
If you’re looking at roof restoration or roof coating bids in coastal North Carolina, the warranty numbers can feel like the whole decision, until you realize they don’t all promise the same thing. You’re not just asking “How many years?” You’re really asking who pays, who shows up, and what gets fixed if you end up with a leak after the next season of wind-driven rain.
In most cases, shingle rejuvenation or “restoration” warranties run about 5–6 years. They focus on shingle performance, not a blanket leak guarantee, while liquid-applied coating systems commonly offer 10- or 20-year options that depend on meeting specific application and documentation requirements. The sections below will help you separate material coverage from workmanship and true system or “leak” warranties, spot the fine print that changes the value, and get comparable answers in writing.
Typical Warranty Ranges by Service
In practice, the “normal” roof restoration warranty term tracks the service type more than the contractor. Expect shingle rejuvenation warranties around 5–6 years; coating systems are typically offered in 10-, 15-, or 20-year terms.
On asphalt-shingle rejuvenation or “restoration” treatments, the published warranties you’ll most often see are about 5–6 years (often framed around shingle flexibility/performance for that period), not “your roof won’t leak.” That’s why a 6-year rejuvenation warranty can be perfectly normal even if the marketing sounds bigger.
Liquid-applied roof coating systems more commonly advertise 10- or 20-year roof coating warranty options, and those years typically refer to the coating system meeting specific requirements (often tied to documented application rate/dry-film thickness), not a blanket promise to fix any leak no matter what.
| Service type | Typical term(s) you’ll see | What it usually covers | What it often does NOT guarantee |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shingle rejuvenation / “restoration” treatment | ~5–6 years | Shingle flexibility/performance (product performance) | A blanket “no leaks” promise |
| Liquid-applied roof coating system | 10 / 15 / 20 years (common options) | Coating system performance if application + documentation requirements are met | Fixing any leak regardless of cause or paperwork |
If you’re comparing by term length alone, dig into what the coverage includes.
If your roof warranty discussion keeps circling back to whether restoration is worth it versus starting over, comparing restoration against a full replacement can clarify what you’re really buying. Read more in our article: Roof Restoration Vs Replacement Those years are a yardstick, not protection.
What the warranty actually promises

Treat the word “warranty” as a label for roof coating warranty coverage—who pays for what when something goes wrong, not as a generic “we’ll fix leaks” promise. Two contractors can both offer a “10-year warranty,” yet one only replaces failed coating material while the other pays for labor and repairs. If you don’t separate the types, you can end up in the classic blame loop, and I have zero patience for it: the installer says it’s a product issue, the manufacturer says it’s an install issue, and you’re stuck coordinating both while BBB ratings won’t save you.
Most roof restoration and coating proposals boil down to three buckets for manufacturer warranty vs contractor warranty roof coating. Nothing more.
Material or product warranty (manufacturer): Covers defects in the product itself. The remedy can be narrow, sometimes limited to supplying replacement material for the affected area, not your contractor’s labor or any interior damage.
Workmanship warranty (contractor): Covers installation errors for a set period. This matters most in the first big season of wind-driven rain, when flashing, penetrations, or prep mistakes reveal themselves.
System or “leak” warranty (often requires registration/inspection): Ties coverage to an approved system and documented application requirements (like dry-film thickness for coatings). This is a different class of protection than a contractor’s handshake, but it’s only as real as the paperwork.
A simple way to compare bids apples to apples: ask each contractor to point to the sentence that says what happens if you get a leak near a vent pipe after a coastal storm, and then ask, “Who pays for the diagnosis and the labor?” Follow the permit trail of paperwork, not the sales talk. If they can’t answer in writing, you’re not buying a warranty, you’re buying optimism.
The fine print that changes value

You can do everything “right,” file the paperwork, and still learn too late that one exclusion in the roof coating warranty terms and conditions wipes out the coverage. The ugly surprises usually live in conditions like ponding water and maintenance documentation.
A “good” warranty turns into a bad one fast, and Consumer Reports would tell you to assume it will when you trip the conditions that limit it. With coatings, longer terms often require documented application rate or dry-film thickness. They also require approved prep and sometimes ongoing inspections or maintenance records. Many warranties also carve out common real-life causes like ponding water and failures at flashing or penetrations.
Before you compare warranty years, ask for the actual warranty page that lists voiding conditions, then ask who’s responsible for roof coating warranty paperwork documenting thickness and any required inspections in writing.
Registration and documentation are often what turn a “good on paper” warranty into coverage you can actually enforce after a claim. Read more in our article: Roof Restoration Documentation
Questions to ask before you sign
After a storm leak, it’s common to hear “send the warranty,” then discover it was never registered and the remedy is unclear. A few precise questions up front can keep you out of that runaround later.
You don’t need to become a warranty expert, but you do need peace of mind with answers you can file and enforce later, especially in coastal NC where wind-driven rain is the stress test that finds every weak point. If a contractor can’t give you these in writing before you pay a deposit, the “warranty” you think you’re buying may not exist when you need it.
Ask these questions and request the document that answers each one
Can you send me the actual warranty documents (not a brochure) for every warranty you’re offering?
Is any part of this warranty manufacturer-backed, and do you register/enroll roof coating warranty registration for me? If yes, what inspection or photos are required to keep it valid?
What’s the remedy if there’s a problem? Specifically: Who pays for labor and materials, and is interior damage excluded as “consequential”?
What conditions void it? Ask them to point to exclusions like ponding water or penetrations/flashing.
Is it transferable if I sell the house? If yes, what paperwork and deadlines apply for roof coating warranty transferability?
How does this restoration/coating affect any remaining shingle manufacturer warranty? Ask for a written statement on whether does roof coating void shingle warranty, and whether it’s separate from (and doesn’t replace) the original coverage.
Leaks around penetrations like chimneys and vents are among the most common real-world failure points that can trigger warranty disputes. Read more in our article: Roof Leaks Chimneys Vents
Roof not getting any younger? Contact us at Contact us or call 910-241-1152 to find out where you stand.


