5 roofing listings in Rio Linda

Roofers in Rio Linda, CA

Compare 5 categorized roofing contractors and 5 roofing-eligible listings based in Rio Linda, part of the Sacramento metro market. Browse all California markets.

Rio Linda, CA

5 roofing listings
5.0 · 40 reviews · 100% 5-star reviews
7420 W 4th St, Rio Linda, CA 95673
5.0 · 33 reviews · 100% 5-star reviews
1719 C St, Rio Linda, CA 95673
Latino-Owned lgbtq-owned
4.9 · 12 reviews · 92% 5-star reviews
1342 Ascot Ave, Rio Linda, CA 95673
4.8 · 38 reviews · 92% 5-star reviews
1015 Q St, Rio Linda, CA 95673
Waterproofing
RO
5.0 · 8 reviews · 100% 5-star reviews
1719 C St, Rio Linda, CA 95673

Finding a Roofing Contractor in Rio Linda, CA

Roofer Directory lists 5 roofing-eligible contractors in the Rio Linda, CA market, including 5 businesses categorized specifically as roofing companies. Together these listings hold 131 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 Rio Linda. 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 California roofing markets to compare nearby cities.

Nearby Markets

Explore Other Roofing Markets

Compare nearby city pages with roofing-eligible contractor listings and local roof-risk context where available.

Storm Data

Sacramento Metro Area Storm Risk & Roof Damage History

Storm statistics below cover the Sacramento metro area, which includes Rio Linda. NOAA records severe weather at the county level, so metro-area data is the most accurate picture of Rio Linda's roof risk.

59
/100
High Risk

Over the past 70 years, the Sacramento metro area has recorded 1,081 severe weather events and $18.9B in property damage. With 1.8 hail events, 10.6 wind events, and 30 tornadoes on record, homeowners in Rio Linda should plan for regular roof inspections, especially after January–December.

Based on NOAA data from 1957-2026. How storms affect roof lifespan →

46
Hail Events
1.8/year avg
225
Wind Events
Max 149 mph
30
Tornadoes
Strongest: F2
$18.9B
Property Damage
1957-2026

Hail Damage History in Sacramento Metro Area

The Sacramento metro area has recorded 46 hail events since 1957, averaging 1.8 per year. The average hail size is 0.83", with the largest recorded hailstone measuring 2" (egg to tennis ball-sized).

39% of hail events in the Sacramento 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.

Sacramento Metro Area Storm Season: Month-by-Month Breakdown

Storm events by month

Peak storm season in the Sacramento metro area runs from January through December. The best time to schedule a roof inspection is immediately after, in January.

Sacramento Metro Area Severe Weather Trend (Last 15 Years)

Storm events by year

2024 was the most active year with 108 events and $12.0M in property damage.

Most Damaging Storms in Sacramento Metro Area

The 5 costliest severe weather events recorded in the Sacramento metro area, ranked by property damage. Understanding your area's storm history helps determine when to repair vs. replace your roof.

January 1, 2023 Flood $145.0M in damage
Yolo + 1 more areas

Sacramento County completed a preliminary estimate of a total of $133 million from public storm damage from January 1 through January 17, and a total of almost $700,000 in private property damage. There was extensive levee damage and flooding along the Cosumnes River from Rancho Murieta to Wilton. There was also widespread flooding of streams, creeks, and roadways across the county. Large numbers of trees were reported down from strong wind events, with widespread power outages and reports of...

National Weather Service
January 1, 2023 Flash Flood $134.0M in damage
Sacramento County

A strong atmospheric storm brought moderate to heavy rain and a period of strong winds New Years Eve into early New Years Day, along with heavy high-elevation Sierra snow. There were 3 fatalities reported due to drowning. Precipitation totals by 8 am (over 24 hours) were around 1 to 3 inches for the southern Sacramento and northern San Joaquin Valleys, 3 to 8 inches for the Motherlode foothills and Northern Sierra from around SR 70 southward, with widespread flooding in those areas. Rainfall ...

National Weather Service
November 8, 2018 Wildfire $17.0B in damage
Northeast Foothills/Sacramento Valley County

The Camp Fire began on the morning of November 8, 2018, by Camp Creek Road, near Pulga in Butte County. The fire was not fully contained until November 25. This fire was the most destructive wildfire in California history, destroying much of the city of Paradise, the community of Concow, and damaging the towns of Pulga and Magalia. There were 18,804 structures destroyed, 13,696 of them single homes, along with 514 commercial structures and 3,718 outbuildings and 153,336 acres burned. There we...

