Frequently asked
Questions we hear most.
How much does a slate or copper roof cost?
Natural slate installed: $18–$32 per square foot ($1,800–$3,200 per 100 sq ft / ‘square’). Standing-seam metal: $14–$22 installed. Copper standing-seam: $24–$45 installed. A typical 25-square (2,500 sq ft) home in slate runs $45,000–$80,000+. Synthetic slate is roughly half. These are NE-realistic numbers — anyone quoting significantly less is using a different grade or skipping critical work.
How long will it really last?
Properly installed natural slate: 75–125 years. Copper: 100+ years. Stainless steel standing-seam: 75+ years. Coated steel standing-seam: 50–60 years. Synthetic slate (DaVinci/EcoStar): 40–50 years. The slate or copper itself almost never fails — the failure points are the flashing, fasteners, and underlayment. Use the right materials for those (copper nails, copper flashing, premium ice-shield), and the assembly lasts as long as the visible material.
Can my house structurally support a slate roof?
If your home was built before about 1940, almost always yes — homes were over-framed in that era and many already had slate. If built between 1940 and 1980, sometimes — we’ll have a structural engineer verify before quoting. If built after 1980, usually only if specifically designed for slate or with verified-adequate framing; otherwise we’ll recommend synthetic slate or stamped metal that gives the look at a fraction of the dead-load.
Do you do repairs on existing slate roofs?
Yes — slate repair is a specialty in itself. Single broken slates can be replaced with copper hooks; ridge slate repointing is routine; chimney crickets and valley re-flashing on otherwise sound slate roofs adds another 30–50 years to a 100-year-old roof. We don’t replace slate roofs that can be repaired economically.
What about a copper roof going green?
That’s not damage — that’s the material doing what copper does. Fresh copper is bright; over 5–15 years it darkens through bronze to brown; over 20–40 years it develops the green verdigris patina that protects the metal underneath. The patina is not a problem — it’s a feature. If you want the bright look forever, copper is the wrong material for you (and a coated steel would simulate it cheaper).
Next step
Get an honest written quote.
Photo-documented assessment. Itemized quote. We’ll tell you if repair makes more sense than replacement.
Our process for heritage roofs
Slower, more careful, more documented.
STEP 01
Engineering assessment
Site visit to verify load capacity, identify historic-preservation considerations, and confirm the material is right for the building. Structural review for any slate or tile install over framing built after 1960.
STEP 02
Material specification + lead time
Slate and copper are typically 8–14 weeks lead time. We help you select quarry source, color, grade, and gauge. Sample shingles delivered for in-context approval before order.
STEP 03
Tear-off + substrate prep
Substrate verified and reinforced where required. New sheathing where original is compromised. Full ice-and-water shield underlayment plus a synthetic rain shield over high-risk slope sections.
STEP 04
Install + final detailing
Slate set with copper nails, never galvanized steel. Copper standing-seam mechanically locked, every termination soldered or properly clipped. All flashings copper or compatible. Project timeline 2–6 weeks depending on scope. Photographic documentation throughout.
Frequently asked
Questions we hear most.
How much does a slate or copper roof cost?
Natural slate installed: $18–$32 per square foot ($1,800–$3,200 per 100 sq ft / ‘square’). Standing-seam metal: $14–$22 installed. Copper standing-seam: $24–$45 installed. A typical 25-square (2,500 sq ft) home in slate runs $45,000–$80,000+. Synthetic slate is roughly half. These are NE-realistic numbers — anyone quoting significantly less is using a different grade or skipping critical work.
How long will it really last?
Properly installed natural slate: 75–125 years. Copper: 100+ years. Stainless steel standing-seam: 75+ years. Coated steel standing-seam: 50–60 years. Synthetic slate (DaVinci/EcoStar): 40–50 years. The slate or copper itself almost never fails — the failure points are the flashing, fasteners, and underlayment. Use the right materials for those (copper nails, copper flashing, premium ice-shield), and the assembly lasts as long as the visible material.
