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Picking siding for a New Orleans home is not the same exercise it would be in Denver or Minneapolis. Humidity sticks around eight months out of twelve. Termites work year-round. And every summer brings the chance that a named storm pushes 100-plus-mph winds straight through Orleans Parish. Big Easy Roofing has installed every major siding type across the New Orleans metro area, and the right material depends on your specific block, your budget, and how long you plan to stay.
This guide walks through the six siding types available to Louisiana homeowners and ranks each one by climate performance, cost per square foot, and neighborhood fit. If you already know the basics and want a side-by-side breakdown of strengths and weaknesses, our pros and cons of siding materials guide covers that ground.
Vinyl siding handles the local humidity without rotting or swelling, but standard-grade panels warp and buckle under sustained temperatures above 100 degrees Fahrenheit, which this region hits regularly between June and September. Hurricane-rated vinyl performs much better, though it still ranks below fiber cement and metal for long-term durability here.
That single limitation matters more here than almost anywhere else in the country. Vinyl installed on a south-facing wall in Metairie or Kenner absorbs radiant heat all afternoon. Over three or four summers, standard panels start to ripple. The warping is cosmetic at first. Then gaps open at the seams and let moisture behind the wall assembly.
Hurricane-rated vinyl is a different product. It runs thicker gauges, reinforced nail hems, and interlocking joints rated for winds above 130 mph. Homeowners in Jefferson Parish and Orleans Parish should always specify hurricane-rated panels if going the vinyl route. The cost difference is roughly $1 to $2 more per square foot, which adds $2,000 to $4,000 on a typical 2,000-square-foot home. That premium pays for itself the first time a tropical storm rolls through.
Vinyl also has zero appeal to Formosan subterranean termites. No cellulose, no food source. That is a genuine advantage in a region where LSU AgCenter research has documented $300 million in annual termite damage across Greater New Orleans.
The tradeoff? Vinyl sits at the bottom of the perceived-value ladder in most New Orleans neighborhoods. Appraisers and buyers in Uptown, the Garden District, and the French Quarter expect to see wood, stucco, or fiber cement. In newer subdivisions across East Jefferson and New Orleans East, vinyl is common and accepted. Know your market before committing.
Vinyl costs $2 to $7 per square foot installed. It works on a tight budget. But before ruling out other options, consider what fiber cement brings to the same price conversation.
Fiber cement dominates the local siding market because it handles every regional threat at once: moisture, termites, wind, and UV exposure. No other single material checks all four boxes at this price point. James Hardie and LP SmartSide are the two leading manufacturers, and both offer product lines engineered for the heat and humidity of IECC Climate Zone 2A.
James Hardie HardiePlank is the most-installed fiber cement product in the Gulf Coast market. The company manufactures a Climate Zone 2A product line with ColorPlus Technology, a factory-baked finish engineered for the UV intensity and humidity levels found across Southeast Louisiana. LP SmartSide is the main competitor, using a treated engineered wood strand substrate instead of cement and sand.
HardiePlank planks resist wind speeds up to 150 mph, meeting Miami-Dade hurricane standards. They do not absorb moisture the way wood does, even under the heavy annual rainfall that hits rooftops and walls here. And Formosan subterranean termites cannot consume cement and sand. The material simply has nothing in it that termites eat.
Here is how fiber cement stacks up against the other five siding types on the metrics that matter most in this climate:
| Siding Type | Cost/Sq Ft | Wind Rating | Termite Proof | Lifespan |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fiber Cement | $5 – $15 | Up to 150 mph | Yes | 40 – 50 years |
| Vinyl (hurricane-rated) | $3 – $9 | Up to 130 mph | Yes | 20 – 30 years |
| Wood (treated) | $6 – $12 | Moderate | No | 15 – 25 years |
| Metal (steel/aluminum) | $7 – $15 | Up to 160 mph | Yes | 40 – 60 years |
| Stucco | $6 – $10 | Good (rigid) | Yes | 50+ years |
| Brick Veneer | $10 – $20 | Good (mass) | Yes | 75+ years |
Fiber cement wins the middle ground. It costs less than metal or brick, lasts twice as long as vinyl, and laughs off the termites that chew through wood siding in a single season. For most homeowners in Lakeview, Kenner, Slidell, and across Jefferson Parish, fiber cement is the default recommendation.
Neighborhoods with historic preservation rules add a wrinkle, though. The HDLC in the French Quarter and parts of the Garden District sometimes requires wood or stucco to match original construction. That leads to the next question.
Wood siding can survive here, but it demands more maintenance investment than any other material on this list. Left untreated, wood absorbs moisture from the humid air, swells, cracks, and invites Formosan subterranean termite colonies that can hollow out a wall stud in under two years.
Some homeowners have no choice. The HDLC governs exterior materials in the French Quarter, the Bywater, parts of Uptown, and several other historic districts. If the original siding was wood clapboard, the replacement must be wood clapboard. Period.
For those homeowners, here is what makes wood siding viable in this climate:
Wood siding installed and maintained correctly looks stunning on a Creole cottage or a Garden District Victorian. The installed cost runs $6 to $12 per square foot, not including the ongoing maintenance budget. Over 20 years, that maintenance adds 30 to 40 percent to the total cost of ownership compared to fiber cement.
