Roofers in Longwood, FL
Compare 8 categorized roofing contractors and 8 roofing-eligible listings based in Longwood, part of the Orlando metro market. Browse all Florida markets.
Longwood, FL
Finding a Roofing Contractor in Longwood, FL
Roofer Directory lists 8 roofing-eligible contractors in the Longwood, FL market, including 8 businesses categorized specifically as roofing companies. Together these listings hold 1,810 Google reviews, and the average rating across them is 4.7 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 Longwood. 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.
Orlando Metro Area Storm Risk & Roof Damage History
Storm statistics below cover the Orlando metro area, which includes Longwood. NOAA records severe weather at the county level, so metro-area data is the most accurate picture of Longwood's roof risk.
Over the past 76 years, the Orlando metro area has recorded 1,797 severe weather events and $3.4B in property damage. With 14.1 hail events, 15.8 wind events, and 211 tornadoes on record, homeowners in Longwood should plan for regular roof inspections, especially after April–September.
Based on NOAA data from 1950-2025. 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 Orlando Metro Area
The Orlando metro area has recorded 623 hail events since 1950, averaging 14.1 per year. The average hail size is 1.09", with the largest recorded hailstone measuring 3" (baseball-sized).
58% of hail events in the Orlando 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 Longwood contractor listings.
Orlando Metro Area Storm Season: Month-by-Month Breakdown
Peak storm season in the Orlando metro area runs from April through September. The best time to schedule a roof inspection is immediately after, in October.
See our seasonal roof maintenance checklist for what to inspect and when.
Orlando Metro Area Severe Weather Trend (Last 15 Years)
2024 was the most active year with 102 events and $126.1M in property damage.
Most Damaging Storms in Orlando Metro Area
The 5 costliest severe weather events recorded in the Orlando metro area, ranked by property damage. Understanding your area's storm history helps determine when to repair vs. replace your roof.
Hurricane Milton moved ashore the west-central Florida coast as a category 3 hurricane on Oct 9 around 1930EST. The system continued slowly in an east-northeast trajectory across central Florida, becoming a category 1 hurricane before emerging into the Atlantic Ocean near Cape Canaveral. The outer rainbands of Milton overspread the Florida peninsula earlier in the day, leading to a prolific tornado outbreak across Okeechobee, Martin, St. Lucie, Indian River, Osceola and Brevard counties with ...
National Weather Service
After making landfall as a major hurricane in southwest Florida near Cayo Costa, Ian crossed the peninsula and into east central Florida (southern Osceola County) as a Category 1 Hurricane with estimated maximum sustained winds of 75 mph. The system was downgraded to a tropical storm shortly thereafter and emerged into the Atlantic Ocean near Cape Canaveral. Ian's slow movement and large wind field led to a long period of tropical storm force winds across all of east central Florida, as well ...
National Weather Service
Hurricane Irma moved northward over the far western Florida peninsula between the afternoon of September 10 and the morning of September 11 at Category 1-2 strength. During the closest point of approach to east-central Florida during the early morning hours of September 11, rain bands associated with the inner core elongated west-to-east and lifted through northwest Osceola County, Lake County and western Orange County. Due to the large size of the wind field, a long duration of damaging trop...
National Weather Service
Hurricane Charley made landfall over southwest Florida as a category four hurricane with estimated sustained wind speeds of 150 mph. Moving north northeast at about 25 mph Charley crossed central Florida maintaining hurricane intensity through Osceola, Orange, Seminole, and Volusia counties. In Osceola County, widespread power outages and damage were reported, mostly to roofs, pool enclosures, awnings, weak buildings, and mobile homes. Much of the damage was due to the thousands of trees b...
National Weather Service
The deadliest tornado of the outbreak was a category F3 that touched down initially one mile south of Intercession City. The tornado moved northeast at 45 mph and ripped through the town of Kissimmee killing 25 people. The hardest hit areas were the Morningside Acres mobile home community and the Ponderosa Recreational Vehicle Park. In all eight people were killed in recreational vehicles, fifteen in mobile homes and one in an automobile. The tornado continued northeast and moved into Orang...
National Weather Service
Recent Severe Weather in Orlando Metro Area
A stalled thunderstorm lingered over the Eustis, Mount Dora, and Sorrento area for several hours, producing an extreme amount of rainfall. Over approximately 6 hours, between 15 to 19 inches of rainfa
Orlando International Airport measured a peak wind gust of 59 knots from the west.
Orlando Executive Airport measured a peak wind gust of 51 knots from the west.
A brief tornado occurred over northern rural Osceola County as confirmed by a combination of video evidence from local media partners and data from the National Weather Service Melbourne (KMLB) radar.
Law enforcement reported multiple intersections with flooding, many of which down to one lane due to high water.
Data: NOAA Storm Events Database (National Centers for Environmental Information). Last updated 2026-06-12. Covers 1950-2025. Hail, wind, and tornado data from 1950. All event types from 1996. See how Orlando compares on our U.S. Storm Risk Index.
Protect Your Longwood Roof After Storm Season
With a storm risk score of 89/100, regular roof inspections are recommended for Longwood homeowners — especially after the April–September peak season.
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