Roof Replacement & Installation in Enterprise, NV
If your Enterprise home has concrete tile that looks fine from the street but you’ve noticed a stain on the ceiling after last summer’s monsoon, you’re likely dealing with a failed underlayment — and you’re not alone. Most full roof replacements in Enterprise run $12,000–$22,000 depending on roof size, pitch, and material choice, and we typically reach homes in the 89139 ZIP code within 24 hours for an assessment. Call (725) 444-5513 to schedule a free on-site estimate with William Turner directly.

Why Absolute Roofing & Repair Las Vegas Is Enterprise’s Preferred Roof Replacement & Installation Company
Enterprise homeowners who’ve called us once tend to call us again — and to send their neighbors our way. Our 4.9-star average across 341 verified reviews reflects a track record built job by job across Southern Nevada’s most demanding desert conditions, not a handful of reviews from a single good season. William Turner, our owner and lead technician, is the person who shows up to assess your roof, pulls the permits, and is on-site through final inspection — that accountability is rare in this trade and it’s the reason our reputation in Enterprise has held steady for a decade.
We know Enterprise’s housing stock specifically — the 2002–2011 production-builder tracts in Mountain’s Edge, Silverado Ranch, and Southern Highlands — because we’ve been replacing underlayments in those subdivisions for years. When you call our Roof Replacement & Installation in Enterprise team, you’re talking to people who understand which builder ran which underlayment batch and what that means for your specific street. That local context is what separates a correct diagnosis from a guess.
Our Roof Replacement & Installation team is structured to mobilize quickly. We serve the 89139 ZIP code regularly and can typically schedule an initial assessment within one business day, with replacement work beginning within the same week for standard projects. Emergency storm-damage response is part of our core model, not a special surcharge situation — if a monsoon cell pushed water through your ceiling last night, we treat that with the urgency it deserves.
Our Roof Replacement & Installation Services in Enterprise
Full Roof Replacement
A full roof replacement in Enterprise means more than swapping shingles — it means stripping everything down to the deck, inspecting for moisture damage, and installing an underlayment system rated for Mojave UV loads and 110°F+ thermal cycling. We document the deck condition before we close it up, so you have a clear record of what was found and what was done. For the 2002–2011 tract homes that make up most of Enterprise’s housing stock, a proper full replacement is almost always the right call once underlayment delamination starts — partial repairs on a failed underlayment field rarely hold through a second monsoon season.
New Construction Roofing
Enterprise continues to see infill development and custom builds along corridors near Saint Rose Parkway and South Decatur Boulevard, and new construction roofing in this climate requires material selections made with desert performance in mind from day one. We work with builders and individual homeowners on spec to install systems that meet Southern Nevada’s fire-rating requirements and HOA aesthetic standards without overbuilding unnecessarily. William reviews every new construction project personally before material orders are placed.
Asphalt Shingle Roofing
While concrete tile dominates Enterprise’s HOA-governed tracts, asphalt shingles remain a viable and cost-effective option for properties outside strict HOA design guidelines — and modern high-temp shingles from manufacturers like GAF, Owens Corning, and CertainTeed have significantly improved UV resistance compared to products installed in the early 2000s. In Enterprise’s climate, we specify shingles rated for Class 4 impact and high solar reflectance wherever the project allows, extending service life meaningfully over standard products. A typical asphalt shingle roof replacement in Enterprise runs $8,500–$14,000 for an average single-family home.
Metal Roofing
Standing-seam metal roofing is gaining ground in Enterprise, particularly on custom builds and re-roofing projects where the homeowner wants to exit the tile-underlayment replacement cycle permanently. Metal handles thermal expansion through engineered panel movement rather than fighting it, which matters enormously in a climate where surface temperatures exceed 160°F on a summer afternoon. We install metal systems from several of our seven manufacturer lines and can match HOA color requirements in most cases — a full metal roof replacement in Enterprise typically runs $18,000–$32,000, with a 40–50-year realistic service life that changes the long-term math considerably.
