Best Roofers in Clute, TX

Clute's 1950s–1980s ranch homes along the Brazosport petrochemical corridor face a compounding roofing problem: shingles installed on low-pitch slab-on-grade houses are already shortened by Gulf Coast UV and humidity, and Brazoria County's coastal position puts every roof in TWIA's catastrophe zone where wind-uplift damage from hurricanes and the May 2024 derecho is a real annual exposure. Permit work here runs through the City of Clute's own permitting office — not Houston, not Brazoria County — and individual subdivisions like Woodshore may add their own deed-restriction approval steps before you touch a shingle.

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See the 10 Roofers Serving Clute
Roofers serving Clute, TX
Median home built
1984
Median home value
$251,100
FEMA flood zone
X (low)
Typical re-roof cost (est.)
$9,000–$16,000 for architectural shingles on a 1,800–2,400 sq ft single-story
Most common local issue
Heat- and UV-accelerated shingle failure on aging low-pitch ranch roofs

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Based in Clute

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Highly-rated pros based nearby who cover Clute. Distance shown from the Clute area.

Roofers in Clute: What You Should Know

Wind-Uplift Risk on Older Ranch Roofs in a TWIA Catastrophe Zone

Why it matters to you

Clute sits in Brazoria County, fully within TWIA's designated catastrophe area, and many homes here were built before the 2006 IRC wind-resistance upgrades that tightened nail-pattern and starter-strip requirements. The May 2024 derecho and Gulf tropical systems produce the exact ridge-cap lift and shingle-tab delamination that pre-2006 low-slope ranch roofs are most vulnerable to — and a failed TWIA inspection after a storm can jeopardize your wind coverage.

What a good pro does

A qualified roofer working in Clute should document existing fastener patterns during tear-off and install new shingles to current IRC wind-resistance specs, including six-nail patterns and sealed starter strips on all eave and rake edges. Verify that the materials specified — especially Class 4 impact-resistant shingles — appear on TWIA's approved-products list before purchase, since TWIA eligibility is tied to installed product compliance.

Sources: Texas Windstorm Insurance Association (TWIA), International Residential Code (as adopted by City of Houston)

Extreme UV and Heat Cycling Cutting Roof Life to 15–18 Years

Why it matters to you

With a census median year built of 1984, many Clute ranch homes are already on their second or third roof — or overdue for one. Houston's 2,700-plus cooling degree days per year and attic deck temperatures that can exceed 160°F oxidize asphalt binders far faster than manufacturers' 25–30 year ratings assume, and the low-pitch profiles common on Clute's single-story brick-veneer homes trap heat with minimal ventilation. Homeowners who installed standard 3-tab or early architectural shingles in the late 1990s or early 2000s are looking at roofs that are functionally at end-of-life now even if they appear intact from the street.

What a good pro does

Ask your roofer to evaluate soffit and ridge vent balance per IRC R806 ratios during the scope-of-work inspection — inadequate attic airflow is the primary reason replacement roofs in Clute underperform their rated lifespan. Upgrading to an Energy Star-rated cool-roof shingle in a lighter color can meaningfully reduce deck temperatures and may qualify for utility rebates; confirm this with your roofer before finalizing material selection.

Sources: International Residential Code (as adopted by City of Houston), ENERGY STAR / U.S. Dept. of Energy

Flat and Low-Slope Additions Prone to Ponding After Heavy Rainfall

Why it matters to you

Clute's mid-century ranch homes frequently gained covered patios, utility rooms, or rear additions under flat or near-flat (under 2:12 pitch) modified bitumen or built-up roof sections. Even though most of Clute maps to FEMA Zone X, the area's low-lying terrain and high-intensity Gulf rainfall events mean flat sections collect standing water that accelerates membrane delamination and can rot OSB decking in the region's persistent humidity — damage that is invisible until water is already inside the home.

What a good pro does

A roofer addressing a flat or low-slope section in Clute should probe the decking for soft spots before applying any new membrane; rotted OSB must be replaced, not covered over. TPO or modified bitumen replacement on these sections averages $4.50–$7.50 per square foot installed (estimate), and the scope should include clearing and resizing scuppers or interior drains to handle realistic rainfall intensity rather than the design minimums that undersized the original system.

Sources: FEMA National Flood Hazard Layer (NFHL), International Residential Code (as adopted by City of Houston)

City of Clute Permits and Subdivision Deed Restrictions Are Two Separate Hurdles

Why it matters to you

Because Clute is an incorporated Brazoria County city, all roofing work requiring a permit — including full re-roofs and structural deck repairs — must be pulled through the City of Clute's own permitting office, not Houston's or the county's. On top of that, subdivisions like Woodshore may have active HOAs whose Architectural Review Committees require written approval before any material change, including shingle color or an upgrade to metal roofing, which can add 10–30 days to the project timeline if not started early.

