Roof repair vs replacement comes down to three numbers: your roof’s age as a share of its expected lifespan, the percentage of the roof area that is damaged, and the repair quote as a percentage of a full replacement. Repair when the roof is young, the damage is isolated, and the fix costs a small fraction of a new roof. Replace when two or more of those three signals point the other way. This guide turns those three axes into a single decision score so you are not guessing.
The trade advice online conflicts on purpose. One contractor cites a 30% cost rule, another a 50% rule, a third talks only about age. Below is one framework that reconciles all three, plus the 25% area rule that many building codes turn into a legal tear-off trigger.
Repair or replace your roof: the 3-factor decision score
Score your roof on three factors, each worth 0, 1, or 2 points. A total of 0 to 2 means repair, 3 to 4 means get a second opinion, and 5 to 6 means replace. This scorecard is the fastest way to answer “should I repair or replace my roof” without waiting on a sales pitch.
| Factor | Repair signal (0 pts) | Borderline (1 pt) | Replace signal (2 pts) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age vs lifespan | Under 50% of expected life | 50% to 75% of life | Over 75% of life |
| Damage area | Under 10% of roof | 10% to 25% of roof | Over 25% of roof |
| Repair cost ratio | Under 30% of replacement | 30% to 50% | Over 50% |
The score is a starting point, not a verdict. A single 2 on the damage axis, for example a decking rot problem found across multiple sections, can override two low scores because it signals hidden system failure. Use the score to frame the inspection, then let a licensed inspector confirm what the surface hides.
How old is your roof, and how much life is left?
Age is the first factor because a roof is a system, and past 75% of its rated lifespan you are repairing one part of an assembly that is failing everywhere at once. Under 50% of expected life, isolated damage almost always favors repair. The threshold that matters is the percentage of lifespan used, not the raw year count, because materials differ widely.
| Material | Typical lifespan | “Repair” window (under 50%) | “Replace” window (over 75%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3-tab asphalt shingle | 15 to 20 years | Under 8 years | Over 15 years |
| Architectural asphalt shingle | 22 to 30 years | Under 12 years | Over 20 years |
| Standing seam metal | 40 to 70 years | Under 25 years | Over 45 years |
| Clay or concrete tile | 30 to 50 years | Under 18 years | Over 35 years |
If you do not know the install date, a roofer can often date the roof from granule loss, shingle brittleness, and the flashing style. The Roofing Brief’s field-data work in the 2026 Roofing Material Lifespan Report shows real-world asphalt roofs often reach the end of their service life 3 to 5 years sooner than the marketing warranty implies, so lean conservative on the age axis.
How much of the roof is actually damaged?
Damage area is the second factor because scattered, small-percentage damage usually patches cleanly, while damage above 25% of the roof surface signals the field itself is failing. Isolated damage means one slope, one leak source, or a cluster of missing shingles from a single wind event, the kind of case where a spot shingle replacement often does the job. Widespread damage means multiple leak points, granule loss across whole slopes, or failures on more than one elevation.
The 25% figure is not just a rule of thumb. Many jurisdictions adopt building code language that prohibits patching or overlaying when more than 25% of a roof section is damaged within any 12-month period, which forces a full tear-off and replacement of that section. Check your local code, because this can convert a “repair” you wanted into a required replacement.
- Clear repair territory: a few missing or lifted shingles, one failed pipe boot, a single flashing leak, minor storm damage on one slope.
- Borderline (inspect closely): damage across 10% to 25% of the roof, or a leak whose source you cannot trace from inside.
- Replace territory: damage over 25% of a slope, multiple active leaks, soft or rotted decking found in more than one spot, or granule loss across entire slopes.
Is it cheaper to repair or replace a roof?
Repair is almost always cheaper upfront, but the cost ratio decides whether that saving holds. Most roof repairs run roughly $400 to $3,000 depending on the failure, while a full asphalt replacement typically lands between $9,000 and $22,000 for an average U.S. home in 2026. The rule: when a repair quote exceeds 30% of a replacement quote, replacement usually wins on a per-year-of-service basis, and above 50% it almost always does.
| Repair cost as % of replacement | What it means | Default call |
|---|---|---|
| Under 30% | Small fix on a roof with life left | Repair |
| 30% to 50% | Major repair, weigh remaining lifespan | Case by case |
| Over 50% | You are buying most of a roof to fix part of one | Replace |
The trap is the repeat-repair cycle. Three $1,200 patches over four years on a 19-year-old roof total $3,600 and still leave you with a roof at the end of its life. Run the cost-per-year-of-service math instead: a $15,000 replacement over 25 years is $600 a year, while $3,600 in patches that buy you two more years is $1,800 a year. For exact repair figures by failure type, see the 2026 roof repair cost guide, and for whole-roof numbers, the average cost to replace a roof.
