Roof Repair in North Las Vegas, NV
If you’re a North Las Vegas homeowner dealing with a ceiling stain, a failed flat roof, or a tile roof that looks fine from the street but is clearly leaking somewhere, you’re not imagining things — and the fix is probably not where you think it is. Our Roof Repair team has worked across North Las Vegas for years, and we know the specific failure patterns that show up in this city’s housing stock, from the 1960s flat-roof blocks in Bonanza Village to the 2005-era concrete tile tracts in Craig Ranch and Aliante. Call us at (725) 237-7255 for a free estimate — we’re familiar with the neighborhoods, the permit process, and the problems.

Why All Star Roofing Company Las Vegas Is North Las Vegas’s Preferred Roof Repair Company
Santos Cruz has been doing this for 22 years, and he’s not managing jobs from an office — he’s on the roof himself, serving as Lead Technician on every project. That matters in North Las Vegas, where misdiagnosed repairs and unpermitted patchwork have become genuinely common problems. When Santos shows up to your home in Craig Ranch or Aliante, you’re getting the person who built this company’s reputation, not a rotating subcontracted crew.
Nearly 120 homeowners have left us verified reviews averaging 4.9 stars. Many of those calls came from North Las Vegas residents who had already paid someone else for a fix that didn’t hold. We pull permits through the City of North Las Vegas Building & Safety Department on every qualifying job — because cutting that corner doesn’t just void warranties, it can create real liability when the city’s inspectors catch unpermitted work during a future sale.
We’re also authorized to work with GAF, CertainTeed, Owens Corning, IKO, Atlas, Tamko, and Boral materials, which means the repair we recommend is based on what’s right for your specific roof — not what happens to be sitting in a supply truck.
Our Roof Repair Services in North Las Vegas
Shingle Replacement
Shingle roofs are less common in North Las Vegas than in other parts of the valley, but they do appear — particularly on older homes east of Simmons Street and in some transitional neighborhoods near East Lake Mead Boulevard North. When individual shingles crack, cup, or blow off in the kind of wind events North Las Vegas sees in spring and early monsoon season, replacing them quickly is the difference between a $200 repair and a $2,000 sheathing replacement. We match material and color from our lineup of GAF, Owens Corning, and IKO shingles so the repair doesn’t look like a patch job from the street.
Leak Repair
Leak repair is the single most in-demand service we provide in North Las Vegas, and the most frequently mishandled. The city’s two dominant roof types — aging built-up flat roofs and 2000s-era concrete tile — both develop leaks that trace back several feet from where the water actually enters the living space. In Aliante and Craig Ranch specifically, we regularly find that the leak isn’t a cracked tile at all; it’s a destroyed 15-lb felt underlayment hidden beneath tiles that look completely intact from the street. Finding the real source is the job. Patching over the visible symptom is not.
Flashing Repair
Flashing failures are one of the leading causes of wall and ceiling moisture in North Las Vegas homes, particularly around chimneys, HVAC curbs, and parapets on flat-roof commercial and residential properties. The extreme thermal cycling in the Mojave — rooftop surfaces exceeding 170°F in summer, then contracting sharply on winter nights — causes improperly installed or aging flashing to lift, crack at the seam, or separate from the substrate entirely. We cut out the failed material, prep the deck properly, and install new lead or aluminum flashing that’s mechanically fastened and sealed against both monsoon downpours and summer UV degradation.
Flat Roof Patch
The older core of North Las Vegas — Bonanza Village, Vegas Heights, the neighborhoods along North Rancho Drive — is dense with 1950s through 1970s single-story block homes built with low-slope or fully flat built-up roofs. These roofs have survived decades, but many of the original substrates are delaminated from years of 170°F heat cycles and annual monsoon saturation. A surface patch applied over a delaminated substrate will re-open within one season. We assess the deck condition before we recommend a repair approach, because a flat roof patch that fails in August is a problem neither of us wants.
Valley Repair
In North Las Vegas’s concrete tile neighborhoods, valley repairs are often the first sign of the underlayment problem hiding underneath. When rust stains run down the face of tiles from a valley line, or when water consistently appears in a ceiling directly below a valley, it usually means the original lead or galvanized valley metal has failed — and that the felt beneath it is gone too. Valley repair done correctly means pulling the adjacent tile courses, replacing the underlayment in the affected field, installing new valley metal, and re-setting the tile properly. We do the full repair, not just a sealant bead over the visible line.
