Below: verified Roofing Contractors serving Spring Lake Hills, followed by guidance specific to this neighborhood.

Vetted Roofing Contractors Serving Spring Lake Hills

Mid Florida Roofing

✓ Verified May 2026 FL DBPR #CCC057834 26 yrs in business
(407) 221-8554

540 N State Road 434, Suite 7401, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714

Florida-licensed (CCC057834) residential and commercial roofer based in Altamonte Springs since 1999. Re-roofs, repairs, tile, shingle, flat, and single-ply systems. Wind-mitigation forms and Seminole County permitting handled in-house.

  • Shingle re-roofs
  • Tile roofs
  • Flat roofs
  • Wind mitigation
  • Storm repair
  • Commercial roofing

Northmen Roofing, LLC

✓ Verified May 2026 FL DBPR #CCC1332653
(407) 498-2137

910 Britt Court, Suite 106, Altamonte Springs, FL 32701

Altamonte Springs CCC-licensed roofer (CCC1332653) specializing in tile roof repairs, flat roof systems, liquid-applied coatings, and balcony waterproofing. Serves Seminole County residential and commercial properties.

  • Tile roof repair
  • Flat roofs
  • Liquid-applied coatings
  • Balcony waterproofing
  • Roof replacement

ROC Roofing Inc.

✓ Verified May 2026 FL DBPR #CCC1329191 16 yrs in business
(386) 960-7004

620 S Volusia Avenue, Orange City, FL 32763

CCC-licensed (CCC1329191) full-service roofer serving Seminole County since 2009. Residential shingle, tile, metal, and flat roofs. Storm damage restoration, insurance claim coordination, and financing available.

  • Shingle roofing
  • Tile roofing
  • Metal roofs
  • Flat roofs
  • Storm damage
  • Insurance claims
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About Spring Lake Hills

Typical home era: 1970s–1980s custom builds, with later additions

ZIP code: 32714

Spring Lake Hills is a lakefront residential neighborhood on the north side of Altamonte Springs, anchored by Spring Lake and characterized by larger lots and 1970s–1980s custom homes.

Notable features:

  • Lakefront properties on Spring Lake
  • Rolling terrain (one of the few areas in Central FL with elevation change)
  • Larger-than-average lot sizes
  • Boat-accessible homes on the lake

Frequently Asked Questions

What roofing materials work best on lakefront homes in Spring Lake Hills?
Metal roofing — particularly standing seam steel or aluminum — outperforms asphalt shingles in the humidity and wind conditions typical of a Spring Lake Hills lakefront home. Metal does not support algae or moss growth the way organic-based shingles do, resists wind uplift better with properly spaced clips, and has a 40–50 year service life that makes it economical over time despite higher upfront cost. Concrete tile is also durable in humid conditions but adds significant dead load that older structures may need engineering review to support. Architectural asphalt shingles with Class 4 impact ratings and algae-resistant coatings are the middle-ground option — adequate performance at lower initial cost.
How does a multi-pitch Spring Lake Hills roof affect insurance wind mitigation credits?
Florida's wind mitigation form (OIR-B1-1802) scores several factors that affect the credit your insurer applies. Roof shape is one of the highest-weighted factors: a hip roof (all slopes, no gable ends) earns the maximum credit; a gable roof earns less. Spring Lake Hills homes with complex architectures — multiple dormers, mixed gable and hip sections — typically earn partial hip credits. Roof covering type (dimensional shingle vs. tile vs. metal) and roof deck attachment (6-inch vs. 4-inch nail patterns) also affect credits. After any re-roof, a licensed wind mitigation inspector should complete the OIR-B1-1802 form and you should submit it to your insurer for re-rating.
How much does a re-roof cost on a larger Spring Lake Hills custom home?
Spring Lake Hills homes typically run 2,200–4,000 sq ft of living area with roof areas often 40–60% larger than the floor plan due to complex architecture. A 3,000 sq ft architectural shingle re-roof with moderate pitch and complexity in 2025–2026 runs $22,000–$40,000. Metal standing seam on the same home is $45,000–$75,000. Concrete tile can run $50,000–$100,000+ depending on tile weight, deck reinforcement, and complexity. Architectural complexity, number of valleys and penetrations, access challenges on rolling terrain, and debris removal are all legitimate line items that explain cost variation between quotes.
How do I find a roofer who actually understands complex custom home rooflines?
Ask specifically about their experience with custom homes — not just any roofing job. Request examples or addresses of comparable multi-pitch, multi-gable projects they've completed. Review their Seminole County permit history if you can (public record) to confirm they've done complex projects rather than just simple ranch re-roofs. A contractor who installs 50 tract-home re-roofs a year may not have the experience to properly flash a dormer valley intersection or detail a complex hip-and-ridge junction. Metal roofing in particular requires specialized training — verify any metal roofing contractor has manufacturer certification for the specific system they propose.
Does Spring Lake Hills' rolling terrain create any unique roofing challenges?
The terrain itself doesn't affect roof installation materially — roofing is done on the structure, not the grade. However, rolling terrain does affect site access and material staging. Homes on sloped lots may have limited flat area for dumpster placement, material stacking, and crew access — factors a contractor needs to assess during quoting. Drainage from roofs on hillside homes also deserves attention: improperly extended downspouts can direct runoff toward foundation areas on sloped lots, making downspout extenders and underground drainage routing more important in Spring Lake Hills than on flat sites.

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