National Weather Service
July 23, 2018 Wildfire $1.5B in damage
Northern Sacramento Valley County

The Carr Fire began on the afternoon of July 23, 2018, at the intersection of Highway 299 and Carr Powerhouse Road, near French Gulch in Shasta County. The fire is reported to have been started accidentally by a vehicle towing a trailer that had a tire blow out, causing the steel rim to scrape along the pavement, generating sparks that ignited dry vegetation along the edge of the highway. Local winds generated by the fire are reported to have caused the fire to spread quickly.||At the end of ...

National Weather Service
February 2, 1998 Flood $20.8M in damage
Northern Sacramento Valley + 1 more areas

The following river stages were observed on the upper Sacramento River:Location: Period(s) above flood stage: Max Crest/Date OccurredRed Bluff briefly on the 3rd 1.9 feet above flood stage/3rdTehama Bridge 3rd -- 27th 8.2 feet above flood stage/3rdWoodson Bridge 3rd--4th, 6th--8th, 14th--15th, 19th--20th 6.0 feet above flood stage/3rdHamilton City 3rd, 8th 2.5 feet above flood stage/3rdOrd Ferry 3rd--24th (occasionally went below) 4.2 feet above flood stage/4thHeavy rains on the ...

National Weather Service

Recent Severe Weather in Sacramento Metro Area

Flood
Yolo County

California Highway Patrol reported that flood gates were closed at County Road 22 near Yolo Bypass due to roadway flooding from heavy rain.

Flood
Sacramento County

California Highway Patrol reported roadway flooding in a mobile home park near 6900 Almond Ave.

Flood
Sacramento County

California Highway Patrol reported a weather related fatality event with an SUV crashing into a power pole on Franklin Boulevard due to wet roads.

High Wind
Northern Sacramento Valley County $5K damage

Southerly wind gusts of 40 to 60 mph were observed in the northern Sacramento Valley on December 24th and 25th. Redding Municipal Airport recorded a max southerly gust of 59 mph. Red Bluff Municipal A

Flood
El Dorado County

California Highway Patrol reported roadway flooding at Silva Valley Pkwy and Harvard Way.

Data: NOAA Storm Events Database (National Centers for Environmental Information). Last updated 2026-06-12. Covers 1957-2026. Hail, wind, and tornado data from 1957. All event types from 1996. See how Sacramento compares on our U.S. Storm Risk Index.

Protect Your Rio Linda Roof After Storm Season

With a storm risk score of 59/100, regular roof inspections are recommended for Rio Linda homeowners — especially after the January–December peak season.

Questions

Good to Know

Yes. Searching, browsing, and visiting contractor websites through our directory is completely free. We never charge homeowners.
No. We don't collect or share your personal information. When you click "Visit Website," you go directly to that contractor's site. You choose who to contact and when.
Ratings and review counts are sourced from Google and reflect real customer experiences. We display them as-is without modification.
Roofer Directory currently shows 5 roofing listings in the Rio Linda, CA market, including 5 businesses categorized as roofing contractors.
The national average for a full asphalt shingle roof replacement is about $9,500 in 2026, with real-world totals ranging from roughly $5,800 to $46,000+ by size, pitch, and material. Rio Linda sits in a high-risk storm area, so impact-rated shingles (which can earn insurance discounts) may shift pricing. Get 2 to 3 written local quotes to find your real number — see our 2026 roof cost guide for the full breakdown.
Sacramento, CA averages 2 hail events per year based on NOAA data from 1957-2026. 39% of these produce hail 1 inch or larger, which is the threshold at which asphalt shingles typically begin sustaining damage. The largest hail recorded in this period was 2.0 inches (egg to tennis ball-sized).
Peak storm season in Sacramento, CA runs from January through December, with January typically being the most active month. Outside of these months, severe weather activity drops significantly. Scheduling a roof inspection in the months immediately following storm season is recommended.
The most damaging recent storm event was a wildfire on November 08, 2018, which caused an estimated $17.0B in property damage in Northeast Foothills/Sacramento Valley County. Sacramento, CA has experienced $18.9B in total storm-related property damage since 1957.
Yes. Sacramento, CA averages 2 hail events per year, with an average hail diameter of 0.8 inches. Hail 1 inch or larger can crack, dislodge, or remove granules from asphalt shingles, often causing damage that isn't visible from the ground. Most roofing professionals and insurance companies recommend a professional inspection after any hail event in your area.
Sacramento, CA has experienced 30 tornadoes over the past 70 years. The strongest rated F2, with tornado paths averaging 1.2 miles in length. Tornado damage to roofs ranges from partial shingle loss to complete structural failure depending on the EF rating and proximity.

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