What happens when you call
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A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
The Underlayment Problem Nobody Told North Las Vegas Homeowners About
North Las Vegas has two distinct failing-roof generations running simultaneously, and understanding both is the only way to diagnose correctly in this city. The older core — Bonanza Village, Vegas Heights — is full of 1950s–70s flat built-up roofs that have simply exceeded their service life. That one’s visible from the street. The less obvious problem is in the master-planned communities: the thousands of concrete tile roofs installed during the Aliante and Craig Ranch development boom of 2003–2008. Those tiles look intact today. From the curb, they look fine. But the original 15-lb felt underlayments beneath them have been thermally destroyed by rooftop surface temperatures that routinely exceed 170°F in North Las Vegas summers — far beyond what the manufacturer’s ratings anticipated. Every July–September monsoon cell then delivers 1–2 inches of rain per hour onto low-slope roofs with cracked, shrunken underlayment lap seams, and water goes straight through. This is why North Las Vegas has become the highest-volume underlayment-replacement market in the Las Vegas Valley, a failure pattern that’s essentially absent in Henderson or post-2010 Summerlin builds where heavier synthetic underlayments were standard.
We were called to a Craig Ranch home off West Craig Road after the homeowner had already paid a plumber to check for a pipe leak — the ceiling stain in the master bedroom had shown up the morning after a July monsoon cell dropped nearly an inch in under an hour. We pulled a section of Boral concrete tile near the ridge and found the original 15-lb felt underlayment cracked and shrunken at every lap seam. The tiles’ own drainage channels were routing water directly through those failures and into the sheathing. We completed a full underlayment tear-off and replacement under a City of North Las Vegas Building & Safety permit, finished the valley repairs with new lead flashing, and the ceiling dried out with no further water intrusion through the next two monsoon events. No plumbing was involved.

All of this work requires permits pulled through the City of North Las Vegas Building & Safety Department — a separate jurisdiction from Clark County and the City of Las Vegas, with its own inspection schedule and approval process. We handle that permitting on every qualifying job. Assuming Clark County rules apply is one of the most expensive assumptions a North Las Vegas homeowner can make.
Common Roof Repair Problems We See in North Las Vegas Homes
- Thermally destroyed underlayment beneath intact concrete tile (Aliante, Craig Ranch): The tiles show no visible cracking, but the original 15-lb felt underneath has been shrunk and cracked by years of 170°F rooftop temperatures. The first monsoon of the season routes water directly into the sheathing — and the homeowner calls a plumber first.
- Delaminated built-up roofs on older Bonanza Village flat-roof homes: Decades of Mojave heat cycles and annual monsoon saturation have separated the substrate layers on many 1960s–70s flat roofs in the older core. Patching the surface without addressing the delamination below produces a repair that re-opens before the following summer ends.
- Failed valley metal and underlayment on low-slope concrete tile roofs: The 2:12–4:12 pitches common across Craig Ranch and Aliante slow drainage and concentrate water in valley channels. When the original galvanized valley metal corrodes or the underlying felt fails, rust staining and ceiling leaks follow — often before the homeowner realizes there’s a structural problem.
- Unpermitted prior repairs that fail inspection: North Las Vegas operates under its own Building & Safety jurisdiction. We regularly encounter homes where a previous contractor patched a leak or replaced flashing without pulling a City of North Las Vegas permit, leaving the homeowner with repairs that cannot be warranted and may create complications at resale.
Trusted Brands We Service in North Las Vegas
We work with GAF, CertainTeed, Owens Corning, IKO, Atlas, Tamko, and Boral across our North Las Vegas projects. That matters practically: when we’re replacing underlayment on a Boral concrete tile roof in Aliante, or sourcing matching shingles for a home near Purple Heart Highway, we’re not limited to one brand’s inventory. We source the material that’s right for your existing system — the right weight, profile, and warranty tier — rather than substituting what’s convenient. For most North Las Vegas repairs, we can source and schedule within a short lead window.
