Tile roofing
Evaluate clay and concrete tile systems and details.
Millennium Makeover, Inc. provides roofing inspections, repairs and replacement planning for Boca Raton homes and commercial properties. We identify the company as Millennium Makeover, Inc.—not the unrelated Millennium Roofing LLC—and publish Florida license CCC1326328 so property owners can verify it directly.
Boca Raton properties range from coastal homes and gated communities to commercial roofs with multiple penetrations. A defensible scope accounts for roof geometry, structural loading, product approvals, HOA requirements and the conditions observed during inspection.
Tile changes can affect roof loading, so the existing structure and proposed system must be evaluated before material selection. A photo or neighborhood style alone cannot establish suitability.
For gated or architecturally controlled communities, confirm color, profile and approval requirements early. This reduces avoidable changes after materials or permits are already in motion.
A repair estimate should name the suspected source, the components to be opened or replaced and what conditions could expand the scope. Vague allowances make competing proposals difficult to compare.
Boca Raton publishes a supplemental roofing package that calls for permit forms, product approvals and, when applicable, roof-uplift and attachment documentation. The correct package depends on roof type and project conditions, so owners should rely on the current City checklist and permit review.
City of Boca Raton — permit application forms
Evaluate clay and concrete tile systems and details.
Repair leaks, flashing and storm-related damage.
Compare replacement systems for the specific structure.
There is no responsible statewide flat price. Roof area and pitch, material, tear-off, access, deck repairs, flashing, product approvals, permits and disposal all change the scope. Ask for a written, address-specific estimate that separates the base work from concealed-condition allowances; online ranges are planning aids, not bids.
No blanket answer is safe. The current Florida Building Code retains a 25% provision and includes an exception tied to whether the existing covering was permitted and installed under the current code or the two preceding editions. Roof sections, prior work and local interpretation matter. Have the contractor and building official apply the current code to the specific permit history before choosing repair versus replacement.