How to Find the Perfect Roofing Contractor | Big Easy Roofers
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How to Find the Right Roofing Contractor in Mandeville

Hiring a roofer is one of those decisions that feels straightforward until something goes wrong. A leaking patch job, a contractor who disappears mid-project, or an unlicensed crew that voids your insurance claim—these problems happen more often than most Mandeville homeowners expect. Big Easy Roofers has worked across St. Tammany Parish for years, and we have seen what happens when property owners skip due diligence. Here is how to find a roofing contractor in Mandeville who will actually do the job right.

Louisiana Licensing Requirements for Roofers

Louisiana requires roofing contractors to hold a license issued by the Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors (LSLBC). Any contractor performing roofing work valued at $7,500 or more must have an active LSLBC license. This is not optional, and it is not just a formality—it is state law under Louisiana Revised Statutes Title 37, Chapter 24.

The LSLBC issues licenses in specific classifications. For residential roofing, the relevant classification is Residential Building Contractor or a specialty classification for roofing. For commercial projects, contractors need a Commercial Building Contractor license or the appropriate specialty trade.

You can verify any contractor license status directly on the LSLBC website at lslbc.louisiana.gov. Search by company name or license number. The listing will show license status, classifications, insurance on file, and any disciplinary actions. If a contractor cannot or will not provide a license number, that is your first and clearest warning sign.

What to Verify Before Signing Anything

A license alone does not tell the whole story. Before you sign a contract with any Mandeville roofing contractor, confirm these items:

  • Active LSLBC license — Verify it is current, not expired or suspended. Check the specific classification covers roofing work.
  • General liability insurance — The contractor should carry at least $500,000 in general liability coverage. Ask for a certificate of insurance and call the carrier to confirm the policy is active.
  • Workers compensation insurance — Louisiana law requires workers comp for contractors with employees. If the crew is uninsured and someone gets injured on your property, you could be held liable.
  • Surety bond — The LSLBC requires contractors to post a surety bond. This provides financial recourse if the contractor fails to complete the work or violates the contract.
  • Physical business address — A PO box or no address at all is a red flag. Legitimate contractors have an established office or shop.
  • References from local projects — Ask for three to five recent projects in St. Tammany Parish. Actually call those references and ask about timelines, communication, and cleanup.

Mandeville and St. Tammany Parish Permit Requirements

Roofing work in Mandeville requires a building permit from the City of Mandeville Building Department. The permit process confirms that the proposed work meets local building codes, which reference the International Building Code (IBC) and International Residential Code (IRC) with Louisiana amendments.

For properties outside Mandeville city limits but within St. Tammany Parish, permits are handled by the St. Tammany Parish Department of Building and Development. The parish adopted the 2021 IBC and IRC with Louisiana-specific wind load and flood zone requirements.

Your contractor should pull the permit—not you. A contractor who asks the homeowner to pull the building permit is sidestepping accountability. The permit ties the work to the contractor license, making them responsible for code compliance. When you pull the permit yourself, that responsibility shifts to you.

After the work is complete, the permit requires a final inspection by the local building inspector. Do not make final payment until the inspection passes and the permit is closed out.

Getting Multiple Estimates the Right Way

Get at least three written estimates from licensed contractors. This is standard advice for a reason—it gives you a price range, lets you compare scopes of work, and reveals which contractors are thorough versus which are cutting corners on paper.

A proper roofing estimate for a Mandeville home should include:

  • Full scope of work (tear-off vs. overlay, number of layers to remove)
  • Material specifications (manufacturer, product line, warranty tier)
  • Underlayment type (synthetic vs. felt, ice and water shield at valleys and penetrations)
  • Ventilation plan (ridge vent, soffit vents, turbines)
  • Flashing details (step flashing, counter flashing, pipe boots)
  • Drip edge and starter strip specifications
  • Debris removal and dump fees
  • Permit costs
  • Timeline and payment schedule
  • Warranty terms—both manufacturer and workmanship

If an estimate is just a single line item with a total price, it is not detailed enough. You need specifics so you can compare apples to apples across proposals.