Can my house structurally support a slate roof?
If your home was built before about 1940, almost always yes — homes were over-framed in that era and many already had slate. If built between 1940 and 1980, sometimes — we’ll have a structural engineer verify before quoting. If built after 1980, usually only if specifically designed for slate or with verified-adequate framing; otherwise we’ll recommend synthetic slate or stamped metal that gives the look at a fraction of the dead-load.
Do you do repairs on existing slate roofs?
Yes — slate repair is a specialty in itself. Single broken slates can be replaced with copper hooks; ridge slate repointing is routine; chimney crickets and valley re-flashing on otherwise sound slate roofs adds another 30–50 years to a 100-year-old roof. We don’t replace slate roofs that can be repaired economically.
What about a copper roof going green?
That’s not damage — that’s the material doing what copper does. Fresh copper is bright; over 5–15 years it darkens through bronze to brown; over 20–40 years it develops the green verdigris patina that protects the metal underneath. The patina is not a problem — it’s a feature. If you want the bright look forever, copper is the wrong material for you (and a coated steel would simulate it cheaper).
Next step
Get an honest written quote.
Photo-documented assessment. Itemized quote. We’ll tell you if repair makes more sense than replacement.
Natural slate (Vermont, Buckingham, Welsh)
Quarried stone, hand-graded, hand-installed. 75–125 year service life. Best for steep-pitch (4:12 and up) historic and Victorian homes. Vermont gray-black is the most common in NE; Vermont mottled green is iconic for Greek Revival; Welsh purple is the heritage premium choice.
Synthetic slate (DaVinci, EcoStar)
Recycled-content polymer slate. 50-year warranty, ~$8–14/sq ft installed vs $18–32 for natural. Looks almost identical from 30 feet. Best for homes that want the slate aesthetic without the weight or premium budget.
Standing-seam metal (24-gauge steel or copper)
Mechanically locked vertical seams, no exposed fasteners, 60+ year service life. Best for modern designs, Vermont farmhouse-style barns, low-pitch sections that don’t take asphalt well, and historic preservation where slate cost is prohibitive.
Stamped metal shingle (Decra, Tilcor)
Stone-coated steel pressed into a shingle, slate, or shake profile. 50-year warranty, lighter than slate, more wind-resistant than asphalt. Good middle path for premium homes that want metal’s longevity with traditional aesthetics.
Copper roofing — full coverage
24-oz or 20-oz copper, mechanically seamed. Patinates from bright copper to bronze to verdigris over decades. 100+ year service life. Used for entire roofs on architecturally significant homes, prominent gable accents, and chimney cricket / dormer cap details on otherwise asphalt roofs.
Properly engineered substrate
Slate weighs 700–1,000 lbs per square. Most homes built after 1960 weren’t framed for it. We verify load capacity with a structural engineer before quoting any slate or stone-tile job — and we walk you out if your framing can’t take it.
Our process for heritage roofs
Slower, more careful, more documented.
STEP 01
Engineering assessment
Site visit to verify load capacity, identify historic-preservation considerations, and confirm the material is right for the building. Structural review for any slate or tile install over framing built after 1960.
STEP 02
Material specification + lead time
Slate and copper are typically 8–14 weeks lead time. We help you select quarry source, color, grade, and gauge. Sample shingles delivered for in-context approval before order.
STEP 03
Tear-off + substrate prep
Substrate verified and reinforced where required. New sheathing where original is compromised. Full ice-and-water shield underlayment plus a synthetic rain shield over high-risk slope sections.
STEP 04
Install + final detailing
Slate set with copper nails, never galvanized steel. Copper standing-seam mechanically locked, every termination soldered or properly clipped. All flashings copper or compatible. Project timeline 2–6 weeks depending on scope. Photographic documentation throughout.
Frequently asked
Questions we hear most.
How much does a slate or copper roof cost?