What a good pro does

Before signing a contract, confirm with your roofer that they are registered to pull permits in the City of Clute specifically and that they have verified your subdivision's HOA or deed-restriction status — a step that matters especially if you're considering upgrading from asphalt to standing-seam metal. Note that Texas issues no state roofing contractor license through TDLR, so permit registration with the City of Clute and verifiable general liability plus workers' compensation insurance are the primary credentialing checkpoints available to homeowners here.

Sources: Municipal permit office (see area profile), Local HOA / deed restrictions (see area profile)

Roofers in Clute: What You Should Know

Hiring roofers in Clute? Clute is an incorporated Brazoria County city anchored by the Brazosport petrochemical corridor, with a housing stock largely built from the 1950s through the 1980s. Homeowners here contend with Gulf Coast humidity, low-lying drainage challenges, and aging ranch-style homes that frequently need roof, HVAC, and plumbing updates. Permit work runs through the City of Clute rather than Houston or the county, and individual subdivisions may carry their own deed restrictions or HOAs.

Housing era
Primarily 1950s–1980s, with some newer 1990s–2020s subdivisions
Foundation
Predominantly slab-on-grade for post-1960 tract homes
Flood zone
FEMA Zone X (low flood risk) per official NFHL data
Permits
City of Clute Permitting — Clute is an incorporated city with its own building…

Housing stock & systems

  • Building era

    Primarily 1950s–1980s, with some newer 1990s–2020s subdivisions.

  • Typical style

    Single-story ranch-style brick veneer homes dominate; later tracts feature contemporary suburban brick-and-siding designs; manufactured homes appear on semi-rural parcels.

  • Foundations

    Predominantly slab-on-grade for post-1960 tract homes; some older pre-1960 frame houses and manufactured homes use pier-and-beam or block/pier systems.

  • Common systems

    Original homes often have galvanized or copper plumbing, aging electrical panels (60–100 amp in older stock), and central HVAC units that may be undersized or past service life. Ductwork in attics is common and vulnerable to heat-related deterioration.

  • What that means for repairs

    Kitchen and bathroom remodels in 1960s–1970s ranch homes are common, along with full HVAC replacements, re-roofing, and plumbing repiping to replace galvanized lines. Some homeowners elevate or flood-proof structures after repeated storm events.

Permits & restrictions

  • Permit jurisdiction

    City of Clute Permitting — Clute is an incorporated city with its own building codes, permits, and inspections independent of Houston or Brazoria County.

  • HOA & deed restrictions

    No single city-wide mandatory HOA governs Clute. Individual subdivisions (e.g., Woodshore and others) may have their own mandatory HOAs or deed restrictions. Some older areas have no active association and rely solely on city code enforcement. Specific subdivision names are needed to confirm HOA status.

  • Historic districts

    No City of Houston historic district designation confirmed. Clute is an independent city with no known local historic district overlay.

  • Contractor note

    Contractors must pull permits through the City of Clute and comply with local building codes. Individual subdivisions may impose additional architectural or material restrictions via deed covenants, so confirming HOA requirements before starting exterior work is advisable.

Flood & weather

  • FEMA flood zone

    FEMA Zone X (low flood risk) per official NFHL data. However, Clute is relatively low-lying and traversed by drainageways; some parcels elsewhere in the city fall within Special Flood Hazard Areas. Proximity to Oyster Creek and coastal drainage corridors warrants parcel-level verification.

  • Hurricane Harvey impact

    Brazoria County experienced major flooding during Hurricane Harvey in 2017, particularly along the Brazos River corridor and low-lying areas. Clute, in the Brazosport area, saw flooding but was not among the most devastated Brazoria County communities (Rosharon, parts of Angleton, and rural Brazos River subdivisions were harder hit). Specific street-level Harvey flood data for Clute is not well-documented in public sources — parcel-level FEMA claims data or Brazoria County records should be consulted for individual addresses.

  • Heat & humidity load

    Gulf Coast humidity and extreme summer heat stress aging HVAC systems and accelerate attic ductwork deterioration in slab-on-grade ranch homes. Condensation issues and mold risk are elevated, especially in homes with original insulation and ventilation. Coastal proximity increases salt-air corrosion on exterior metals and roofing fasteners.

Working with contractors here

The most common jobs in Clute involve HVAC replacement, roof replacement, and plumbing repiping in 1960s–1980s ranch homes where original systems have reached or exceeded useful life. Slab foundation repair is a recurring need given the expansive clay soils and low-lying terrain. Exterior painting and siding repair are frequent due to Gulf Coast humidity and salt air exposure. Contractors should scope jobs assuming slab-on-grade construction unless confirmed otherwise, and should verify whether a specific subdivision's HOA requires architectural approval before beginning exterior modifications. Flood mitigation work — including French drains, grading improvements, and sump pump installations — is an emerging service need given the area's drainage challenges.