Tile Roofing
Concrete tile is the dominant roofing material in Enterprise — it’s what Mountain’s Edge, Silverado Ranch, and Southern Highlands were built with, and in many cases HOA covenants require it. The tile itself is extremely durable; the problem is underneath it. Our tile roofing work in Enterprise focuses heavily on underlayment system replacement using high-temp synthetics rated for Mojave conditions, with careful tile removal, inspection, and re-setting of undamaged field tile wherever possible to control costs. We handle the full scope: stripping, decking, new underlayment, re-tile or new tile supply, and flashing replacement at every roof-to-wall transition.
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
We carry active inventory and certified installation status across seven major manufacturer lines: GAF, CertainTeed, Owens Corning, IKO, Atlas, Tamko, and Boral. For Enterprise’s concrete tile stock, Boral’s tile systems and compatible synthetic underlayments are frequently the right fit — but our recommendation is always driven by your roof’s specific needs, not by what we happened to order last. Because we work in Enterprise regularly and know the local project volume, we maintain material availability that lets us move quickly rather than waiting on supply chains.
Enterprise’s Synchronized Underlayment Crisis — What’s Actually Happening in Your Neighborhood
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 production builders — and that means the concrete tile roofs across entire cul-de-sacs share nearly identical underlayment ages, often from the same installation batch. That original #30 felt underlayment, punished by Mojave UV radiation and relentless 110°F+ thermal cycling, typically fails in 15–20 years. Enterprise is now inside that window — and the result is a community-wide wave of underlayment failures hidden beneath tile that looks perfectly intact from the street.

This synchronized aging pattern simply doesn’t occur in older, more organically developed communities where housing stock was built across different decades by different builders using different materials. In Mountain’s Edge, we regularly document entire cul-de-sacs where the same builder’s product from the same install year fails within the same 18-month window. A homeowner calls after a monsoon leak. We replace their underlayment. Within weeks, two neighbors on the same block call — same builder, same year, same failure. Homeowners who wait while watching their neighbors get work done are often scheduling into a backlogged market.
We were called to a Mountain’s Edge home after the first significant monsoon cell of August pushed water through a ceiling seam the homeowner had never noticed before. The concrete tile above looked flawless from Saint Rose Parkway. When we pulled a field section, we found the original #30 felt underlayment had delaminated across nearly 60% of the deck — brittle from two decades of thermal cycling. We performed a full replacement: stripped all tile, installed a Boral-compatible synthetic high-temp underlayment rated for Mojave UV loads, and re-set the original concrete tile where it was undamaged, all within the same week. Before we finished, two neighbors on the same cul-de-sac had already called after seeing our truck — both presenting identical failure patterns from the same builder’s 2006 install run.
Common Roof Replacement & Installation Problems We See in Enterprise Homes
- Hidden underlayment delamination beneath visually intact concrete tile. The #30 felt installed during Enterprise’s 2002–2011 building boom has reached the end of its Mojave-punished service life, failing silently until a monsoon rainfall event forces water through the deck. By the time a ceiling stain appears, interior damage has typically already occurred behind the drywall.
- Flashing failure at roof-to-wall transitions driven by extreme thermal expansion. Enterprise’s 110°F+ summer highs cause metal flashings on these tract homes to expand and contract beyond their original installation tolerances, opening gaps that the late-summer monsoon season then immediately exploits. We replace compromised flashings as part of every full roof replacement — it’s not optional in this climate.
- Synchronized block-level aging that catches homeowners off guard. Because Silverado Ranch and Southern Highlands homes were built in tight multi-year windows by the same production builders, underlayment failures propagate neighbor-to-neighbor within months, creating sudden spikes in local demand that compress scheduling windows for anyone who waits.
- UV-accelerated shingle granule loss on non-tile properties. Enterprise homes outside tile HOA zones that carry early-2000s asphalt shingles are showing significant granule loss after two decades of Mojave sun exposure, leading to accelerating water infiltration that a single repair won’t solve. At that stage, replacement is the more economical path over a 5-year horizon.
Pricing for Roof Replacement & Installation in Enterprise, NV
Here’s a straightforward look at what Enterprise homeowners typically pay:
- Concrete tile underlayment replacement (re-tile existing tile): $10,000–$18,000 for an average 2,000–2,800 sq ft Enterprise tract home
- Full concrete tile replacement (new tile + underlayment): $14,000–$24,000
- Asphalt shingle full replacement: $8,500–$14,000
- Standing-seam metal roof replacement: $18,000–$32,000
- Flat roof replacement (low-slope sections, accessory structures): $5,000–$9,000
Roof pitch, deck condition, HOA material requirements, and the extent of any structural damage found during tear-off all move the final number. We price every job after a free on-site assessment — not from a satellite photo — because the deck underneath is what determines the real scope. Call (725) 444-5513 and we’ll get William out to your Enterprise property for an honest, itemized estimate at no charge.