Can you repair just one section of a roof?
Yes, partial or single-slope repair is possible and often smart when damage is confined to one plane and the rest of the roof has years left. Partial replacement makes sense after localized storm damage, or when one south-facing slope weathered faster than the shaded sides. The catch is that new shingles rarely match aged ones, and insurers sometimes push back on partial claims.
Two things commonly derail a partial job: color and granule mismatch that leaves an obvious patch, and the 25% code trigger that can force a full section tear-off. If your damage sits near that 25% line on a single slope, price both options. The full breakdown of when partial works, what it costs, and how insurers respond is in the guide to partial roof replacement cost.
What symptoms mean replacement, not repair?
Certain signs point past repair regardless of the score, because they indicate the roof system itself has failed rather than a single component. These are the symptoms a repair cannot durably solve. If you spot two or more, treat replacement as the baseline and use the scorecard only to confirm.
- Widespread granule loss: bald asphalt shingles and heavy granule accumulation in gutters across multiple slopes signal the shingle mat is exposed and aging out.
- Multiple active leaks: leaks in more than one location usually mean the underlayment and flashing system are failing broadly, not at one point.
- Sagging or spongy deck: a roofline that dips or feels soft underfoot points to rotted decking or structural moisture damage.
- Daylight through the roof deck: visible light in the attic means gaps a patch will not seal.
- Curling, cupping, or cracking across the field: shingle deformation over whole slopes is end-of-life weathering, not spot damage.
These overlap with the broader symptom checklist in 10 signs you need a new roof, which separates true replacement triggers from cosmetic issues like minor algae streaks that only need cleaning.
Repair vs replace: which one wins for your situation
Match your situation to the summary below, then confirm with a professional inspection because surface appearance routinely understates decking and underlayment condition. The decision is rarely about a single symptom and almost always about how the three factors stack up together.
| Your situation | Likely call |
|---|---|
| Roof under 10 years, one leak or a few missing shingles | Repair |
| Roof 12 to 18 years, isolated damage, sound decking | Repair, but budget for replacement soon |
| Roof over 20 years, damage on multiple slopes | Replace |
| Any age, repair quote over 50% of replacement | Replace |
| Damage over 25% of a slope where code applies | Replace (often code-required) |
| Third repair on the same roof in under four years | Replace on cost-per-year math |
Whichever way the score leans, get at least one independent inspection before you authorize work. An inspector who is not selling you the job has no incentive to inflate the damage area or the recommendation, and a written inspection gives you a stronger position when comparing bids.
Frequently asked questions
Should I repair or replace my roof?
Repair if your roof is under about half its expected lifespan, the damage covers under 10% of the surface, and the repair quote is below 30% of a full replacement. Replace when two or more of those three signals point the other way, when decking is rotted, or when a repair quote exceeds 50% of replacement. A written professional inspection should confirm the call before you authorize work.
Is it cheaper to repair or replace a roof?
Repair is cheaper upfront, typically $400 to $3,000 versus $9,000 to $22,000 for a full asphalt replacement in 2026. It stops being cheaper when repairs repeat. Three patches over a few years on an aging roof can cost more per year of added service life than replacing outright. Run cost-per-year-of-service math rather than comparing single sticker prices.
How do you know when a roof needs to be replaced?
Replacement is the call when the roof is past roughly 75% of its rated lifespan, when damage spans more than 25% of the surface, when multiple leaks or rotted decking appear, or when granule loss is widespread across slopes. Any two of these together usually mean the roof system, not a single component, has failed and cannot be durably patched.
Can you repair just a section of a roof?
Yes, when damage is confined to one slope and the rest of the roof has service life left. The two common obstacles are visible color mismatch between new and weathered shingles, and building codes that require a full section tear-off once more than 25% of that section is damaged within a 12-month period. Price both partial repair and full replacement near that threshold.
How many years should a roof last?
Lifespan depends on material: 3-tab asphalt lasts about 15 to 20 years, architectural asphalt 22 to 30 years, standing seam metal 40 to 70 years, and clay or concrete tile 30 to 50 years. Real-world service life often falls short of the warranty term, so treat the lower end of each range as the planning number for repair-versus-replacement decisions.
Reviewed by The Roofing Brief Team. Last reviewed July 2026.