Your tile isn't the problem. The layer beneath it is.
Florida tile roofs rarely fail all at once. Clay and concrete tile can last 50 years or more — but the underlayment beneath it, the actual waterproof layer, cooks out in our sun and rain decades sooner. When it goes, you don't necessarily need a new roof. You need the underlayment rebuilt and your sound tile re-laid — often $20,000–$45,000 less than a full tear-off. Repair-first since 1974.
Accredited · Certified · Recognized · Family-Owned Since 1974
A tile roof is really two roofs — and only one of them ages out.
The tile is your armor: clay and concrete tile routinely last 50+ years in South Florida. The waterproofing is the felt or synthetic underlayment underneath — and in our heat, UV, and wind-driven rain it reaches the end of its life first, often in 15–25 years. An age-based replacement throws away tile with decades of service left. A condition-based evaluation tells you which layer is actually failing — and under Florida's Roof Age Law (§627.7011), a sound roof with five or more years of remaining useful life can't be condemned on age alone. When the tile is sound and the underlayment is spent, the fix is a tile roof rebuild, not a replacement.
The typical gap between rebuilding a tile roof's underlayment — re-laying your existing tile over a new waterproof layer — and tearing the whole roof off and starting over.
The tile shrugs off the weather. The felt underneath takes the damage.
Four things age out a Florida tile roof's underlayment long before the tile itself wears out.
It cooks from below
Attic temperatures and direct sun bake the asphalt out of felt underlayment, leaving it brittle and cracked. The tile insulates the surface you see — while the layer that matters slowly hardens and fails.
Sunlight reaches it through gaps
Every cracked, slipped, or lifted tile lets UV strike the underlayment directly. Florida's sun breaks it down far faster than the tile manufacturer's lifespan would suggest.
It never fully dries out
High humidity and wind-driven rain keep the underlayment damp, and constant wet-dry cycling degrades it. Trapped moisture is also why a failing roof shows up first as attic and ceiling stains.
Valleys concentrate the wear
Valleys and transitions funnel water from two roof planes over the same narrow path. That concentrated flow wears the underlayment through years before the open field of the roof shows any age.
Seven signs the layer under your tile is failing.
You rarely see the underlayment — but you can see what happens when it stops doing its job.
- Water stains on ceilings or upper walls after rain
- Damp, discolored, or clumped attic insulation
- A musty, earthy smell in upper-floor rooms
- Water stains on fascia or soffit boards
- Cracked, slipped, or missing tiles
- Daylight visible through the roof deck in the attic
- An unexplained jump in cooling bills
It starts in the valleys — not across the whole roof.
Tile roofs fail in predictable places. Knowing where lets us preserve the rest.
Valleys
Every drop off two roof planes funnels here. Valleys see the most water and the highest velocity, so their underlayment and metal wear through first — usually years ahead of the rest of the roof.
Transitions & flashings
Where the roof meets a wall, chimney, or changes pitch, sealant and metal flashing age, lift, and separate. These joints are among the most common leak origins on a tile roof.
Penetrations
Plumbing vents, exhaust stacks, and skylights all break the roof plane. The boots and seals around them harden and crack long before the tile field does.
Hips & ridges
Mortar and ridge components loosen with decades of thermal expansion and contraction, opening paths for wind-driven rain to reach the underlayment.
Eaves & drip edges
Wind pushes rain back up under the first courses of tile at the eaves. Worn drip-edge detailing lets that water find the deck and the fascia behind it.
The open field
The broad, flat areas of tile fail last. When the field is sound and the failures are confined to valleys and details, preservation is almost always on the table.
An underlayment rebuild — tile up, felt out, re-laid.
This is what preservation looks like on a real Palm Beach estate: the sound tile lifted and set aside, the failed underlayment replaced, the deck rebuilt, and the original tile re-laid — not a tear-off.


From a free inspection to a roof that's been saved, not replaced.
Free, documented inspection
A complete roof inspection with attic thermal imaging. We find where the underlayment is actually failing — not just where you happen to see a stain — at no cost and no obligation.
Condition & useful-life report
A written, photographed assessment of each area of the roof and an honest estimate of its remaining useful life, so the decision is based on documented condition, not age.
Preserve & rebuild
We carefully lift the sound tile, replace the failed underlayment, rebuild valleys and flashings, and re-lay your existing tile. We replace only the tile that's genuinely gone.
Certify when it qualifies
If the finished roof is sound, a signed 5-Year Roof Certification documents its condition and remaining useful life — useful when an insurer or buyer asks.
When a rebuild is right — and when it isn't.
Preservation isn't always the answer. The honest version of this decision rests on condition, not a sales target.
When your tile is sound
If the tile is largely intact and the deck is solid but the underlayment has aged out, we re-lay your existing tile over a new waterproof layer and rebuild the failure points. Usually $20,000–$45,000 less than a full replacement — and it keeps tile that's often hard to match.
When it's truly needed
If the tile itself is widely cracked, the deck is compromised, or the system has genuinely reached the end of its life, a full replacement is the right call. We'll tell you honestly when that's the case — and never one day sooner.
This page is general information about tile roof systems and Florida's Roof Age Law, not legal or insurance advice. Every roof is evaluated on its own documented condition, and remaining-useful-life findings vary by roof. For coverage questions, consult your insurance carrier or agent. Sources: Florida Statute §627.7011 · Florida CFO: property insurance changes.
The preservation-first roofer — documentation over demolition.
We inspect the layer that fails
Our whole approach is the opposite of an age-based tear-off. We find the underlayment failures, document them, and preserve every part of the roof that's still sound.
Thermal imaging, signed reports
Attic thermal imaging finds trapped moisture you can't see from a ladder, and every assessment is documented and signed under Florida license CCC1331721.
No sales pressure, ever
If your roof can be preserved, we say so. If it genuinely needs replacing, we show you exactly why — never a replacement you don't need.
See it for yourself
Browse the Resource Center, a real redacted 5-Year Certification, and the Island Drive case study — a Palm Beach estate roof we preserved instead of replaced.
Your questions, answered honestly.
Can you really save my tile roof instead of replacing it?
How long does tile underlayment last in Florida?
Is a rebuild really cheaper than a full replacement?
How do you know whether my roof can be preserved?
Do you reuse my existing tile?
Does a preserved roof still qualify for a certification?
Before you replace a tile roof, let's see what's actually failing.
A free, thermal-imaged inspection and an honest report on whether your tile roof can be preserved — rebuilt and re-laid — or genuinely needs replacing. Family-owned in Palm Beach County since 1974.
Request a Free Inspection









