Slate Roofing
Natural stone slate for historic and luxury homes, desert, and Mediterranean-style homes.
Roofing materials by style
Natural stone slate for historic curb appeal and century-scale durability — see if slate 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?
Natural stone slate for historic and luxury homes, desert, and Mediterranean-style homes.
Natural stone, synthetic slate, and hybrid systems — weight, craft labor, and lifespan vary widely.
Natural slate excels in freeze-thaw and historic 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 →75–100 year lifespan · Natural stone
$16 – $28 / sq ft
Current guide50+ year lifespan · Clay & concrete
$11 – $19 / 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 slate to asphalt, wood, metal, and other materials.
Based on the city selected in the calculator above.
Illustrative installed totals for natural slate with tear-off.
Natural slate
Natural slate
Natural slate
Natural slate
Prices on this page adjust for Los Angeles-area labor, permits, and climate — not a generic national template.
Los Angeles has among the highest contractor labor rates in the country. Varied housing — bungalows, mid-century, stucco tract — means specialists for each era are essential. Seismic and energy code add compliance cost.
Contractor labor runs about 35% above the U.S. average; typical permit fees in our model start around $420 for standard residential work.
LADBS (Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety) handles city permits with notoriously variable timelines. Valley and Westside projects may fall under different district offices.
LA's diverse microclimates affect project scope by neighborhood:
Natural slate often lasts 75–100 years. Synthetic slate typically lasts 40–60 years. Underlayment may need replacement before the stone — budget for maintenance cycles.
Natural slate offers authentic stone and the longest lifespan but costs more and requires specialist labor. Synthetic slate lowers weight and cost while mimicking the look on many homes.
Natural slate is very heavy. Before switching from asphalt, have trusses evaluated by an engineer. Reinforcement is common on homes not originally framed for stone.
On historic and luxury homes, slate protects authenticity and resale narrative. In markets where asphalt dominates, slate is a long-horizon choice rather than a upfront savings play.
Use our calculators for a localized range, then compare contractor bids.