Local Tip

Always ask for a written estimate before work begins. Texas contractors are required to provide one on jobs over $1,000.

About Clute

Clute is an incorporated Brazoria County city anchored by the Brazosport petrochemical corridor, with a housing stock largely built from the 1950s through the 1980s. Homeowners here contend with Gulf Coast humidity, low-lying drainage challenges, and aging ranch-style homes that frequently need roof, HVAC, and plumbing updates. Permit work runs through the City of Clute rather than Houston or the county, and individual subdivisions may carry their own deed restrictions or HOAs.

Median year built
1984
Median home value
$251,100
Owner-occupied
50.8%
Population
10,650
Housing units
5,178
Median income
$66,224

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 5-Year 2023

Flood & storm risk

FEMA Zone XLow flood risk

Most of Clute maps to FEMA Zone X (low mapped flood risk), but Houston's flash-flood reality means even low-risk blocks benefit from smart drainage and storm-hardened installs; as a Brazoria County coastal community, tropical surge and wind add a layer generic guidance misses.

Source: FEMA National Flood Hazard Layer (NFHL). Flood zones vary by parcel — verify your individual FIRM panel.

Houston Storm Readiness in Clute

Hurricane & flooding

Even in lower-risk Clute, TX, a Gulf hurricane can drive 130-mph gusts that peel ridge caps and send shingles airborne, so have a TDLR-licensed roofer apply additional hand-sealing to all perimeter and hip shingles with roofing cement before the season opens. A two-hour prep visit is far less disruptive than a post-storm emergency tarp call when every roofer in Houston is booked. As a Brazoria County community, Clute may follow county rather than City of Houston storm rebuild rules.

Severe storms & hail

After a severe thunderstorm, the first thing a roofer should check in Clute, TX is whether wind-driven rain has pushed up under any low-slope transition sections—areas where a steep roof meets a flatter porch or addition—because these joints separate under gust pressure and rarely reseal on their own. Sealing those transitions with a peel-and-stick modified bitumen patch costs far less than replacing the framing they protect. As a Brazoria County community, Clute may follow county rather than City of Houston storm rebuild rules.

Ice storms & freezes

Winter Storm Uri 2021 showed that ice-covered roofs across the Houston metro lost shingles when the freeze-thaw cycle broke the adhesion seal on standard three-tab and architectural shingles never designed for sustained below-freezing temperatures. Have a TDLR-licensed roofer inspect your shingle tab adhesion in Clute, TX each autumn and apply supplemental roofing cement to any tabs that no longer lie flat. With a median build year of 1984, the older building stock here is more exposed to hard-freeze damage than newer construction. Confirm the current FEMA panel for your Clute parcel — the area maps to Zone X, but adjacent lots can differ.

Sources: FEMA National Flood Hazard Layer (NFHL), Ready.gov -- Hurricanes, CenterPoint Energy -- Storm Center, City of Houston -- Emergency Preparedness, Ready.gov -- Winter Weather, Harris County Flood Control District

Free Clute Tools & Calculators

Houston-specific estimators to plan your project before you call a pro. All results are planning estimates — a licensed local pro confirms the details on site.

Hurricane Roof Wind-Load & TDI/WPI-8 Estimator

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115–120 mph

Estimated design wind speed for your zone

Outside the TDI catastrophe area, so a WPI-8 is generally not mandated — but Houston still sees hurricane-force gusts (Beryl, 2024). Insist on properly rated shingles installed to the manufacturer's high-wind nailing pattern (6 nails) and starter strips, or a wind claim can be denied for improper installation.

Find a Houston roofer →

This is a planning estimate only — actual requirements depend on an on-site assessment by a licensed Houston pro. Wind-speed zones are approximate; your exact TDI/WPI-8 obligation depends on your address's designation. Verify with the Texas Department of Insurance before contracting.

Houston Freeze Prep & Pipe Insulation Checklist

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Your freeze checklist — 4 tasks

  1. 1

    Disconnect & drain every outdoor hose bib

    Remove hoses, drain the spigots, and cover each with an insulated faucet sock. Un-drained hose bibs are the #1 burst point in a Houston freeze.

  2. 2

    Insulate exposed pipes in the attic & garage

    Wrap any pipe in an unconditioned space (attic runs, garage walls) with foam sleeves. Houston homes rarely insulate these because they only matter a few nights a year — which is exactly why they burst.

  3. 3

    Open cabinet doors & keep a pencil-width drip

    On hard-freeze nights, open kitchen/bath cabinets so warm air reaches the pipes and let faucets on exterior walls drip to relieve pressure.

