Finding commercial roofing contractors in 2026 starts with one decision that most building owners get wrong: do you hire a national player with multi-region scale, or a regional specialist who has worked your zip code for thirty years? Both can be right answers. Neither is the default. The national networks (Tecta America, Centimark, Nations Roof, KPost) bring standardized safety programs, manufacturer master-tier certifications across multiple product lines, and bond capacity that can carry a $20M project without breaking a sweat. The regional specialists (Baker Roofing in Charlotte, Latite Roofing in Florida, A.W. Farrell in New York, Maxwell Roofing in Tennessee) bring crews who live within 60 miles of your roof and a portfolio of buildings you can drive to over a long weekend. This guide explains how to vet both, what credentials actually matter, and why the contractor selection question is really a question about who is going to answer the phone in year seven of your warranty.
The national players: who actually counts as national
The label “national” gets tossed around loosely. A roofer with offices in three states is regional, not national. A national commercial roofer has crews in 15+ states, central safety and training infrastructure, and the bond capacity to take on $50M+ aggregate annual work without distress.
Tecta America. The largest pure-play commercial roofer in the United States, with 80+ operating locations and around $1.5B in annual revenue. Tecta is majority-owned by Altas Partners and Leonard Green & Partners after a recapitalization that closed in 2021. Tecta operates as a roll-up: each location was a regional roofer (often family-owned) acquired and integrated under the Tecta brand, retaining local crew leadership while adding national systems for safety, manufacturer certifications, and project management. Tecta carries authorized applicator status with Carlisle, Versico, GAF, Sika, and Holcim Elevate across most regions. If you have a multi-site portfolio (chains, REITs, public school districts), Tecta is the most likely national bidder.
Centimark. Pittsburgh-based, around 90 service centers across North America. Centimark is privately held by the Edwards family and runs both new installation and a large dedicated maintenance arm (CentiMark Service Network) that handles 24/7 emergency response and contracted preventive maintenance. They cover the U.S. and Canada and are particularly strong in industrial and big-box retail. Their bid response time on multi-site requests is among the fastest in the industry.
Nations Roof. Headquartered in Joliet, Illinois with roughly 25 regional offices. Nations Roof grew via acquisition through the 2010s and is a strong bidder on industrial, manufacturing, and distribution warehouse work. Their commercial portfolio skews to the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic but they take projects coast to coast for national accounts.
KPost Company. Dallas-based, with operations across Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, and growing into the Southeast. KPost is often categorized as a regional super-specialist that has scaled into a small-national footprint. They are dominant in stadium and high-profile commercial work in the Sunbelt, including stadium roof projects, airport terminals, and class-A office.
The advantage of hiring national is consistency. A Tecta crew in Dallas runs the same safety protocols as a Tecta crew in Atlanta. Manufacturer certifications are administered centrally, so the warranty paperwork is clean. Bond capacity is institutional. The disadvantage is responsiveness on small projects: if you have a $40,000 repair, a national bidder is often slower to respond and less competitive on price than a regional specialist who needs the work to fill a crew-week.
The regional specialists: who to take seriously
Regional specialists are where the depth lives. These are firms that have been roofing the same metro area for 50-100 years, with multi-generational ownership and crews who learned the trade from someone who learned it from someone who started the company.
Baker Roofing. Charlotte, North Carolina, founded 1915, 100% employee-owned ESOP. Baker covers the Carolinas, Virginia, Tennessee, Georgia, and parts of Florida with around 1,500 employees. They run residential, commercial, and industrial divisions. Their commercial portfolio includes major hospitals, university campuses, and Fortune 500 manufacturing facilities across the Southeast. Baker is the regional benchmark for the Carolinas.
Latite Roofing. Pompano Beach, Florida, founded 1947, second-generation family owned. Latite is the dominant tile and flat-membrane specialist in South Florida with regional offices serving Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, and the Treasure Coast. Their commercial portfolio reflects the Florida code reality: high-velocity hurricane zone (HVHZ) compliance, ASCE 7 wind-uplift detail, and a Miami-Dade NOA approval process that excludes contractors who do not understand the product approval system. If your roof is in Florida, Latite is on the short list.
A.W. Farrell & Son. Buffalo, New York, founded 1937, third-generation family owned. Farrell covers Western and Central New York, Northern Pennsylvania, and parts of Ohio. Their commercial book skews to school districts, hospitals, industrial buildings, and university campuses in cold-climate snow-load territory. Farrell is the Carlisle Authorized Applicator with Centurion status that most institutional buyers in upstate New York call first.