Red Flags That Should Stop You Cold

Some warning signs are obvious. Others take experience to recognize. Here are the most common red flags in the Mandeville and Northshore roofing market:

  • Door-to-door solicitation after storms — Storm chasers flood St. Tammany Parish after every hurricane or hailstorm. They offer cheap prices, do substandard work, and leave town before the first leak appears.
  • Asking for large upfront payments — A 10 to 20 percent deposit is reasonable. Demanding 50 percent or full payment before starting work is not.
  • No written contract — Verbal agreements are unenforceable in practice. Everything—scope, price, timeline, warranty—must be in writing.
  • Pressure to sign immediately — “This price is only good today” is a sales tactic, not a legitimate deadline. Good contractors let you compare proposals.
  • No physical office or local references — If you cannot visit their office and they cannot name five jobs within 30 miles, keep looking.
  • Offering to waive your insurance deductible — This is insurance fraud in Louisiana. Walk away immediately.
  • No permit mention in the proposal — If permits are not included, the contractor may be planning to skip them.

Choosing a Contractor for Commercial vs. Residential Work

Residential and commercial roofing are different trades that happen to share a name. The materials, installation methods, code requirements, and crew expertise are distinct. A contractor who installs asphalt shingles on houses every day is not automatically qualified to install a TPO membrane on a commercial flat roof.

For commercial roofing in the Mandeville area, look for contractors with specific commercial experience and the appropriate LSLBC commercial classification. Ask about their experience with the specific system you need—whether it is TPO, EPDM, modified bitumen, or metal. Manufacturer certifications (GAF Master Commercial, Carlisle Authorized Applicator, etc.) indicate specialized training.

For residential roofing projects, manufacturer certifications like GAF Master Elite, CertainTeed SELECT ShingleMaster, or Owens Corning Preferred Contractor show that the installer meets the manufacturer quality standards and can offer enhanced warranty options.

Working with Insurance Claims

If your Mandeville home sustained storm damage, your roofing contractor and your insurance company will both play roles in the repair process. Here is how to keep that process clean:

File the claim yourself. Do not let a contractor file it on your behalf or handle everything with your insurer. You need to stay in direct communication with your adjuster.

Get an independent estimate before the adjuster visits. Your contractor estimate gives you a baseline to compare against the insurance company assessment. If there is a significant gap, your contractor can supplement the claim with documentation—photos, measurements, material specifications—to support the actual cost of proper repair.

Never sign an Assignment of Benefits (AOB) unless you fully understand what you are giving up. An AOB transfers your insurance claim rights to the contractor, and disputes between the contractor and your insurer can drag on for months while your roof sits unfinished.

Questions to Ask Every Roofing Contractor

Before you hire, ask these questions and pay attention to how they are answered:

  1. What is your LSLBC license number, and is it current?
  2. Can I see your certificate of insurance for general liability and workers comp?
  3. Will you pull the building permit, and is that cost included in your estimate?
  4. How many roofing projects have you completed in St. Tammany Parish in the last 12 months?
  5. Who will be the on-site supervisor, and how do I reach them during the project?
  6. What is your payment schedule?
  7. What happens if the project goes over the estimated timeline?
  8. Do you use subcontractors, and if so, are they licensed and insured?
  9. What manufacturer certifications do you hold?
  10. What does your workmanship warranty cover, and for how long?

A trustworthy contractor will answer every one of these without hesitation. Evasive or vague answers tell you everything you need to know.

What to Expect After You Hire

Once you sign a contract with a Mandeville roofing contractor, the process should follow a predictable sequence:

The contractor pulls the permit and schedules the work. Material delivery usually happens the day before or morning of the job. For a standard residential re-roof in Mandeville, most crews complete the work in one to three days depending on roof size and complexity.

During the project, your contractor should protect landscaping, contain debris with tarps, and use magnetic sweepers to pick up stray nails. At the end of each workday, the site should be reasonably clean.

After the roof is complete, the contractor schedules the final building inspection. Once the inspector signs off, you review the work with the contractor, confirm everything matches the contract scope, and make the final payment. Keep copies of the permit, inspection report, material warranties, and workmanship warranty in a safe place—you will need them if you sell the house or file a future insurance claim.

Frequently Asked Questions