Roof Repair in Enterprise, NV
If you own a home in Enterprise, NV, and you noticed a water stain on your ceiling after last summer’s monsoon, you’re not alone — and the cause is almost certainly not the tile on your roof. It’s what’s underneath it. Absolute Roofing & Repair Las Vegas has been working roofs across the Las Vegas metro for a decade, and William Turner personally responds to jobs in Enterprise, typically reaching homes along Saint Rose Parkway and South Decatur Boulevard the same day you call. Reach us now at (725) 444-5513 for a free, no-obligation estimate.

Why Absolute Roofing & Repair Las Vegas Is Enterprise’s Preferred Roof Repair Company
Our Roof Repair team has earned a 4.9-star average across 341 verified customer reviews — and a meaningful portion of those reviews come from homeowners right here in Enterprise, in communities like Mountain’s Edge, Silverado Ranch, and Southern Highlands. That’s not a number we’re guessing at. It’s the cumulative record of decade of work, tracked job by job, and it tells you something about what happens when the same owner shows up on every roof.
William Turner is both the owner and the lead technician at Absolute Roofing & Repair Las Vegas. When you call us, William is the person who inspects your roof, diagnoses the problem, and executes the repair. There’s no handoff to a subcontractor you’ve never met. For Enterprise homeowners navigating HOA Architectural Review Board requirements — where a mis-matched tile can trigger a violation notice as quickly as a leak can trigger a call — that direct accountability isn’t optional. It’s the whole job.
We know Enterprise’s housing stock the way you learn it after ten years of climbing on it: the 2000s-era tract builds, the Boral and CertainTeed concrete tile roofs, the #30 felt underlayment that’s now quietly failing block by block across the 89139 zip code. That knowledge shapes every estimate we write and every repair we document.
Our Roof Repair Services in Enterprise
Flashing Repair
Flashing failure is the leading source of active leaks in Enterprise homes, and the Mojave’s thermal cycling is the reason why. Summer highs regularly exceed 110°F along corridors like Hidden Well Road, causing metal flashings at pipe penetrations, skylights, and chimneys to expand and contract beyond their elastic limits until the seal cracks. We’ve responded to calls in Mountain’s Edge where the concrete tile above a failed flashing looked factory-fresh from the street — the leak was entirely invisible until monsoon rain found the gap. We replace failed lead and galvanized flashings, ensure the surrounding underlayment hasn’t been compromised in the process, and document the repair for any HOA review that follows.
Valley Repair
Enterprise’s steeply-hipped rooflines — a hallmark of the 2000s builder aesthetic throughout Silverado Ranch and Southern Highlands — funnel monsoon water directly into valley channels that were installed two decades ago with materials now at or past their rated service life. A cracked or lifted valley allows water to track laterally under adjacent tiles, soaking the deck before it ever shows up inside the home. We open the affected valley section, inspect the deck for moisture damage, and reinstall with closed-cut or woven valley material appropriate to your roof’s pitch and your HOA’s approved tile profile.
Vent Boot Repair
Cast-lead vent boots on 2002–2008 Enterprise tract homes have been through hundreds of thermal expansion cycles since they were first installed. The lead collar cracks, the rubber collar in hybrid boots hardens and separates from the pipe, and the next heavy rain finds exactly that gap. In Mountain’s Edge, we regularly document three or four cracked vent boots on a single roof — the homes were built by the same crew, same week, same materials, and they age in lockstep. We replace the boot, inspect the #30 felt around the penetration, and confirm the new boot clears the ARB’s requirements for visible rooftop hardware before we close up.
Leak Repair & Underlayment Assessment
A leak repair that stops at the symptom — the cracked tile, the lifted flashing — without checking the underlayment beneath it is a repair that will call you back in six months. Enterprise’s #30 felt underlayment, installed across entire subdivisions between 2002 and 2011, has a thermal-stress lifespan that is now expiring block by block across the 89139 zip code. We don’t just patch the entry point. We assess a reasonable radius around it, confirm whether the adjacent underlayment has embrittled, and give you an honest read on whether a targeted repair holds the line or whether a broader underlayment replacement is the right call before the next July monsoon season hits.
