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Roofing Providers

The roofing providers on this provider network index licensed contractors, coating applicators, inspectors, and manufacturers operating across the United States. Entries span residential and commercial segments, with classifications that reflect contractor scope, coating type, and geographic service area. The Roof Coating Provider Network Purpose and Scope page documents the criteria governing which categories appear in this index and why.

How providers are organized

Providers are structured by service category first, then by geographic region. The primary classification splits follow four functional lines:

Within each category, entries are sorted by state, then metro area or county. Multi-state operators appear in each applicable state's subsection rather than under a national catch-all, which preserves the geographic precision that permitting and licensing research requires.

Contractor licensing standards vary by jurisdiction. The National Conference of State Legislatures tracks roofing contractor licensing requirements across all 50 states, and those differences are reflected in how license numbers are displayed — or flagged as not applicable — within each state's providers block.

What each provider covers

A standard roofing provider network entry contains the following data fields:

Safety-related credentials are flagged separately from general licensing. Firms with documented OSHA 10 or OSHA 30 construction training, or those operating under a written fall protection plan as required under OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart M, carry a distinct marker in their entry. That marker does not constitute a safety endorsement — it reflects the presence of documented training records in the submission file.

Applicators whose coating products are subject to VOC content regulations under rules such as South Coast Air Quality Management District Rule 1113 have that compliance status noted where the firm supplied documentation at the time of provider.

Geographic distribution

The provider network covers all 50 states. Provider density is heaviest in states with high commercial flat-roof inventories and active re-roofing markets. Florida, Texas, California, and Arizona together account for a disproportionate share of coating applicator entries, which reflects both climate-driven demand for reflective and waterproofing coatings and the volume of commercial construction in those states.

Providers in states without mandatory contractor licensing — such as states where municipal rather than state-level licensing governs roofing work — include a jurisdiction notation explaining the applicable local licensing framework. This distinction matters because ASHRAE 90.1-2022 compliance for commercial building envelopes, including roof assemblies, is increasingly embedded in local building codes across jurisdictions that have adopted the 2021 International Energy Conservation Code.

Rural and low-density regions are covered through regional coating distributors and multi-county contractors where local specialty applicators are not present. For guidance on interpreting coverage gaps or understanding how the provider network scope was defined, see How to Use This Roof Coating Resource.

How to read an entry

Each entry functions as a structured record, not a review or ranked result. No entry carries a rating score, star system, or editorial endorsement. The fields present factual identifiers — license numbers, certification references, product affiliations — that a researcher or procurement professional can independently verify against the issuing authority.

The coating type field uses product-category terminology aligned with Roof Coatings Manufacturers Association (RCMA) classifications. A contractor verified under "silicone" has documented that silicone application is within their stated scope; it does not indicate volume, market share, or quality rank relative to other silicone applicators in the same geography.

Where a provider includes an ENERGY STAR product reference, that reference points to a product the contractor or distributor supplies — not the contractor's own certification. ENERGY STAR qualification is held by the manufacturer, and the product must appear in the EPA's rated products database to carry that notation.

Permitting language in an entry reflects whether the verified entity pulls permits as a standard business practice. In jurisdictions where roofing permits are required under the International Building Code or local amendments, a contractor's documented permit-pulling status is a verifiable operational data point. Entries where this field is blank indicate the information was not supplied at time of provider, not that permits were declined or waived.

References


The law belongs to the people. Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, 590 U.S. (2020)