Natural slate installed: $18–$32 per square foot ($1,800–$3,200 per 100 sq ft / ‘square’). Standing-seam metal: $14–$22 installed. Copper standing-seam: $24–$45 installed. A typical 25-square (2,500 sq ft) home in slate runs $45,000–$80,000+. Synthetic slate is roughly half. These are NE-realistic numbers — anyone quoting significantly less is using a different grade or skipping critical work.
How long will it really last?
Properly installed natural slate: 75–125 years. Copper: 100+ years. Stainless steel standing-seam: 75+ years. Coated steel standing-seam: 50–60 years. Synthetic slate (DaVinci/EcoStar): 40–50 years. The slate or copper itself almost never fails — the failure points are the flashing, fasteners, and underlayment. Use the right materials for those (copper nails, copper flashing, premium ice-shield), and the assembly lasts as long as the visible material.
Can my house structurally support a slate roof?
If your home was built before about 1940, almost always yes — homes were over-framed in that era and many already had slate. If built between 1940 and 1980, sometimes — we’ll have a structural engineer verify before quoting. If built after 1980, usually only if specifically designed for slate or with verified-adequate framing; otherwise we’ll recommend synthetic slate or stamped metal that gives the look at a fraction of the dead-load.
Do you do repairs on existing slate roofs?
Yes — slate repair is a specialty in itself. Single broken slates can be replaced with copper hooks; ridge slate repointing is routine; chimney crickets and valley re-flashing on otherwise sound slate roofs adds another 30–50 years to a 100-year-old roof. We don’t replace slate roofs that can be repaired economically.
What about a copper roof going green?
That’s not damage — that’s the material doing what copper does. Fresh copper is bright; over 5–15 years it darkens through bronze to brown; over 20–40 years it develops the green verdigris patina that protects the metal underneath. The patina is not a problem — it’s a feature. If you want the bright look forever, copper is the wrong material for you (and a coated steel would simulate it cheaper).
Next step
Get an honest written quote.
Photo-documented assessment. Itemized quote. We’ll tell you if repair makes more sense than replacement.
When to choose heritage
Right material, right house.
There’s a reason slate roofs still cover 1850s farmhouses in Vermont and 1700s mansions in Newport. When natural slate is installed correctly — copper nails, copper flashing, properly underlayed deck — it doesn’t really fail; it lasts longer than the people who lived under it. Copper standing-seam has the same story: roofs from the 1920s still on Boston brownstones. These materials are an investment, not a purchase.
But these roofs are unforgiving of mediocre install. A slate roof installed with aluminum step flashing instead of copper will fail at the flashing in 20–30 years, long before the slate does. A copper roof installed with the wrong solder will leak at the seams. The shingles are not the hard part. We’ve trained on these materials for years before we install them — and we won’t quote a slate job we can’t deliver to museum-grade standards.
Natural slate (Vermont, Buckingham, Welsh)
Quarried stone, hand-graded, hand-installed. 75–125 year service life. Best for steep-pitch (4:12 and up) historic and Victorian homes. Vermont gray-black is the most common in NE; Vermont mottled green is iconic for Greek Revival; Welsh purple is the heritage premium choice.
Synthetic slate (DaVinci, EcoStar)
Recycled-content polymer slate. 50-year warranty, ~$8–14/sq ft installed vs $18–32 for natural. Looks almost identical from 30 feet. Best for homes that want the slate aesthetic without the weight or premium budget.
Standing-seam metal (24-gauge steel or copper)
Mechanically locked vertical seams, no exposed fasteners, 60+ year service life. Best for modern designs, Vermont farmhouse-style barns, low-pitch sections that don’t take asphalt well, and historic preservation where slate cost is prohibitive.
Stamped metal shingle (Decra, Tilcor)
Stone-coated steel pressed into a shingle, slate, or shake profile. 50-year warranty, lighter than slate, more wind-resistant than asphalt. Good middle path for premium homes that want metal’s longevity with traditional aesthetics.
