The Real Cost of Hiring the Wrong Roofing Contractor in Florida
Published April 2026 · Ocean Group Construction · For Property Managers
It's 3 AM on a Tuesday. Your phone lights up. Tenant in Building C says water is coming through the ceiling in the hallway. You call the 24-hour emergency line of the roofing contractor you hired eight months ago — the one who came in $18,000 under the next bid. The number goes to voicemail. You call again. Voicemail.
By morning you've got a wet tenant, a flooded hallway, a building owner who wants answers, and a board meeting scheduled for Thursday.
That scenario didn't start Monday night. It started the day you hired the wrong contractor.
The Invoice Is the Cheapest Part
The low bid feels like a win in February. You brought a roofing project in under budget. You look like you're managing the property well. The board approves the contract, the work gets done, and everybody moves on.
Then the calls start. A leak here. A bubbling membrane there. An emergency repair mid-hurricane season. A tenant threatening to withhold rent because their unit has been damp for three weeks.
Here's what the wrong contractor actually costs you — and none of it showed up on the original invoice:
- Emergency repairs at 3–5x the cost of scheduled maintenance. A properly identified and addressed seam separation costs $800–$2,000 to fix at an annual inspection. The same failure found during a rainstorm, with water already inside the building, costs $4,000–$12,000 — and that's before you factor in interior damage, drywall, flooring, or tenant property.
- A warranty that covers nothing you actually need. We'll get to this in detail. It matters more than most property managers realize until they try to make a claim.
- Change orders after the job starts. Low-bid contractors make up the margin they cut in the proposal through change orders once they're on the roof. "Found additional damage." "Flashings need replacement." "Substrate needs repair before we can proceed." These aren't surprises — they're the model.
- Tenant disruption and complaints. An ongoing roofing problem that generates repeated tenant calls is a management problem. It costs you time, it costs your reputation with the building owner, and it creates liability exposure if a tenant documents ongoing neglect and pursues a claim.
- The board meeting you weren't prepared for. We'll get to this too. This is the one that really matters.
The Warranty Problem Nobody Explains
When a roofing contractor installs a commercial roof system, the warranty paperwork comes in two forms, and most property managers don't know the difference until it's too late.
A No-Dollar-Limit (NDL) manufacturer warranty covers both materials and installation labor for the warranty period — 10, 15, or 20 years depending on the system. If the membrane fails due to a product defect or an installation error, the manufacturer covers the full cost of remediation: materials, labor, everything. No dollar cap. No exclusions for labor.
A materials-only warranty covers the cost of the membrane if it fails. That's it. The $60,000–$120,000 in labor required to tear off the failed system, prep the deck, and reinstall — that comes entirely out of your budget.
Here's the catch: you only get an NDL warranty if the system was installed by a contractor certified by that specific manufacturer. GAF, Versico, Firestone, Carlisle, Sika, Tremco, Soprema — every major commercial roofing manufacturer maintains a list of certified applicators. If your contractor isn't on that list, you don't have an NDL warranty, regardless of what the paperwork says.
Ask your last roofing contractor: "Are you GAF certified? Versico? Firestone?" Ask them to show you their current certification letter. If they hesitate, change the subject, or tell you "our materials have a 20-year warranty" without directly answering the question — you don't have an NDL warranty. You have a piece of paper.
The math is brutal: on a 30,000 SF commercial re-roof, labor accounts for $80,000–$150,000 of the total cost. A materials-only warranty in that scenario covers a fraction of what you actually need if the system fails.
What Your Board Actually Sees
Property managers live and die by their credibility with the board. That credibility is built slowly, over years of good decisions and clear documentation — and it can be damaged quickly by a single roofing problem that wasn't anticipated or managed well.
Here's the difference between two property managers presenting to the same board after a hurricane season:
PM who hired the right contractor: "We completed our semi-annual roof inspection in September. Here's the written report with photos from each section of the building. We identified three areas of concern and completed repairs in October before the season ended. The roof is in documented good condition. Here's the contractor's certification."
