A useful Woodstock roof inspection explains the next step.
A roof inspection is only valuable if it helps you make a decision. The goal is not to scare you into a project. The goal is to separate cosmetic wear, maintenance items, active leak sources, storm damage, and end-of-life roof conditions.
Woodstock homes often have roof planes shaded by trees, valleys that catch debris, and gutter lines that can make a roof problem look like a siding or fascia problem. We look at the connected exterior details before writing the recommendation.
What we inspect
We look at shingle condition, lifted tabs, missing shingles, exposed nails, ridge cap, pipe boots, chimney flashing, wall flashing, valleys, skylights, drip edge, gutters, downspouts, fascia, and visible ventilation clues.
When attic access is available, we also look for water stains, rusted nail tips, wet insulation, heat buildup, and decking concerns that are not obvious from the roof surface.
When inspection turns into repair planning
Some inspections end with one small repair. Others reveal a roof that needs replacement planning. The difference should be visible in the photos and written scope, not buried in vague sales language.