  4. 4

    Protect the attic/garage water heater & its lines

    An attic or garage tank sits in unconditioned space. Insulate the cold-inlet and hot-outlet lines and confirm the emergency drain pan is clear so a leak doesn't reach the ceiling.

This is a planning estimate only — actual requirements depend on an on-site assessment by a licensed Houston pro. If a pipe has already burst, shut off your main water supply and call a licensed Houston plumber immediately — freeze bursts flood fast.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to pull a permit through the City of Clute for a full shingle re-roof, or does Brazoria County handle that?
Clute is an incorporated city with its own building department, so all roofing permits for full re-roofs and structural deck repairs must go through the City of Clute Permitting office — not Brazoria County and not the City of Houston. Your roofer should be registered to pull permits in Clute specifically; out-of-town storm chasers who only know Houston's process will hit delays. Call the City of Clute directly to confirm current permit fees and inspection scheduling before work begins.

Sources: Municipal permit office (see area profile)

My Clute ranch home was built in the 1960s and has what looks like original wood decking under the shingles. Does that affect a re-roof?
Many 1960s Clute ranch homes used 1x6 or 1x8 tongue-and-groove pine board sheathing rather than plywood or OSB, and after 50-plus years of Gulf Coast humidity that wood can be checked, cupped, or partially rotted in isolated sections — you won't know until tear-off. A responsible roofer should inspect the deck before writing a final quote and include a per-sheet or per-board allowance for deck replacement in the contract; estimate an additional $1.50–$3.00 per square foot for partial deck repairs, though your actual scope will vary. This is especially common on the north-facing and heavily shaded planes where moisture has never fully dried between rain events.

Sources: International Residential Code (as adopted by City of Houston)

Clute is listed as FEMA Zone X, so do I really need TWIA wind coverage for my roof, or is standard homeowners insurance enough?
FEMA Zone X addresses mapped flood risk, not wind — and Brazoria County's coastal position places Clute squarely inside the Texas Windstorm Insurance Association's designated catastrophe area, meaning TWIA wind coverage is a separate product from your standard homeowners policy and from flood insurance. If your lender or insurer requires TWIA coverage, any re-roofing work must use TWIA-approved products and installation methods, and your roofer must be a Certified Roofing Contractor (CRC) under TWIA's program to keep that coverage valid. Confirm your current policy status with your agent before signing any roofing contract.

Sources: Texas Windstorm Insurance Association (TWIA)FEMA National Flood Hazard Layer (NFHL)

I live in the Woodshore subdivision in Clute. Do I need HOA approval before replacing my roof, even if I'm using the same shingle style?
Woodshore and some other Clute subdivisions carry active deed restrictions or HOA covenants that can require Architectural Review Committee sign-off before any exterior material change — including swapping shingle color or upgrading to a Class 4 impact-resistant product, even if the profile looks similar. ARC review in these communities can take 10–30 days, so submit your material sample and color spec to the HOA before scheduling the roofer, not after. Getting city permit approval and HOA approval are two completely separate processes in Clute, and skipping the HOA step can result in fines or a forced redo.

Sources: Local HOA / deed restrictions (see area profile)

When is the worst time of year to schedule a re-roof in Clute, and how far out are contractors booking after a Gulf storm?
Hurricane season runs June through November, and scheduling a non-emergency re-roof during that window carries real risk of work interruption if a storm system moves into the Gulf — most local roofers will pause mid-job for mandatory evacuations or crew safety. The practical sweet spot for planned replacements in Clute is November through February, when weather is drier and contractor availability is better. After a significant Gulf event, expect a 6–18-month backlog and price surges estimated at 15–25% above normal baseline, as Clute experienced in the aftermath of Harvey (2017) and Beryl (2024) when Brazoria County crews were stretched across the entire corridor.

Sources: Texas Windstorm Insurance Association (TWIA)

Can upgrading to Class 4 impact-resistant shingles get me a discount on my TWIA policy in Clute, and what do I need from the roofer to claim it?
TWIA does offer premium credits for roofs installed with TWIA-approved products, and Class 4 impact-resistant shingles that appear on their approved list can qualify — but the discount only applies if the installation is performed by a TWIA Certified Roofing Contractor and the roofer submits the proper WPI-8 certificate to document the compliant installation. Ask your roofer upfront whether they hold current TWIA CRC certification and whether the specific shingle product they're proposing is on the TWIA approved-products list for Brazoria County; an uncertified installer using even a Class 4 shingle won't trigger the credit. Contact TWIA directly or your insurance agent to get the current discount percentage before factoring it into your upgrade budget.

Sources: Texas Windstorm Insurance Association (TWIA)ENERGY STAR / U.S. Dept. of Energy

Written & reviewed by the HHSG Editorial Team Updated 2026 Our sourcing standards