Roof Repair

Roofs Fixed Right After Storm Damage

Roof Repair in Tyler for storm damage and leak issues affecting East Texas properties

Dickson Roofing handles roof repair in Tyler and throughout East Texas, addressing storm damage and active leaks with methods that stop recurring problems. Pine pollen season clogs valleys and creates moisture traps, while summer storms tear shingles and compromise flashing systems. You'll work with a crew trained to identify the exact source of leaks through attic inspection rather than guessing from visible exterior damage alone.


Repair work begins with a full attic inspection to trace water entry points back to their origin, which often differs from where stains appear on ceilings. The process includes custom flashing fabrication to match existing roof materials exactly, ensuring repairs blend structurally and visually. Each flashing piece is soldered together rather than relying on sealants that degrade under UV exposure and temperature swings.


Schedule an attic inspection to determine the exact source and extent of roof damage before interior issues worsen.

What Proper Roof Repair Prevents Long-Term

Roof repair done correctly addresses not just the visible damage but the underlying vulnerabilities that cause leaks to return after the first heavy rain. Dickson Roofing fabricates custom flashing on-site to match the profile and gauge of original materials, ensuring water flows away from penetrations rather than pooling at seams. The crew can identify shingle manufacturers and color matches by sight, preventing the mismatched patchwork that signals rushed repair work and creates new failure points where different materials expand at different rates.


After repairs are completed, you'll notice that attic insulation remains dry during storms, ceiling stains stop expanding, and roof valleys drain cleanly without debris buildup trapping moisture. Flashing around chimneys and vent pipes sits flush against surfaces without gaps or lifted edges, and shingles align in straight courses without color variation that marks material mismatches.


The repair process includes replacing damaged decking where water has softened wood, resealing nail penetrations with proper underlayment, and verifying that ventilation pathways remain unobstructed. Storm damage often extends beyond the obvious missing shingles to include compromised starter strips, torn underlayment, and bent drip edge that must be addressed to prevent wind-driven rain from entering wall cavities.

Questions About Roof Repair in East Texas

Property owners in Tyler and surrounding areas typically ask about repair processes, material matching, and how attic inspections reveal hidden damage that exterior assessments miss.

  • What does an attic inspection reveal that exterior inspection misses?

    Water stains in attic spaces trace back to the exact entry point, showing whether damage stems from flashing failure, shingle blow-off, or valley deterioration, while exterior views often only show secondary effects downstream from the actual breach.

  • How do you match existing roof materials during repairs?

    The crew identifies shingle manufacturers, product lines, and color batches by examining granule patterns and backing material, then sources matching inventory or selects the closest available alternative that blends without creating visible repair lines across roof planes.

  • Why does custom flashing fabrication matter for repairs?

    Pre-formed flashing rarely matches the exact angles and dimensions of existing roof penetrations, leaving gaps where water enters, while custom-fabricated pieces soldered together conform precisely to chimneys, skylights, and vent pipes without relying on sealants that fail within three to five years.

  • When should storm damage be repaired in Tyler?

    Repairs should occur before the next heavy rain event, as even small breaches allow water to saturate decking and insulation, turning a simple shingle replacement into a full decking reconstruction project once wood begins delaminating from prolonged moisture exposure.

  • What causes roof leaks to return after previous repairs?

    Most recurring leaks result from treating symptoms rather than causes—sealing around a vent pipe without addressing the lifted flashing beneath it, or replacing shingles without correcting the valley design that funnels excess water volume onto weakened sections during storms common to East Texas.

Dickson Roofing's repair process includes material matching, custom flashing work, and attic-level inspection to verify that water entry points are eliminated rather than temporarily covered. Arrange a repair consultation to assess storm damage and review the specific steps required for your roof configuration.