Maxwell Roofing & Sheet Metal. Nashville, Tennessee, founded 1897 (yes, 1897), still family-owned. Maxwell is one of the oldest continuously operating roofing firms in the country and the regional commercial benchmark for Middle Tennessee, Kentucky, and Northern Alabama.
MR Roof and MR Roof Commercial. Indianapolis, Indiana, founded 1982, family-owned. MR Roof started residential and has built a commercial book across the Midwest covering Indiana, Ohio, Illinois, and Michigan.
Other regional specialists worth knowing by name include Carlisle Roofing (Massachusetts), Beldon Roofing (Texas), CEI Composite Materials (Wisconsin), Tremco Roofing (which is technically a manufacturer with installer network), and Sutter Roofing (Florida West Coast). Every metro has 3-5 of these. The vetting framework below applies whether the contractor has 1,500 employees or 50.
EMR: the number that separates pros from amateurs
Experience Modification Rate (EMR) is a workers comp insurance score that compares a contractor’s actual loss experience to the industry average for their classification code. An EMR of 1.0 is industry average. Below 1.0 means fewer claims than average, lower premiums, and a safer crew. Above 1.0 means more claims than average, and the contractor is paying surcharges on workers comp. Best-in-class commercial roofers run EMR between 0.65 and 0.85. An EMR below 0.75 is excellent. Above 1.0 is a red flag. Above 1.2 is disqualifying for most institutional and general contractor pre-qualification systems. The EMR letter is generated annually by the contractor’s workers comp insurer. Any commercial roofer should produce it on request within 24 hours.
The reason EMR matters beyond the safety reason is that most commercial general contractors pre-qualify subcontractors using EMR as a gate. A contractor with EMR above 1.0 cannot get on the jobsite of most large GCs. So when you hire a roofer for a project that requires a GC, you are implicitly hiring through that GC’s pre-qualification screen, which will already have filtered the bidder list to EMR-acceptable firms. If you are hiring direct, you need to apply the same screen yourself.
Manufacturer certifications that matter
The 20-30 year manufacturer warranty on a commercial roof is the single most valuable piece of paper in the transaction. It only ships with certified installer programs. The tiers that count:
Carlisle Authorized Applicator and Centurion Award. Carlisle SynTec is the largest single-ply manufacturer in North America. The Authorized Applicator program requires installer training on Carlisle Sure-Weld TPO, Sure-Flex PVC, and Sure-Seal EPDM systems, plus an annual installation audit. Centurion goes to applicators who maintain top performance metrics across multiple years.
GAF Master Select. GAF dominates residential but runs a serious commercial program. Master Select is the top tier and activates the GAF Wellington 30-year NDL (no dollar limit) warranty, which covers labor and material for full replacement, not just material.
Versico VersiTrac. Versico is a Carlisle subsidiary that runs a parallel commercial brand. VersiTrac certified installers qualify for the Versico Total System warranty up to 30 years.
Firestone Red Shield (now Holcim Elevate). Firestone Building Products was acquired by Holcim and rebranded Elevate in 2022, but the Red Shield contractor program continues. Red Shield Master Contractors qualify for the Platinum 30-year NDL warranty.
Sika Sarnafil Roofing Standards Bureau. Sika is the gold standard for PVC in North America. RSB-certified contractors qualify for the Sika Sarnafil 30-year Roof Guarantee. PVC is the right answer for restaurants, hospitals, schools, and any building with chemical or grease exposure.
If a contractor pitches you a 30-year manufacturer warranty without holding the corresponding certification, they are misrepresenting. Verify directly on the manufacturer website, where every brand publishes a searchable list of authorized contractors by zip code. For a deeper read on warranty tiers, see our commercial roof warranty guide.
Insurance limits: what is actually adequate
Residential roofers often carry $1M general liability and minimum statutory workers compensation. That is not enough for commercial work. Commercial general liability should be $2M per occurrence and $5M aggregate at the absolute minimum. Larger projects (over $500K contract value) frequently require $5M per occurrence and $10M aggregate. Umbrella policies are common: a contractor with $1M GL and a $5M umbrella has effective coverage of $6M, which counts. A $5M umbrella sitting over an expired primary policy does not. Read both certificates. Demand certificates of insurance (COIs) naming your business as additional insured. A COI dated 18 months ago is stale.
