Asphalt shingles vs composite shingles is really two questions in one, because the words get mixed up constantly. “Composition shingles” is just another name for asphalt shingles, so those two are the same product. “Composite” or “synthetic” shingles are a different thing entirely: molded polymer roofing that imitates slate or cedar and costs three to five times as much. So no, asphalt shingles and composite shingles are not the same, but asphalt and composition shingles are. This guide sorts out which one you actually mean and helps you choose.
Are asphalt shingles composite shingles?
No. Asphalt shingles are not composite shingles, even though the names sound close. Asphalt shingles (also sold as “composition” shingles) are made from a fiberglass mat coated in asphalt and topped with ceramic granules. Composite shingles, also called synthetic shingles, are molded from engineered polymers, sometimes with recycled rubber or plastic, and are designed to mimic natural slate or wood shake. Two different products, two different price tiers, two different lifespans.
The confusion is understandable. “Composition” and “composite” differ by two letters and both describe a manufactured, multi-material shingle. But in roofing the two terms point at opposite ends of the price scale, so getting them straight before you request quotes prevents an expensive misunderstanding.
What does “composition shingles” mean?
Composition shingles means asphalt shingles. The term comes from the fact that the shingle is a composition of layered materials: a fiberglass base mat, a waterproofing asphalt coating, and a top surface of colored mineral or ceramic granules. Roofers, supply houses, and older insurance paperwork often say “comp” or “composition” when they mean a standard asphalt shingle. There is no separate “composition” product to shop for.
If a contractor quotes you “composition shingles,” you are being quoted asphalt shingles, most likely architectural (laminated) asphalt, which is the default residential shingle in the United States. For a full breakdown of that terminology and the tiers involved, see the dedicated guide on composition shingles and what they actually are.
What are composite (synthetic) shingles?
Composite shingles, sold as synthetic slate or synthetic shake, are premium polymer roofing tiles molded to copy the look of natural slate or cedar. Brands such as DaVinci, Brava, and F-Wave dominate the category. They weigh a fraction of real slate, install like a shingle rather than a heavy tile, and carry limited warranties that often run 40 to 50 years. The trade-off is price: they cost far more than asphalt per square foot installed.
Because “composite” spans several polymer formulas and imitation styles, the category behaves more like a design upgrade than a commodity roof. The deeper comparison of brands, formulas, and how synthetic stacks up against real slate lives in the guide on composite (synthetic) roofing cost and brands.
Asphalt vs composite shingles: side-by-side comparison
Here is the direct comparison for a homeowner choosing between standard architectural asphalt and premium synthetic composite. Figures reflect 2026 U.S. installed pricing and field-observed lifespans; costs vary by region, roof complexity, and access.
| Factor | Asphalt (composition) shingles | Composite (synthetic) shingles |
|---|---|---|
| Core material | Fiberglass mat, asphalt, ceramic granules | Engineered polymer, sometimes recycled rubber or plastic |
| Installed cost (2026) | About $3.50 to $7.00 per sq ft | About $8.00 to $16.00 per sq ft |
| Typical field lifespan | 15 to 30 years by tier | 40 to 50 years |
| Wind rating | Commonly 110 to 130 mph rated | Commonly 110 to 190 mph rated |
| Weight | Roughly 2 to 4.5 lbs per sq ft | Roughly 1.25 to 2 lbs per sq ft |
| Impact resistance | Class 3 to 4 on premium lines | Class 4 on most lines |
| Look | Flat 3-tab to dimensional architectural | Realistic slate or cedar shake profiles |
| Repairability | Easy, matching stock widely available | Brand-specific tiles, harder to match |
The pattern is consistent: asphalt wins on upfront cost and repair simplicity, composite wins on lifespan, impact rating, and curb appeal. Neither is universally “better”; the right pick depends on how long you plan to own the home and whether the roof is visible from the street.
Which lasts longer, asphalt or composite?
