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Last Updated: May 2026
New Orleans averages over 60 inches of rainfall per year. Add hurricane-force winds, 90-degree summer heat that bakes shingles, and humidity that feeds mold and algae growth, and your roof absorbs more punishment than roofs in most American cities. A checklist keeps you from forgetting the small things that turn into expensive problems. This is not a generic list pulled from a national template. Every item below reflects conditions specific to southeastern Louisiana, where Big Easy Roofing inspects roofs across Orleans, Jefferson, and St. Tammany parishes year-round.
Twice a year at minimum: once in April or May before hurricane season opens June 1, and once in late November or December after the season closes. These two inspections catch problems created by summer heat and storm damage before they compound through the next weather cycle. A spring inspection gives you time to schedule repairs before contractors get buried in storm season work.
If a named storm passes within 50 miles of your home, inspect again within 48 hours regardless of the calendar. Wind-driven rain can push water through gaps that held fine during normal rainfall. The post-storm inspection focuses on different things than the seasonal check, and both matter.
From ground level with binoculars, scan each roof plane for these specific conditions. You do not need to climb the roof for most of this.
Spring Pre-Season Check:
Post-Season Fall Check:
If your shingles are over 15 years old in the New Orleans climate, they are approaching the end of their effective lifespan regardless of what the manufacturer warranty says. National warranty estimates assume milder conditions than what a Gulf Coast roof endures.
Flashing seals the joints where the roof plane meets a vertical surface: chimneys, dormers, sidewalls, skylights, and vent pipes. In New Orleans, thermal expansion from extreme summer heat followed by cooling rain causes flashing to work loose faster than in moderate climates. A gap of 1/16 of an inch is enough for wind-driven rain to enter.
Look for these from the ground or attic side:
Chimney flashing failures are the single most common source of roof leaks on homes in older New Orleans neighborhoods like Lakeview, Gentilly, and Broadmoor. Many of these homes were reroofed after Katrina, but the flashing was reused or improperly sealed. If your roof is leaking and you cannot find the source, start with the flashing around vertical penetrations.
New Orleans gets more annual rainfall than Seattle, Houston, or Miami. Gutters that work “well enough” in other cities fail here. Clogged or undersized gutters overflow during heavy rain, sending water behind the fascia board and into the soffit, where it rots the wood framing and can migrate to the roof deck.
Check these items:
Gutter screens help but are not a substitute for cleaning. Spanish moss and fine oak debris pass through most screen types and accumulate underneath. Plan for at least two gutter cleanings per year in addition to the inspections.
Pipe boots are the rubber or neoprene collars that seal around plumbing vent pipes where they exit the roof. In New Orleans heat, these rubber collars dry out, crack, and split within 8 to 12 years. A cracked pipe boot lets water run directly down the vent pipe into your walls and ceiling with every rainstorm.
With binoculars, look for:
Pipe boot replacement is one of the cheapest roof repairs, usually under $200 per boot installed. But the water damage from an ignored cracked boot can cost thousands in drywall, insulation, and mold remediation. This is the single most cost-effective item on the checklist.
The attic is where roof problems show up before they reach your living space. Bring a flashlight and check during daylight hours so you can spot light coming through the roof deck.
Inspection points:
Proper attic ventilation is critical in New Orleans. Without it, summer heat builds to 150+ degrees in the attic space, cooking shingles from underneath and shortening their life by years. Your attic ventilation system needs balanced intake and exhaust to function correctly. Soffit vents provide intake, and ridge or turbine vents provide exhaust. If one side is blocked, the system fails.
Yes. Flat roofs and low-slope roofs are common on New Orleans homes, particularly in the French Quarter, Marigny, Bywater, and Treme neighborhoods. They collect water differently than pitched roofs and have different failure modes.
Flat roof inspection items:
Flat roof inspections require walking the surface, which means a professional should handle this. The membrane materials are easily punctured by shoes with debris embedded in the soles, and untrained foot traffic can cause more damage than it prevents.
A post-storm inspection adds urgency-specific items that do not apply to seasonal checks. Within 48 hours of a named storm passing, check for:
Document everything with photos before cleanup. If you file an insurance claim, the adjuster needs to see the original damage. For a complete walkthrough of the post-storm process, follow the steps in our guide on protecting your New Orleans roof during hurricane season.
A standard residential roof inspection in New Orleans runs between $150 and $400, depending on roof size, pitch, and accessibility. Many roofing companies offer free inspections when combined with a repair estimate or as a post-storm service.
You can handle a ground-level visual check and attic inspection yourself using the checklist above. A professional inspection adds drone imagery, close-up shingle assessment, and structural evaluation that you cannot do safely from the ground or attic alone.
Schedule your pre-season inspection in April or early May, before hurricane season begins June 1. The post-season inspection should happen in late November or December. Booking in March or April avoids the rush of homeowners who wait until May.
A thorough residential roof inspection takes 45 minutes to 2 hours depending on roof complexity, access, and whether the inspector also checks the attic and interior for leak evidence. Most single-story homes are done within an hour.
A standard inspection alone will not lower your premium. However, a wind mitigation inspection, which evaluates specific structural features like roof-to-wall connections and opening protection, can qualify you for discounts of up to 65% on the wind/hail portion of your Louisiana homeowners policy.
Minor issues like cracked pipe boots, small flashing gaps, or a few missing shingles are routine repairs that cost $150 to $500. Major findings like widespread shingle deterioration, deck rot, or structural sagging require a full repair estimate and may involve an insurance claim if storm-related.
Yes. A pre-purchase roof inspection is one of the most valuable investments in a New Orleans home purchase. Given the climate stress on roofs, age-related issues appear 5 to 10 years earlier than in moderate climates. The inspection report gives you negotiating leverage and prevents surprise replacement costs within years of closing.
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