Bonding capacity
Performance bonds and payment bonds protect you if the contractor fails to complete the project or fails to pay subcontractors and suppliers. Public commercial work (schools, government, federally-funded hospitals) typically requires bonds under the Miller Act and state Little Miller Acts. Private commercial work over $500K frequently requires bonds. A contractor’s bonding capacity is the maximum aggregate bond value the surety will write. Good commercial roofers maintain bonding capacity 2-5x their largest project size. Ask for a bid bond letter from the surety. Asking pre-qualifies the contractor’s financial health before you waste time on a proposal.
How to source the short list
The right way to source bidders is not Google. The right way is:
- Pull the manufacturer authorized contractor directory for the membrane system you are leaning toward (Carlisle, Versico, GAF, Holcim Elevate, Sika). Filter by zip code.
- Ask your peer building owners in the same metro who they hired and would hire again. Property managers at multi-tenant buildings know everyone.
- If you have an architect or engineer involved in the project, ask their preferred specifier list. Architects and engineers maintain contractor pre-qualification lists for their own liability reasons.
- For multi-site portfolios, contact one of the nationals (Tecta, Centimark, Nations Roof) and one or two regional specialists for the same metro. Compare on like-for-like specs.
Lead aggregator sites that promise to “match you with 3 verified contractors” are not the way. Those are pay-for-click marketplaces, not vetted lists. For more on this sourcing problem, see our local commercial roofer finder and commercial roofers near you guides.
The portfolio test: drive there
Commercial buyers should physically drive to at least two completed projects of comparable scope and age. If the contractor pitches you a 200-square TPO replacement, ask for the address of a 200-square TPO they completed 5 years ago, and go look at it. Are the seams intact? Are the flashings clean? Are the drains working? Is the parapet detail still sealed? Does the membrane have ponding water staining or punctures from rooftop traffic? Walk it with the building owner if possible, and ask whether they would hire the same contractor again.
National vs. regional: when each is right
National is right when you have a multi-site portfolio, when the project is large enough that bond capacity matters, when you want a single point of contact across geographies, or when you have institutional procurement rules that require a contractor of a certain size. National is also right when you need rapid mobilization across multiple locations after a regional weather event.
Regional is right when you have a single building, when you value crew tenure (regional crews tend to stay longer), when you want a relationship that carries through the warranty period, and when local code knowledge matters (Florida HVHZ, California Title 24 cool roof, New York City Local Law 97, Chicago green roof ordinance, Massachusetts Stretch Energy Code).
For high-stakes industrial work (cold storage, food processing, pharmaceutical manufacturing), see our industrial roofing contractors 2026 guide, where the contractor selection question gets tighter still.
The 12 questions to ask any bidder
- Which manufacturer certifications do you hold, and at what tier? Provide proof of current status.
- What is your EMR for the most recent policy year, and may I see the EMR letter?
- What are your general liability and workers compensation limits, and which states do you carry compliant WC in?
- What is your current bonding capacity, and may I have a bid bond letter from your surety?
- Who is the on-site project manager, and how many years have they been with your company?
- Will the install crew be your direct employees, or are you subcontracting? If subcontracting, what is their EMR and certification status?
- What is the manufacturer warranty (term, NDL vs material-only, exclusions), and will you provide the actual warranty paperwork before installation begins?
- What is your workmanship warranty (typically 2-5 years on commercial), and what does it cover?
- What is your daily safety protocol (toolbox talks, fall arrest verification, weather hold criteria)?
- Walk me through your tear-off and weather-tight schedule. How much roof will be open at any one time?
- What is the payment schedule? Reasonable: 10% deposit, progress payments tied to milestones, 10% retention until punch list complete. Unreasonable: 50% up front.
- May I have addresses of three completed projects of comparable scope, with owner contact info?
For more on what separates serious bidders from dabblers, see how to choose a roofing contractor and questions to ask a roofing contractor. The contract template is in roofing contract template.
The bottom line
Hiring commercial roofing contractors in 2026 is more a paperwork exercise than a skill exercise. The contractor with the right certifications, the right insurance, the right EMR, the right bonding, and the right portfolio is going to do good work because the system that produced those credentials is the same system that produces good installs. Whether you go national or regional depends on your portfolio size, your geography, and how much you value local crew tenure versus institutional scale. Use the same 12 questions on both. Drive to two finished projects. Read the bid against the manufacturer specification sheet. The right answer reveals itself.