Everett roofs answer to the full range of Pacific Northwest weather. Long rainy stretches roll in off Port Gardner Bay, wind builds along the ridges between Riverside and View Ridge, the canopy of Doug fir and bigleaf maple feeds moss on shaded north-facing slopes, and the occasional winter snow load tests anything that has been neglected. The housing stock is just as varied: older Bayside and Riverside cottages near downtown, mid-century ramblers across North Everett and Holly, View Ridge homes from the 60s and 70s now reaching the end of their first or second asphalt life cycle, and newer construction up around Silver Lake and Pinehurst. RoofWorks Northwest builds and maintains roofs across all of it, from the original HQ on Hewitt Avenue.
We work the full Everett footprint — Bayside, Riverside, North Everett, View Ridge, Silver Lake, Holly, Pinehurst, the Boeing/Paine Field corridor, and the I-5 spine north toward Marysville. Each pocket has its own roofing tells: cedar conversions in older Riverside, original 1970s composition shingles aging out across View Ridge, low-slope additions on Silver Lake ramblers, and newer architectural shingles already showing wind lift up on the ridges. We know the Snohomish County permit office, the inspectors, and the HOAs that ask for a sample board before a re-roof gets approved.
A few patterns show up repeatedly on Everett roofs. The 1970s and 1980s built-up neighborhoods are at the tail end of their second composition shingle, with granule loss, lifted edges, and pipe-jack failures all hitting at once. North Everett homes shaded by mature trees collect moss faster than the city average, and a yearly soft-wash plus zinc strip extends the roof's working life by years. Wind events off the bay and off the ridge between View Ridge and Silver Lake routinely strip ridge caps that were installed without proper nailing pattern in the 90s. And a surprising number of Everett re-roofs end up adding ventilation that the original build skipped, because trapped attic moisture is what is actually shortening the roof.
Everett homeowners often ask us the same questions. Here are the short answers.
Costs depend on roof size, material, complexity, and access. Most Everett homes fall in a typical range for the Snohomish County market. We provide firm written estimates after an on-site consultation.
Yes. Drone inspection is part of how we assess steep, complex, or hard-to-access roofs in Everett without putting a crew on the deck. Useful for second opinions, insurance documentation, and replacement scoping.
Yes. We respond to leaks, storm damage, and wind events across Everett and Snohomish County. Call us for urgent triage; we will stabilize the roof and follow up with a written repair scope.
Call (206) 718-4931 or email service@roofworksnorthwest.com to schedule a free consultation.
Contact RoofWorks Northwest