Tile Roofing
Clay and concrete tile for coastal, desert, and Mediterranean-style homes.
Roofing materials by style
Clay and concrete tile for Mediterranean curb appeal and 50+ year durability — see if tile fits your structure, budget, and climate.
Enter roof size, metal system type, and city — pricing updates instantly.
Is this the right roof for your home and budget?
Clay and concrete tile for coastal, desert, and Mediterranean-style homes.
Clay, concrete, and slate-profile tile — each with different weight, cost, and regional availability.
Tile dominates hot, coastal, and Mediterranean-style markets. Select a city in the calculator above for localized guidance.
Compare roofing materials by cost, appearance, durability, and lifespan.
15–30 year lifespan · Most affordable
$4 – $8 / sq ft
View cost guide →40–70 year lifespan · Standing seam
$9 – $16 / sq ft
View cost guide →50+ year lifespan · Clay & concrete
$11 – $19 / sq ft
Current guide75–100 year lifespan
$16 – $28 / sq ft
View cost guide →20–30 year lifespan
$8 – $14 / sq ft
View cost guide →Side-by-side comparison
Compare options
Read comparison →Compare tile to asphalt, metal, and other materials.
Based on the city selected in the calculator above.
Illustrative installed totals for concrete tile with tear-off.
Concrete tile
Concrete tile
Clay tile
Concrete tile
Prices on this page adjust for Phoenix-area labor, permits, and climate — not a generic national template.
Phoenix metro labor is shaped by extreme summer heat — roofers start at dawn and HVAC crews book months ahead before peak season. Maricopa County's growth keeps new-construction and retrofit crews in steady demand.
Contractor labor runs about 5% above the U.S. average; typical permit fees in our model start around $248 for standard residential work.
City of Phoenix and Maricopa County cities (Mesa, Chandler, Gilbert) use online permitting for most residential work. Solar requires utility interconnection with APS or SRP.
Sonoran Desert extremes drive every Phoenix-area project decision:
Clay tile often lasts 50–100 years. Concrete tile typically lasts 40–60 years. Underlayment may need replacement before the tile itself — budget for maintenance cycles.
Clay offers authentic terracotta aesthetics and longest lifespan but costs more and can be more brittle in hail. Concrete is more common, often more affordable, and widely used in Florida and the Southwest.
Tile is heavy. Before switching from asphalt, have trusses evaluated. Many homes in tile-heavy regions are built for the load; older homes may need reinforcement.
In markets where tile is the neighborhood standard, it can protect resale value. In regions where asphalt dominates, tile is a lifestyle and longevity choice more than a cost-saving one.
Use our calculators for a localized range when planning your project budget.