We Also Serve Cities Near Enterprise
Beyond Enterprise, our roof replacement and installation work regularly covers Spring Valley to the north, Paradise along the eastern corridor, and Summerlin South across the valley. If you’re in any of these communities and need the same owner-led, hands-on approach, the same team handles it — same response time, same accountability, same William Turner on the roof.
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 Replacement & Installation in Enterprise
If your Silverado Ranch home was built between 2002 and 2008, the tile itself may well be intact — concrete tile is extremely durable — but the original #30 felt underlayment underneath is almost certainly at or past the end of its functional life given Mojave UV exposure. The tile above it is literally hiding the problem. A ceiling stain after a monsoon is the most common sign, but by then interior damage is already in progress. The only accurate diagnosis is an on-site inspection where we pull a representative field tile section and assess the underlayment condition directly. Call (725) 444-5513 and we’ll give you a clear answer, not a guess.
In most cases, yes — a significant portion of the original tile can be carefully removed, inspected, and re-set over the new underlayment system, which reduces material cost meaningfully. The tiles we remove are sorted on-site: undamaged field tiles go back on, cracked or chipped ones are replaced with matching new tile. This tile-salvage approach is standard practice in Enterprise and is part of how we keep full underlayment replacement projects cost-competitive. We’ll walk you through what percentage of your tile is salvageable during the initial estimate so you know what the material cost looks like before any work starts.
Because your entire street was likely built by the same production builder in the same two-to-three-year window, using the same underlayment materials installed under the same conditions. When one home’s underlayment reaches failure — typically triggered by the first hard monsoon rain of the season — the neighboring homes are almost always within the same failure window. This is Enterprise’s synchronized aging pattern, and it’s specific to boom-era tract development. It’s not a coincidence; it’s predictable infrastructure physics. If your neighbors are getting their roofs done, your timeline is probably shorter than you think. A free inspection will tell you exactly where you stand.
Yes — and for homeowners who want to exit the 15-to-20-year underlayment replacement cycle permanently, standing-seam metal is worth serious consideration. Metal handles Enterprise’s extreme thermal expansion through engineered panel movement rather than resisting it, which is why metal systems perform well here over decades. The upfront cost runs higher — typically $18,000–$32,000 for a full replacement — but the realistic 40–50-year service life changes the long-term math compared to concrete tile systems that will need another underlayment replacement in 15–20 years. HOA approval is required in most Enterprise communities, and we’ve navigated that process with Enterprise HOAs before. Call (725) 444-5513 and we can review your specific HOA requirements alongside the cost comparison.
October through April is Enterprise’s optimal window — temperatures are out of the extreme range, and the monsoon season has passed, so there’s no risk of an active weather event interrupting a multi-day replacement project. March and November book up quickly as local homeowners increasingly understand the timing advantage. If you’ve already found a leak after this past monsoon season, don’t wait for fall — an active underlayment failure in an Enterprise home will not hold through another summer of 110°F+ cycling without making the interior damage significantly worse. We schedule Enterprise jobs year-round and can discuss temporary protective measures for active leak situations while a replacement is being planned. Call (725) 444-5513 to lock in a date before the schedule fills.
Schedule Your Free Roof Replacement Estimate in Enterprise
If you own a home in Enterprise — whether you’re in Mountain’s Edge, Silverado Ranch, or Southern Highlands, or anywhere across the 89139 ZIP code — and you have any doubt about your underlayment’s condition, the time to find out is before the next monsoon season arrives. William Turner will come out personally, pull a tile section if warranted, and give you a straight assessment with a written, itemized estimate at no charge. No pressure, no satellite-photo quotes, no subcontractors on the assessment call. Call (725) 444-5513 today to schedule.
Reviewed by William Turner, Owner & Lead Technician at Absolute Roofing & Repair Las Vegas, serving Enterprise, NV and the greater Las Vegas area for 10 years.