Homeowners outside historic districts who want the look of wood without the upkeep should consider fiber cement in a lap or shingle profile. It replicates the grain texture and shadow lines without the termite risk. The topic of eco-friendly and sustainable siding covers material sourcing and environmental impact if that factors into your decision.
Metal siding has the highest wind resistance of any siding type available locally. Steel panels rated to 160 mph or higher outperform even fiber cement in raw wind-speed testing. That performance makes metal a strong candidate for homes in exposed areas along the Northshore near Lake Pontchartrain, and anywhere that catches unobstructed storm surge winds.
Steel and aluminum are the two options. Steel costs more, resists dents better, and has a longer lifespan. Aluminum is lighter, cheaper, and naturally rust-resistant. Both are termite-proof. Both handle moisture without swelling or rotting.
The catch with metal in New Orleans is salt air. Homes within a few miles of Lake Pontchartrain, Lake Borgne, or the Mississippi River face accelerated corrosion on untreated steel panels. Galvanized coatings and Kynar 500 paint finishes extend the lifespan, but homeowners in Slidell or Lakeview should inspect metal siding annually for any coating breakdown.
Aesthetically, metal siding reads as modern or industrial. It fits new construction and commercial buildings well. It does not blend into traditional New Orleans residential streetscapes. A standing-seam metal panel on a shotgun house in the Bywater would look out of place. On a contemporary build in Old Metairie or a commercial siding installation along Veterans Boulevard, it works.
Metal siding runs $7 to $15 per square foot installed. The 40-to-60-year lifespan and zero termite risk make the per-year cost competitive with fiber cement. Storm performance gives it the edge in high-exposure locations.
Stucco and brick veneer are the two masonry-based cladding options available to homeowners in the metro area. Both resist termites completely, hold up against wind, and last decades longer than wood or vinyl. They also cost more upfront and require specific installation techniques to handle the persistent moisture load.
Stucco has deep roots in New Orleans architecture. Walk through the French Quarter or the Marigny and stucco is everywhere. The material is Portland cement, sand, and lime applied in three coats over a wire lath substrate. When applied correctly on a properly flashed wall, stucco can last 50 years or more.
The risk is cracking. New Orleans soil shifts. Foundations settle unevenly. When the substrate moves, stucco cracks, and cracks let water in. Water behind stucco in this climate grows mold fast. Proper expansion joints and weep screeds prevent most failures, but the installer must understand Gulf Coast building science. This is not a material for a crew that learned their trade in Arizona.
Brick veneer brings a different set of considerations:
Both stucco and brick pair well with other materials. A home might use brick on the front facade and fiber cement on the sides and back. That combination cuts costs while preserving curb appeal. Our guide to selecting siding colors for curb appeal covers how to match materials and finishes across a mixed-material exterior.
Fiber cement siding delivers the best long-term value for most New Orleans homes when measured by cost per year of service life. A $25,000 fiber cement installation that lasts 45 years costs roughly $556 per year. Vinyl at $12,000 lasting 25 years costs $480 per year but needs replacement sooner and adds less to resale value.
Value depends on your situation. Budget, neighborhood, timeline, and aesthetics all factor in. Here is a decision framework based on what Big Easy Roofing sees across hundreds of residential siding installations each year.
If you live in a historic district, wood or stucco is your path. The HDLC will tell you what is allowed. Plan for higher maintenance costs and budget accordingly.
If your priority is storm protection and you are in an exposed area near Lake Pontchartrain or the Northshore, metal siding gives you the highest wind rating available.
If you want the best balance of cost, durability, and appearance for a home in Kenner, Metairie, Lakeview, or a newer neighborhood in Orleans Parish, fiber cement is the answer. James Hardie HardiePlank with ColorPlus Technology is the specific product most contractors in this market recommend.
If budget is the primary constraint and you need to re-side a rental property or a home you plan to sell within 10 years, hurricane-rated vinyl gets the job done at the lowest upfront cost.
Brick veneer makes sense on a forever home where the foundation supports the weight and the upfront investment is not a concern. It outlasts everything else on this list.
Energy performance also plays a role in total value. Insulated vinyl and fiber cement with foam-backed sheathing both reduce cooling costs in IECC Climate Zone 2A. Our siding and energy efficiency guide covers R-values, air sealing, and how each material type affects your utility bills.
Choosing the right siding type for your New Orleans home starts with understanding what your house, your neighborhood, and this climate demand. Contact Big Easy Roofing to schedule an on-site evaluation and get a material recommendation tailored to your home.
Wood siding in the New Orleans climate needs repainting or restaining every 3 to 5 years due to UV exposure and humidity-driven moisture absorption.
The HDLC generally requires replacement materials to match the original construction, so fiber cement is typically not approved for French Quarter buildings that originally had wood or stucco.
Fiber cement, metal, vinyl, stucco, and brick are all completely termite-proof because they contain no cellulose. Wood is the only siding type vulnerable to Formosan subterranean termite damage.
Yes, and many New Orleans homeowners do. Brick or stone on the street-facing facade with fiber cement on the remaining walls is a common approach that balances curb appeal with cost.
Most residential siding installations in the New Orleans metro take 5 to 10 business days depending on the home’s size, the material chosen, and weather conditions during hurricane season.
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