Composite shingles last longer, typically 40 to 50 years against 15 to 30 years for asphalt. Within asphalt, 3-tab averages the low end near 15 to 20 years while architectural and luxury lines reach 25 to 30 in favorable climates. Composite polymer resists the granule loss, curling, and thermal cracking that end most asphalt roofs, which is where its multi-decade warranties come from.
Marketing lifespans and real field lifespans differ, though. The Roofing Brief’s 2026 Roofing Material Lifespan Report tracks field data against manufacturer claims and shows most asphalt roofs retire before their rated year, usually from storm damage, poor ventilation, or installation defects rather than the shingle simply wearing out.
Which costs more, and is composite worth it?
Composite costs roughly two to three times more than asphalt installed, so it pays off mainly for long-term owners. If you plan to stay 20-plus years, spreading a 45-year composite roof across that time can beat replacing a 20-year asphalt roof midway. If you may sell within 10 years, architectural asphalt usually returns more of its cost. Insurance can shift the math: a Class 4 rating on either material may earn a premium discount in hail-prone states.
Weight and carbon footprint also factor in. Lighter composite avoids structural reinforcement on some homes, and the 2026 Roofing Material Carbon and Embodied Energy Report compares the embodied energy of asphalt, synthetic, and other materials for owners weighing environmental cost alongside dollars.
How to decide between the two
Match the material to how long you will own the home and how much the roof shows. Work through these steps before requesting quotes so you are comparing the right products.
- Confirm the term. If a quote says “composition,” it is asphalt; if it says “composite” or “synthetic,” it is polymer. Ask which one.
- Set your horizon. Under 10 years to sell favors architectural asphalt; 20-plus years favors composite.
- Check visibility. A prominent, street-facing roof rewards the slate or shake look of composite; a low-slope or hidden roof rarely does.
- Price your climate. In severe hail or high-wind zones, compare Class 4 asphalt against composite and factor any insurance discount.
- Get quotes on both. Ask each contractor to price a named architectural asphalt line and a named composite line so the comparison is apples to apples.
For the wider set of choices beyond these two, including 3-tab, designer asphalt, and metal, the guide to roof shingle types lays out every option side by side.
Frequently asked questions
Are asphalt shingles the same as composite shingles?
No. Asphalt shingles are the same as composition shingles, but not the same as composite shingles. Asphalt (composition) shingles use a fiberglass mat, asphalt, and granules. Composite shingles are molded synthetic polymer tiles that imitate slate or shake and cost three to five times more. The near-identical names cause the mix-up, so confirm which product a quote means before you buy.
What is the difference between composition and composite shingles?
Composition shingles are asphalt shingles, the standard granule-topped fiberglass shingle on most U.S. homes. Composite shingles are premium synthetic polymer tiles designed to look like natural slate or cedar. Composition is the budget commodity roof; composite is a design upgrade at roughly two to three times the installed cost. Despite the similar spelling, they are different materials at different price points.
Do composite shingles last longer than asphalt?
Yes. Composite shingles typically last 40 to 50 years, while asphalt shingles last 15 to 30 years depending on tier. Composite polymer resists the cracking, curling, and granule loss that retire most asphalt roofs. Real field lifespans often fall short of marketing claims for both, most commonly from storm damage, ventilation problems, or installation defects rather than the material wearing out.
Is composite roofing worth the extra cost over asphalt?
Composite roofing is usually worth it for owners staying 20-plus years, where a 45-year roof outlasts two asphalt replacements. For shorter ownership, architectural asphalt tends to return more of its cost at resale. A Class 4 impact rating on either material may earn an insurance discount in hail-prone regions, which can narrow the gap. Match the choice to your time horizon and climate.
Why do roofers call asphalt shingles “composition”?
Roofers call asphalt shingles “composition” because the shingle is composed of layered materials: a fiberglass base mat, an asphalt waterproofing coat, and a granule surface. The term long predates modern synthetics and is used interchangeably with “asphalt” on quotes, insurance forms, and supply orders. If you see “composition” or “comp,” read it as a standard asphalt shingle, most often architectural.
Reviewed by The Roofing Brief Team. Last reviewed July 2026.