Roofers in Hialeah, FL
Compare 6 categorized roofing contractors and 6 roofing-eligible listings based in Hialeah, part of the Miami metro market. Browse all Florida markets.
Hialeah, FL
Finding a Roofing Contractor in Hialeah, FL
Roofer Directory lists 6 roofing-eligible contractors in the Hialeah, FL market, including 6 businesses categorized specifically as roofing companies. Together these listings hold 441 Google reviews, and the average rating across them is 4.9 stars. Every contractor shown here maintains at least a 4.0-star rating, and 5 hold a 4.7 or higher.
Ratings and review counts come straight from Google and are shown as-is. Before you hire, confirm each contractor's license and insurance: requirements vary by state, so check the appropriate state board and ask for proof of coverage. Our guide on how to verify a roofing license by state walks through where to look, and how to choose a roofing contractor covers the questions worth asking before you sign anything.
Comparing quotes is the fastest way to gauge fair pricing in Hialeah. You can request a free estimate from a local roofing contractor, or read up on what a new roof costs in 2026 and when to repair versus replace before you start. Browse all Florida roofing markets to compare nearby cities.
Explore Other Roofing Markets
Compare nearby city pages with roofing-eligible contractor listings and local roof-risk context where available.
Miami Metro Area Storm Risk & Roof Damage History
Storm statistics below cover the Miami metro area, which includes Hialeah. NOAA records severe weather at the county level, so metro-area data is the most accurate picture of Hialeah's roof risk.
Over the past 74 years, the Miami metro area has recorded 3,433 severe weather events and $12.3B in property damage. With 15.2 hail events, 28.7 wind events, and 506 tornadoes on record, homeowners in Hialeah should plan for regular roof inspections, especially after May–October.
Based on NOAA data from 1952-2025. How storms affect roof lifespan →
After major hail or wind, review our hail damage insurance guide and storm chaser scam checklist before hiring a contractor.
Hail Damage History in Miami Metro Area
The Miami metro area has recorded 637 hail events since 1952, averaging 15.2 per year. The average hail size is 1.03", with the largest recorded hailstone measuring 4" (softball-sized).
48% of hail events in the Miami metro area produce stones 1 inch or larger — the threshold at which asphalt shingles typically begin sustaining granule loss, cracking, and other damage that can shorten roof lifespan.
Hail exposure is one of the biggest factors in roof lifespan. Learn how long your roof should last by material type, then compare local Hialeah contractor listings.
Miami Metro Area Storm Season: Month-by-Month Breakdown
Peak storm season in the Miami metro area runs from May through October. The best time to schedule a roof inspection is immediately after, in November.
See our seasonal roof maintenance checklist for what to inspect and when.
Miami Metro Area Severe Weather Trend (Last 15 Years)
2024 was the most active year with 240 events and $177.6M in property damage.
Most Damaging Storms in Miami Metro Area
The 5 costliest severe weather events recorded in the Miami metro area, ranked by property damage. Understanding your area's storm history helps determine when to repair vs. replace your roof.
Major Hurricane Irma made landfall in Southwest Florida on Marco Island as a Category 3 hurricane around 330 PM EDT on September 10th. The storm traveled north through southwest Florida through the evening. Effects from Irma were felt across South Florida from September 9th through September 11th. Irma had reached Category 5 strength and a minimum central pressure of 914 MB east of the Bahamas, maintaining Category 5 intensity until landfall along the north coast of Cuba on September 9th. Irm...
National Weather Service
Wilma was a classic October hurricane which struck South Florida as a Category 3 hurricane on October 24th, 2005. Wilma developed from a tropical depression near Jamaica, a typical source region for October tropical cyclones, on the afternoon of October 15, 2005. It became the 21st named storm of the season during the morning hours of October 17, 2005, which tied the record for the most named storms in one season originally set back in 1933. Wilma underwent a rapid intensification cycle which...
National Weather Service
Hurricane Jeanne formed from a tropical depression just east of the Leeward Islands on September 13. She moved across Puerto Rico and Hispaniola then turned north into the Atlantic and became a hurricane on September 20. Jeanne made a clockwise loop for three days in the Atlantic north of Hispaniola before moving west northwest. It strengthened to a Category 3 Hurricane while over the northwest Bahamas and then make landfall around 11 P.M., September 25 near the south end of Hutchinson Islan...
National Weather Service
Hurricane Frances formed from a tropical depression in the deep tropical Atlantic on August 25 about 1400 miles east of the Lesser Antilles and reached hurricane strength on August 26. Frances became a Category 4 Hurricane on August 28 while about 700 miles east of the Lesser Antilles. Frances then moved generally west northwest and weakened to a Category 2 hurricane while crossing the northwest Bahamas. After stalling for about 12 hours on September 4 in the Florida Straits between Grand B...
National Weather Service
After lingering as a broad area of low pressure in the western Caribbean Sea for four days, a tropical depression formed just after midnight EDT on October 13 and became tropical storm Irene in the northwest Caribbean Sea later that morning. Irene moved north across western Cuba on October 14 and strengthened to hurricane intensity early on October 15 in the Straits of Florida. It then made its first landfall in south Florida in the lower Florida Keys around 9 AM EDT, October 15. After cro...
National Weather Service
Recent Severe Weather in Miami Metro Area
Significant flash flooding has been reported on Federal Highway in Boca Raton. 5 to 7 inches of rainfall has occurred in the past 2 hours.
Social media video depicts significant tidal flooding along South Flagler Drive in West Palm Beach during high tide. Water reaches about halfway up car tires.
Street flooding reported along Federal Hwy and NE 56th St. Water depth approximately 6-8 inches.
Florida DOT reported that SR-786, locally known as PBA Boulevard, was closed from SR-710 to Ryder Cup Boulevard in Palm Beach Gardens due to water from heavy rains on the roadway.
Social media footage of several inches of standing water due to King Tides at the entrance ramp to MacArthur Causeway from Biscayne Blvd.
Data: NOAA Storm Events Database (National Centers for Environmental Information). Last updated 2026-06-12. Covers 1952-2025. Hail, wind, and tornado data from 1952. All event types from 1996. See how Miami compares on our U.S. Storm Risk Index.
Protect Your Hialeah Roof After Storm Season
With a storm risk score of 90/100, regular roof inspections are recommended for Hialeah homeowners — especially after the May–October peak season.
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