Paradise Valley sits in a natural funnel between Camelback Mountain and Mummy Mountain, and that geography concentrates monsoon storm energy. The Scottsdale/Paradise Valley corridor consistently logs some of the heaviest rainfall totals in the Phoenix metro during summer monsoon events. A July 2023 storm system dropped significant rainfall across the corridor, with flooding and debris closing roads inside Paradise Valley itself. In August 2025, monsoon winds strong enough to tear roofs off East Valley homes swept the same regional cell that hit the Scottsdale/Paradise Valley area. Estates with large flat roof sections hidden behind parapets, and complex multi-hip rooflines with multiple valleys, take storm damage differently than a standard Phoenix subdivision tract home. A tile that stays put on a simple gable can shift on a cantilevered section or steep hillside pitch. Post-storm inspection here requires someone who understands how custom architecture responds to wind loading.
The housing stock in Paradise Valley spans three distinct eras, each with its own roofing reality. Homes built in the 1960s through 1980s along corridors like McDonald Drive and Lincoln Drive often feature low-profile clay or concrete tile over 30-lb felt paper underlayment. That underlayment is now past or approaching end of life regardless of how intact the tile looks from the street, and the luxury tile market has a well-documented gap between visible tile condition and failed underlayment beneath. Homes built from the late 1980s through the 2000s in communities like Finisterre and Cheney Estates are predominantly concrete tile, with underlayment that is approaching the 15-to-20-year real-world Arizona performance threshold even if manufacturer ratings suggest more time remains. The newest custom builds on Mummy Mountain and in Clearwater Hills increasingly use clay tile, standing seam metal, and stone-coated steel, with complex multi-pitch geometries that demand a higher technical standard than standard residential replacement work.
Roof replacement in Paradise Valley costs more than in any other Phoenix metro market, and for specific reasons. Clay tile replacement on a 4,000-to-6,000 square foot estate typically runs $25,000 to $50,000 or higher depending on tile specification, roof complexity, and whether structural assessment is needed for older homes. Concrete tile replacement on a comparable footprint runs $18,000 to $35,000. Underlayment-only renewal, where salvageable tile is lifted, new underlayment is installed, and tile is relaid, runs $12,000 to $22,000 and is often the right answer when tile is in good condition but the paper beneath has failed. Pre-monsoon scheduling from April through June avoids the 15-to-25% demand premium that hits the market in July and August when storm damage creates a backlog across the metro. Storm damage claims are worth pursuing with your insurer. All Storm offers $0 down financing for projects that don't involve an insurance recovery.
All Storm Roofing provides a free instant online estimate and can schedule an on-site inspection with a written report, typically within a few business days. Projects on standard residential estates run 1 to 3 days. ROC #345156 and Tamko Diamond Certified. All Storm handles ARC documentation and any required permits when applicable, so paperwork does not slow the project.
Tile, shingle, storm damage, underlayment. If it keeps water out of your home, we handle it.
No upselling. The right system for your home and budget, backed by a 15-year workmanship warranty.
Find the source, fix it right, document for insurance. Same-week inspection available.
Inspect, document, and work directly with your adjuster. We know how AZ insurers handle monsoon claims.
Lift tile, install new membrane, reset. Saves thousands vs. full replacement when tile is sound.
Written report with photos. Insurance-ready and free with any repair quote. No obligation.
Monsoon hit at midnight? We protect your home immediately and stop further water damage.
How It Works
Call or submit online. On-site within 24 to 48 hours. No fee, no obligation.
We show what we found, what it costs, and what happens if you wait.
Same crew, on time. Most jobs finish in 1 to 3 days with complete cleanup.
15-year workmanship warranty in writing. If anything is off, we fix it.
Local Coverage
Licensed Arizona ROC #345156 and Tamko Diamond Certified. All Storm Roofing serves Paradise Valley's custom estates with the level of precision these homes require, from clay tile lift-and-relay to monsoon damage inspection and repair.
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FAQ
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Age and underlayment condition are the two deciding factors. If your home was built before 1995 and has original tile, the underlayment is almost certainly at or past its real-world Arizona lifespan of 15 to 20 years, which means replacement or underlayment renewal is the right call even if the tile looks fine. Repair makes sense when storm damage is isolated to a specific field, flashing has failed at a single penetration, or a handful of tiles have cracked. An on-site inspection is the only reliable way to know which category your roof falls into.
Document everything the same day with photos and video before any cleanup happens. Schedule a professional inspection within 7 days. Arizona insurance policies commonly enforce a one-year filing deadline for storm damage claims, and some carriers want documentation submitted sooner. Two streets in Paradise Valley can see completely different damage from the same cell because of how Camelback and Mummy Mountain affect wind direction. All Storm provides a written inspection report suitable for insurance submission.
Manufacturer ratings on quality underlayment run 25 to 30 years. Real-world performance in Paradise Valley's UV and heat environment is closer to 15 to 20 years, and south- and west-facing slopes degrade faster. The estates built in the 1970s and 1980s along McDonald Drive and Lincoln Drive corridors are well past that window. Intact tile is not a reliable indicator of underlayment condition. If your home was built before 2005 and you haven't had an underlayment inspection, it's overdue.
More than in most Phoenix metro markets, for legitimate reasons. Clay tile replacement on a 4,000-to-6,000 square foot estate typically runs $25,000 to $50,000 depending on tile specification and roof complexity. Concrete tile replacement on a comparable home runs $18,000 to $35,000. Underlayment-only renewal, where good tile is lifted and relaid over new paper, runs $12,000 to $22,000 and is often the most cost-effective answer. Scheduling before June avoids peak-monsoon demand premiums. All Storm offers $0 down financing and a free instant online estimate.
Depends on your property. A significant share of Paradise Valley homes sit on non-HOA lots, particularly older estates on larger parcels. If you are in one of the gated communities like Clearwater Hills, Finisterre, or Cheney Estates, the community's Architectural Review Committee must approve material, profile, and color before work begins. Many HOAs here require clay or concrete tile and maintain specific approved color palettes. All Storm Roofing prepares and submits the ARC documentation for you as part of the project, so HOA paperwork does not delay your schedule.