Flat Roof Patch
Enterprise’s newer commercial-adjacent properties and some single-story additions along South Decatur Boulevard incorporate low-slope or fully flat roof sections that require TPO or modified bitumen repair rather than tile work. Heat-welded seam failures and membrane punctures are the common failure modes we see on these surfaces. A typical flat roof patch in Enterprise runs $300–$600 depending on the size of the damaged section and whether the underlying insulation board has been compromised by standing water.
Shingle Replacement
Concrete tile dominates Enterprise, but there are shingle-roofed homes — particularly on older parcels along West Starr Avenue and some of the smaller HOA communities that adopted asphalt shingle as their standard. We stock GAF, Owens Corning, IKO, and Atlas shingle lines and can match most existing profiles for a repair that blends cleanly. A standard shingle replacement section in Enterprise runs $250–$550 for smaller damaged areas, depending on material grade and accessibility.
What happens when you call
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A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in Enterprise
Enterprise’s concrete tile roofs come predominantly from Boral, CertainTeed, and similar manufacturers that were supplying the Las Vegas boom-era builders. We carry active inventory and documented blend codes for those lines, which matters enormously when your Mountain’s Edge or Silverado Ranch HOA requires an exact color and profile match. Beyond tile, we work with GAF, Owens Corning, IKO, Atlas, and Tamko for underlayment, flashing accessories, and shingle sections — seven manufacturer lines in active inventory means we’re recommending what fits your roof, not whatever happens to be left on a supplier’s shelf. That breadth keeps turnaround fast for Enterprise homeowners.
The Underlayment Crisis Happening Block by Block in Enterprise Right Now
Enterprise is almost entirely a product of the mid-2000s Las Vegas housing boom. Mountain’s Edge, Silverado Ranch, and Southern Highlands were mass-developed between roughly 2002 and 2011 by a handful of large-volume builders working from the same material specs and the same subcontractor rosters. The concrete tile those builders installed is genuinely durable — it can last 50 years. The #30 felt or early synthetic underlayment beneath it was rated for 15–20 years. The Mojave’s relentless UV radiation and the extreme thermal cycling of 110°F+ summers degraded that underlayment faster than its rated lifespan in many cases. The result is that Enterprise is now experiencing a synchronized, community-wide wave of underlayment failures hidden completely beneath tile that looks perfectly intact from the street — a failure mode that simply does not exist at this scale in older, more organically developed parts of the Las Vegas metro where construction was spread across different decades.
In Mountain’s Edge, we’ve documented what amounts to a predictable pattern: entire cul-de-sacs of the same builder’s product, same install year, same underlayment batch, failing within the same 18-month window. A homeowner calls after a monsoon leak, and within weeks their neighbors two doors down are experiencing the same thing. The underlayment doesn’t telegraph its failure from the outside — the tiles look fine, the ridge caps look fine. The first sign is often a ceiling stain after the first significant rainfall of the monsoon season, because the embrittled underlayment holds up through a dry year and fails the moment standing water finds even a hairline split.
Understanding this tract-by-tract aging wave is central to how we approach every Enterprise job. We don’t treat a cracked flashing as an isolated event. We assess the surrounding underlayment, give you a realistic picture of what the next five monsoon seasons are likely to bring, and let you decide how aggressive you want to be with the repair scope.

HOA Compliance Is Half the Job in Enterprise
Enterprise’s master-planned communities don’t just have aesthetic preferences — they have legally binding Architectural Review Board requirements that govern every visible element of a roof repair. Mountain’s Edge, Silverado Ranch, and Southern Highlands each maintain pre-approved tile profiles, blended color palettes, and in some phases, grout-line specifications. A replacement tile from the wrong production run — even structurally identical to the original — can trigger an ARB violation notice that costs the homeowner more in fines and remediation than the original repair did.