Copper roofing — full coverage
24-oz or 20-oz copper, mechanically seamed. Patinates from bright copper to bronze to verdigris over decades. 100+ year service life. Used for entire roofs on architecturally significant homes, prominent gable accents, and chimney cricket / dormer cap details on otherwise asphalt roofs.
Properly engineered substrate
Slate weighs 700–1,000 lbs per square. Most homes built after 1960 weren’t framed for it. We verify load capacity with a structural engineer before quoting any slate or stone-tile job — and we walk you out if your framing can’t take it.
Our process for heritage roofs
Slower, more careful, more documented.
STEP 01
Engineering assessment
Site visit to verify load capacity, identify historic-preservation considerations, and confirm the material is right for the building. Structural review for any slate or tile install over framing built after 1960.
STEP 02
Material specification + lead time
Slate and copper are typically 8–14 weeks lead time. We help you select quarry source, color, grade, and gauge. Sample shingles delivered for in-context approval before order.
STEP 03
Tear-off + substrate prep
Substrate verified and reinforced where required. New sheathing where original is compromised. Full ice-and-water shield underlayment plus a synthetic rain shield over high-risk slope sections.
STEP 04
Install + final detailing
Slate set with copper nails, never galvanized steel. Copper standing-seam mechanically locked, every termination soldered or properly clipped. All flashings copper or compatible. Project timeline 2–6 weeks depending on scope. Photographic documentation throughout.
Frequently asked
Questions we hear most.
How much does a slate or copper roof cost?
Natural slate installed: $18–$32 per square foot ($1,800–$3,200 per 100 sq ft / ‘square’). Standing-seam metal: $14–$22 installed. Copper standing-seam: $24–$45 installed. A typical 25-square (2,500 sq ft) home in slate runs $45,000–$80,000+. Synthetic slate is roughly half. These are NE-realistic numbers — anyone quoting significantly less is using a different grade or skipping critical work.
How long will it really last?
Properly installed natural slate: 75–125 years. Copper: 100+ years. Stainless steel standing-seam: 75+ years. Coated steel standing-seam: 50–60 years. Synthetic slate (DaVinci/EcoStar): 40–50 years. The slate or copper itself almost never fails — the failure points are the flashing, fasteners, and underlayment. Use the right materials for those (copper nails, copper flashing, premium ice-shield), and the assembly lasts as long as the visible material.
Can my house structurally support a slate roof?
If your home was built before about 1940, almost always yes — homes were over-framed in that era and many already had slate. If built between 1940 and 1980, sometimes — we’ll have a structural engineer verify before quoting. If built after 1980, usually only if specifically designed for slate or with verified-adequate framing; otherwise we’ll recommend synthetic slate or stamped metal that gives the look at a fraction of the dead-load.
Do you do repairs on existing slate roofs?
Yes — slate repair is a specialty in itself. Single broken slates can be replaced with copper hooks; ridge slate repointing is routine; chimney crickets and valley re-flashing on otherwise sound slate roofs adds another 30–50 years to a 100-year-old roof. We don’t replace slate roofs that can be repaired economically.
What about a copper roof going green?
That’s not damage — that’s the material doing what copper does. Fresh copper is bright; over 5–15 years it darkens through bronze to brown; over 20–40 years it develops the green verdigris patina that protects the metal underneath. The patina is not a problem — it’s a feature. If you want the bright look forever, copper is the wrong material for you (and a coated steel would simulate it cheaper).
Next step
Get an honest written quote.
Photo-documented assessment. Itemized quote. We’ll tell you if repair makes more sense than replacement.
Heritage materials · 75-year design life
Roofs that outlive the people who commission them.
Natural slate, standing-seam copper, and metal roofing aren’t for every home. They’re for homes you want to hand down. They cost more up front, they last 75–125 years, and they patinate into something that looks better at year 40 than year 1. Done right — and done right matters more for slate than for any other material.