure
ExposureModerate
CoastalNo
Common local roofing issues
Traditional Welsh slate roofs needing like-for-like repair rather than tile substitutionWind damage from recent named storms (Storm Eunice) loosening tiles, ridges and flashingsOlder housing stock with original pitched roofs prone to slipped tiles, worn valleys and perished underlay

This information helps the roofers in our network quote accurately.

Illustrative example of typical work

A typical roof replacement job in Birmingham

Area:
Birmingham
Service:
Roof Replacement

A homeowner in the Kings Heath area had an ageing Welsh slate roof with repairs becoming more frequent each year. They requested a survey through us and were matched with a local roofer who inspected the timbers, underlay and slate condition, then provided an itemised written quote covering scaffolding, materials and a workmanship guarantee before any work began.

This describes typical work carried out by roofers in our network. Names and specific details have been omitted to protect customer privacy.

Roof Replacement in Birmingham — FAQs

Is it more expensive to re-roof a Welsh slate house in Birmingham than a tile one?
Natural slate generally costs more than concrete tile UK-wide, and that holds for Birmingham's Welsh slate terraces around Handsworth and Aston. As a guide, a typical three-bed semi re-roof in concrete tile runs roughly £5,500–£9,000 including scaffolding, with clay tile and natural slate costing more — always compare itemised quotes rather than a single round number.
Do I need planning permission to re-roof a house in Birmingham?
Usually not for a like-for-like replacement, though building regulations still apply and your roofer should handle notification. If your street sits in a conservation area — common in some of Birmingham's older suburbs — there may be stricter rules on matching the existing slate or tile appearance.
How do I know if my Birmingham roof needs full replacement rather than another repair?
Widespread underlay failure, tiles or slates that have gone porous across the whole roof, and repeated repairs in different spots after storms like Eunice or Henk all point toward replacement. A trustworthy roofer will show you photographs from the roof itself as evidence either way.
How much does a new roof cost in the UK?
A typical three-bed semi re-roof in concrete tile runs roughly £5,500–£9,000 including scaffolding; clay tile and natural slate cost more. Complex roofs, dormers and chimney details add to the price. Always compare itemised quotes, not single round numbers.
How long does a roof replacement take?
Most domestic re-roofs take 5–10 working days once scaffolding is up, weather permitting. Larger or more complex roofs, or houses with multiple valleys and dormers, can take two to three weeks.
Do I need planning permission to replace my roof?
Usually not if you're replacing like-for-like. You may need permission if you change the roof's appearance significantly, and conservation areas or listed buildings have stricter rules — often requiring matching slate. Building regulations do apply to re-roofing, and your roofer should handle notification.
How do I know my roof needs replacing rather than repairing?
Widespread underlay failure, tiles that have gone porous or delaminated across the whole roof, repeated repairs in different areas, and sagging battens all point to replacement. A trustworthy roofer will show you photographs from the roof itself as evidence either way.

Roof Replacement near Birmingham

We connect homeowners with local roofers across the towns around Birmingham. Pick a town to see local roofing coverage.

Our Birmingham service area

Find Trusted Roofers connects homeowners across Birmingham and its surrounding areas with local roofers who work on the area's roof types. The roofers in our network cover the B4, B44, B42, B6, B13, B8, B9, B16 postcode districts. Nearby coverage includes Sheffield, Manchester, Bristol, London.

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Find Trusted Roofers connects homeowners across Birmingham and its surrounding areas with local roofers who work on the area's roof types.

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