We maintain blend-code documentation for the most common Boral and CertainTeed tile profiles used across Enterprise’s major HOA phases. Before we order materials for any visible repair in Southern Highlands or Mountain’s Edge, we confirm the correct production run against the ARB’s file. After the repair, we provide documentation suitable for submission to the architectural review board before the next HOA inspection window. That step — the paperwork — is what separates a completed repair from a completed repair that stays completed.
There’s also a scheduling reality in Enterprise that catches some contractors off-guard. HOA CC&Rs in many Enterprise communities restrict construction activity to specific morning-to-early-afternoon windows, and starting work before those hours invites neighbor complaints and potential work stoppages. A work stoppage mid-repair on a flashing or valley section means exposed underlayment left open ahead of an afternoon monsoon build-up. We schedule Enterprise jobs around those permitted windows deliberately, not as an afterthought.
The field vignette that captures this exactly: We responded to a call from a Mountain’s Edge homeowner after the first monsoon cell of the season pushed water through a cracked lead flashing at a pipe penetration. The Boral concrete tile above it looked pristine from Saint Rose Parkway. The #30 felt underlayment beneath had embrittled from years of thermal cycling and split the moment standing water found it. We sourced the correct Boral tile blend code on file with the community’s ARB, replaced the failed underlayment section, installed a new cast-lead vent boot, and had the repair documented and submitted to the architectural review board before the next HOA inspection window. One trip. No violation. No callback.
Common Roof Repair Problems We See in Enterprise Homes
- Embrittled #30 felt underlayment beneath intact-looking concrete tile. The tile above looks fine; the underlayment beneath has been through 15+ years of 110°F thermal cycling and is failing silently across entire Enterprise subdivisions. The first sign is usually a ceiling stain after the July monsoon season’s opening storm.
- Cracked lead flashing at pipe penetrations and vent boots. Enterprise’s cast-lead flashings from the 2002–2008 construction era have been expanding and contracting through Mojave summers for nearly two decades. Cracks are now common, and because the underlayment around them is often compromised too, replacing only the flashing without inspecting the surrounding felt is a repair that won’t hold.
- HOA-triggered re-work from non-matching tile replacement. A repair tile from the wrong color batch or profile run looks wrong immediately — and Mountain’s Edge and Silverado Ranch ARBs act on it. We see homeowners come to us after a previous contractor used a close-but-not-exact tile and left them managing a violation notice on top of the original leak.
- Valley channel failures on monsoon-facing roof planes. Enterprise’s pitched, hipped rooflines were designed to shed heat, not necessarily to handle the sudden intensity of a Mojave monsoon cell. Valley materials installed in 2004 are now cracking and lifting, and the lateral water intrusion they allow can soak roof decking for months before it’s noticed inside.
Pricing for Roof Repair in Enterprise, NV
Roof repair costs in Enterprise’s market reflect both the material requirements of concrete tile work and the additional documentation step that HOA compliance adds. Here are honest ranges based on what we actually see in the 89139 zip code:
- Vent boot replacement (single penetration): $180–$320, including underlayment inspection of the surrounding area
- Flashing repair or replacement: $250–$480 for a standard pipe or vent penetration; chimney or skylight flashings run $400–$750
- Valley repair (per linear section): $350–$700 depending on valley length, deck condition, and tile removal/reset scope
- Underlayment section replacement (per roofing square): $420–$680, including tile removal, underlayment replacement, and re-set with ARB-documented tile
- Shingle section replacement: $250–$550 for smaller damaged areas
- Flat roof patch: $300–$600 depending on membrane type and damage extent
- Full leak diagnosis and repair (tile reset + underlayment patch + flashing): $550–$1,200 for a concentrated repair scope
What moves the number up: HOA documentation requirements, deck damage discovered under tile, and the time needed to source an exact ARB-approved tile blend. What keeps it reasonable: catching it before a second monsoon season compounds the damage. Call (725) 444-5513 — estimates are free and we’ll give you a specific number, not a range, once we’ve seen the roof.
We Also Serve Cities Near Enterprise
Our work extends throughout the southwest Las Vegas metro. Beyond Enterprise, we regularly serve homeowners in Spring Valley to the north, Paradise to the northeast, and Summerlin South to the northwest — all communities where desert climate conditions and similar housing-era construction patterns create comparable roofing challenges. If you’re in any of these areas and need a reliable repair, the same team and the same standards apply.