Pricing for Roof Repair in North Las Vegas, NV
Roof repair pricing in North Las Vegas varies based on failure type, roof pitch, and whether City of North Las Vegas permitting is required — but here are honest ranges for what we actually see in this market:
- Shingle replacement (minor, 1–3 squares): $250–$600
- Leak repair (locate and seal, no underlayment replacement): $300–$750
- Underlayment replacement beneath concrete tile (partial, per square): $400–$700 per square; full-roof tear-off projects typically run $8,000–$16,000 depending on home size
- Flashing repair (chimney, pipe boot, HVAC curb): $275–$650
- Flat roof patch (built-up or foam, minor area): $350–$900
- Valley repair (including underlayment and metal replacement): $600–$1,400
Permit fees through the City of North Las Vegas Building & Safety Department add to project cost but are non-negotiable on qualifying work — and are included in our quotes upfront. Call (725) 237-7255 for a free on-site estimate; pricing is specific to your roof, not a ballpark from a satellite image.
We Also Serve Cities Near North Las Vegas
In addition to North Las Vegas, our repair crews regularly work in Sunrise Manor, Las Vegas, Spring Valley, and Summerlin South. If you’re outside North Las Vegas proper but in the surrounding valley, call us — we know the housing stock and permit requirements across all of these jurisdictions and can schedule a free estimate without delay.
Serving North Las Vegas, NV — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the North Las Vegas area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Roof Repair in North Las Vegas
The concrete tiles themselves are almost certainly intact — that’s the normal finding on Craig Ranch homes. What’s failed is the original 15-lb felt underlayment beneath them. After 15-plus years of rooftop surface temperatures exceeding 170°F in North Las Vegas summers, that underlayment shrinks and cracks at every lap seam. The tiles’ own drainage channels then route monsoon water directly through those failures and into the sheathing below. The tiles look fine from the street because they are fine — they’re not the problem. The leak source is underneath them. Call (725) 237-7255 and we’ll pull a section near the stain to confirm before any repair scope is written.
It depends on the scope, but in many cases in North Las Vegas — yes, particularly for underlayment replacement, valley work, or any structural deck repair. The City of North Las Vegas Building & Safety Department operates as a separate jurisdiction from Clark County and the City of Las Vegas, with its own permit thresholds and inspection process. Assuming county rules apply is a common and costly mistake. We pull permits on every qualifying job and handle the submission process ourselves. Call us at (725) 237-7255 and we’ll tell you upfront what’s required for your specific repair.
The short answer is age compounded by conditions that nothing in the original construction anticipated. Bonanza Village’s built-up flat roofs date to the 1950s–70s, meaning the substrate has been through 50-plus years of Mojave heat cycles — rooftop temperatures exceeding 170°F in summer — followed by annual monsoon saturation. That combination delaminates the substrate layers over time, so what looks like a surface crack is often a roof that has structurally separated from the inside out. A patch over a delaminated substrate fails within one season. The correct repair starts with a full assessment of the deck, not just the surface.
Rust staining running down tile from a valley line is a structural warning, not a cosmetic issue. It means the original galvanized valley metal has corroded through, and water is moving behind or beneath it rather than channeling cleanly off the roof. On Aliante homes with the original 2003–2008 underlayment still in place, a corroded valley almost always means the felt beneath it has also failed — because moisture has been working at that seam for months or years. Left alone, that leads to sheathing rot and interior damage. Valley repair done correctly means replacing the metal and the underlayment field beneath it, not applying sealant over the stain. Call (725) 237-7255 for a free assessment before the next monsoon season.
We work with GAF, CertainTeed, Owens Corning, IKO, Atlas, Tamko, and Boral — the full lineup of major manufacturer lines you’ll find on North Las Vegas homes from the 1970s through today. That includes Boral concrete tile, which appears on a significant share of the Aliante and Craig Ranch housing stock, as well as the GAF and Owens Corning shingle products used on older and transitional neighborhoods near East Lake Mead Boulevard North. We source based on fit for your existing system.
Reviewed by Santos Cruz, Owner and Lead Technician at All Star Roofing Company Las Vegas, serving North Las Vegas since 2003.