
If you’re getting mixed advice on your roof, you’re not alone. One person says “coat it and buy a few years,” and another says “tear it off, no exceptions,” and you’re stuck trying to tell the difference between a real diagnosis and a sales default.
The simplest way to decide is this: for roof restoration vs replacement, you can do some basic checks, but restoration only works when your roof is still a dry, stable weatherproof envelope underneath the surface wear. In coastal North Carolina, sun and humidity can make shingles look rough before they’re failing, but hidden moisture or widespread damage can rule restoration out fast. This guide helps you spot the quick disqualifiers and confirm the signs of a true restoration candidate. It also helps you document what you need so quotes (and insurance or resale conversations) stay grounded in evidence.
| What you see | What it usually means | Restoration? |
|---|---|---|
| Active leak signs (fresh ceiling stains, dripping in attic) | Water is already getting past the system | No—replacement/repair first |
| Soft/sagging decking; visible dips/waves | Deck movement or moisture damage | No—replacement likely |
| Widespread missing/creased shingles after storms | Large-area wind/storm damage | No—surface treatment won’t hold |
| Roof is dry/stable; tabs lie flat; issues are localized | Wear without active failure | Often yes—get restoration quotes |
| Heavy algae staining plus heavy granule loss or musty attic after rain | May be crossing from “worn” to “failing” | Unclear—inspect/attic check needed |
The Fast Disqualifiers for Restoration

You can spend money on a treatment and still end up replacing the roof months later if moisture is already in the system. To avoid that mistake, start by checking for problems a surface fix won’t address.
Restoration only makes sense when your roof is still a functioning system, and I am blunt about this for a reason. If you have active leaks (fresh ceiling stains or dripping in the attic) or soft or sagging decking you can feel from the attic, you’re past the point where a surface treatment can responsibly help.
Also disqualifying: bare spots where the black mat shows through from heavy granule loss or moldy, wet insulation in the attic. Don’t let “it’s just old” be the deciding factor.
Many leaks that “disqualify” restoration start around penetrations like vents, pipe boots, and chimneys instead of in the open shingle field. Read more in our article: Roof Leaks Chimneys Vents A Consumer Reports style checklist mindset matters here, because in Wilmington’s humidity and salt air, a “still-dry” 20-year roof can be a better candidate than a “newer” roof that’s already wet underneath.
Roof Restoration Candidate Checklist
A homeowner in Ogden gets two opposite bids in one afternoon, and the only difference is whether anyone checked the attic or the deck. A few simple tells can keep you from choosing based on confidence and sales pitch.
Your roof is typically a candidate for asphalt shingle roof restoration when it’s dry, stable, and uniformly worn, not a patchwork quilt of failing spots. Age alone won’t tell you that. A 22-year roof that sheds water cleanly can qualify, but hidden moisture can disqualify a 12-year roof.
Use this quick roof inspection checklist before you spend time getting quotes. Get a second set of eyes if anything feels unclear.
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No current moisture signs: attic sheathing looks dry (no dark, wet-looking areas), insulation isn’t matted, and you don’t smell damp or musty after a rain.
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Shingles still have surface protection: granules are present across most slopes, and gutters aren’t consistently filling with heavy black grit.
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Tabs still lie flat and sealed: you don’t see lots of lifted edges, widespread cracking, or brittle corners breaking off.
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Roof plane looks true: no visible dips or “waves” along ridgelines or around valleys that suggest deck movement.
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Problems are localized, not everywhere: a few repairable spots (one pipe boot, a small flashing tweak) rather than repeating issues across multiple areas.
Coastal NC Stressors That Change the Call

In Wilmington-area conditions, roofs often look worse than they are, and sometimes they fail faster than you’d expect for reasons that don’t show up in a simple “how old is it?” rule. Strong sun bakes shingles so they get brittle and lose sealing at the tabs, and humidity makes small ventilation or flashing problems turn into attic moisture quickly.
Algae is the big wild card here, and knee-jerk replacement calls are often just noise. The black streaking common near Wrightsville Sound and Carolina Beach is often algae (frequently tied to Gloeocapsa magma), as noted in ARMA guidance (asphaltroofing.org). This Old House has preached this for years, and it’s usually a cleaning and prevention issue, not an automatic replacement verdict. But if the staining comes with heavy granule loss (bare mat showing, persistent gritty gutters) or you’re also seeing musty attic air after rain, you should treat it as a sign the roof may be crossing from “worn” into “failing.”
In coastal neighborhoods, black streaks are often algae discoloration rather than immediate shingle failure, so the right next step is usually identification and proper cleaning—not an automatic tear-off. Read more in our article: Roof Algae Black Streaks
What to document before you decide
Walk into estimates with clear photos and notes, and you are far more likely to hear the same diagnosis from three different people for roof leak detection or overall condition. Better documentation also makes it harder for anyone to skip straight to their default solution.
You’ll get a more honest, apples-to-apples answer when you walk into calls with the same evidence every contractor can react to. A driveway glance can mislead you. If you don’t document it, you invite vague conclusions. That also opens the door to quotes that vary with the salesperson, not the roof.
Capture a simple set of photos and notes
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One wide photo of each roof plane (front, back, left, right), plus close-ups of the worst-looking area on each plane.
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Two gutters/downspouts: a photo of granules/grit accumulation (if any) and a note on whether it’s a one-time cleanout or keeps coming back.
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All penetrations and transitions: pipe boots, vents, chimney, skylights, wall step flashing, and any low-slope tie-ins.
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Any repair history: dates, invoices, and where patches were made (even a hand-drawn sketch is fine).
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Attic evidence after rain: 3–5 photos of sheathing around penetrations/valleys, insulation condition, and any stains or rusty nail tips.
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Age and shingle type (best guess): when it was installed and whether it’s 3-tab or architectural, since that can affect insurance conversations.
A consistent inspection process helps you compare bids because different contractors often focus on different red flags unless they’re looking at the same checkpoints. Read more in our article: Typical Roof Inspection
Insurance and resale can override “restorable”
Some underwriting guides treat roof age like a switch: 3-tab often hits friction around 15 years, and architectural around 20 (see an example underwriting quick reference from upcinsurance.com). That reality can force your hand even when the roof is still performing.
Even if your shingles still shed water and look like a solid candidate for restoration, your insurer may treat roof age as a hard stop, and that policy reality beats neighborhood chatter every time. Many underwriters apply age cutoffs, then require roof photos or an inspection report for renewal or new coverage. You can be “right” about the roof and still lose coverage.
Resale can force the same move, even if Nextdoor is full of people saying they “got away with” restoration. For instance, a buyer’s inspector sees an older roof plus a faint ceiling stain and writes it up as end-of-life, and the lender or buyer demands a replacement credit. If you’re planning to refinance, renew, or list soon, factor that timeline in before you bet on restoration.
Roof not getting any younger? Contact us at Contact us or call 910-241-1152 to find out where you stand.