Serving Enterprise, NV — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Enterprise area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Roof Repair in Enterprise, NV
For most repair work — flashing replacement, vent boot repair, valley repair, or an underlayment section replacement — HOA pre-approval is typically not required in Enterprise communities, but the repair must match the ARB-approved tile profile and color batch exactly, and documentation must be submitted after completion. We handle that documentation step as a standard part of every job in Mountain’s Edge, Silverado Ranch, and Southern Highlands. If your specific CC&Rs require pre-approval for any visible roof modification, we’ll flag that during the estimate so there are no mid-job surprises. Call (725) 444-5513 and we’ll walk through your community’s specific requirements before we schedule anything.
In almost every case we see in Enterprise, the tile is fine — it’s the #30 felt underlayment beneath it that has failed. Enterprise’s homes were built predominantly between 2002 and 2011, and that underlayment has been through 15+ summers of 110°F+ thermal cycling that embrittles and cracks felt far faster than the product’s rated lifespan accounts for. The tile above it remains intact and presents no visible warning. The first sign is typically water intrusion during the monsoon season’s first significant rainfall event, because that’s when standing water finds the hairline splits in the underlayment for the first time. We assess the underlayment during every Enterprise repair visit — not just the visible surface. Call (725) 444-5513 to schedule an inspection.
Yes, and this is a step we take seriously because the consequences of getting it wrong are real. We maintain blend-code documentation for the most common Boral and CertainTeed concrete tile profiles used across Mountain’s Edge’s construction phases, and we confirm the correct production run against your HOA’s ARB file before ordering materials. An approximate match isn’t acceptable — Mountain’s Edge ARBs act on visible tile discrepancies, and re-doing a repair with correct tile after getting a violation notice costs more than doing it right the first time. Call (725) 444-5513 and we’ll pull the blend documentation for your specific address before the estimate.
It’s not a coincidence — it’s exactly what we expect to see, and it’s a pattern we’ve documented repeatedly across Enterprise. Mountain’s Edge was built out by large-volume builders using the same underlayment specifications, the same installation crews, and the same material batches across entire phases of construction. When that underlayment reaches its thermal-stress failure point, it reaches it across the entire block simultaneously. Your neighbors’ leaks are a reliable signal that your underlayment is at or near the same failure threshold, even if you haven’t seen water intrusion yet. The time to address it is before the next monsoon season, not after. Call (725) 444-5513 — we can assess your roof now while the season is dry.
Most Enterprise HOA CC&Rs restrict exterior construction and contractor activity to daytime windows — commonly 7:00 AM to 6:00 PM on weekdays, with more restricted windows on weekends, though the exact hours vary by community and phase. We ask about your HOA’s permitted hours at the time of scheduling, not after we arrive. This matters specifically because performing a flashing or valley repair requires opening the roof — and a work stoppage mid-repair due to a CC&R violation leaves exposed underlayment vulnerable to an afternoon monsoon build-up, which can cause more damage than the original leak. We schedule Enterprise jobs to start and complete within the permitted window. Call (725) 444-5513 to discuss scheduling and we’ll confirm your community’s specific restrictions upfront.
Schedule Your Enterprise Roof Repair Today
If you’re in Enterprise, NV — in Mountain’s Edge, Silverado Ranch, Southern Highlands, or anywhere in the 89139 zip code — and you’ve seen a water stain, noticed a cracked flashing, or simply know your roof was built in the mid-2000s and hasn’t been assessed since, call Absolute Roofing & Repair Las Vegas at (725) 444-5513. William Turner will personally assess your roof, give you a specific estimate, pull the ARB tile documentation if your HOA requires it, and tell you plainly what the repair involves and what it costs. No vague quotes. No crews you’ve never met. A decade of Enterprise roofs, and the same owner on every job.
Reviewed by William Turner, Owner & Lead Technician at Absolute Roofing & Repair Las Vegas, serving Enterprise, NV and the greater Las Vegas metro for 10 years.