PM who hired the wrong contractor: "We had a contractor out in the spring. They said the roof looked fine. We had two leaks in November. One of them damaged the hallway ceiling in Building C. We're getting quotes for repairs. The tenant in 4B is asking about rent reduction. The contractor isn't responding to our calls."
One of those property managers is at this board meeting next year. One of them may not be. The difference wasn't budget — it was contractor selection.
Your board doesn't just want the building maintained. They want documentation that shows they made a sound decision trusting you to maintain it. The right contractor gives you that documentation. The wrong contractor leaves you explaining problems instead of presenting solutions.
What to Look For: The Non-Negotiables
Commercial roofing contractor selection for property managers comes down to five questions. If any of these produce an unsatisfactory answer, keep looking.
1. Manufacturer Certifications
Ask for the contractor's current manufacturer certification letters — not marketing materials, not a logo on their website. Certifications from GAF, Versico, Firestone, Carlisle, Sika, Tremco, or Soprema are the ones that translate to NDL warranty eligibility. A contractor certified by multiple manufacturers can recommend the best system for your building rather than pushing you toward the one system they happen to be approved to install.
2. State Licensing
Florida law requires a Certified Roofing Contractor (CCC) or Certified General Contractor (CGC) license for commercial roofing work. Verify at myfloridalicense.com — the license number, the license holder, and whether it's current. If a contractor cannot provide their license number immediately, walk away.
3. Commercial-Specific References — From Property Managers
Ask for references from property managers or HOA management companies — not homeowners, not individual building owners. Property managers understand the documentation, communication, and responsiveness standards that matter to your job. Ask specifically: "Did they respond quickly when you had a problem? Would you call them at 3 AM for an emergency?" If the answer is hesitant, that's your answer.
4. Insurance — All Three Types
Require current certificates of insurance for: General Liability (minimum $1M per occurrence, $2M aggregate — many commercial projects require $5M), Workers' Compensation (covers injuries on your property — without it, your building's insurance may be exposed), and Commercial Auto. Ask for the certificates before signing anything. Any delay or hesitation is a red flag.
5. Written Scope Before You Sign
A legitimate commercial roofing contractor provides a written scope of work that specifies: the manufacturer system being installed, the product line and membrane specification, the warranty terms (NDL or materials-only), surface preparation requirements, and timeline. "Repair as needed" is not a scope of work. "Install TPO roof" is not a scope of work. If you can't read the proposal and understand exactly what's being done and why, ask for clarification — or find a different contractor.
Red Flags That Should End the Conversation
- "We can start Monday" with no written scope of work provided or offered
- Requesting a deposit larger than 30% before work begins
- Unable to name their current manufacturer certifications when asked directly
- No references from property managers or commercial clients within the last 12 months
- Pressure tactics — "this price is only good through Friday," "we have a crew available next week and then we're booked through fall"
- Unwilling or slow to provide current certificates of insurance
- Subcontracts 100% of labor to crews you've never met and the contractor won't be on-site
- Vague warranty language — cannot tell you specifically whether the warranty is NDL or materials-only
- No fixed office address or established business presence in the area
A Note on Low Bids
Low bids in commercial roofing are not accidents. When a bid comes in significantly below the field, one of three things is true: the contractor is using lower-grade materials than specified, they're planning to make up the margin through change orders, or they don't fully understand the scope. In any of those cases, you will pay more over the life of the project than the next bid would have cost you.
We're not saying the highest bid is always the right choice. We're saying that an outlier low bid deserves scrutiny — and that scrutiny starts with the five questions above.
How Ocean Group Construction Works with Property Managers
Ocean Group Construction is a licensed commercial roofing and waterproofing contractor serving Florida property managers and building owners. We hold CCC and CGC licenses (CCC1332364 · CGC1504639) and active manufacturer certifications from GAF, Carlisle, Versico, Firestone, Sika, Tremco, and Soprema.
We offer annual roof maintenance service agreements for property managers — semi-annual inspections, written reports with photos, priority emergency response, and documented condition records that give you exactly what you need for your board. Because the property manager who walks into a board meeting with a written, photographed inspection report and a certified contractor on file is the property manager who keeps their job when things go wrong — and gets credit when they don't.
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