A new roof is one of the most significant investments a Bristol homeowner will ever make. It’s also one of the most opaque — quotes vary wildly, the terminology is confusing, and most roofers won’t publish their prices anywhere. That makes it easy to overpay, or to accept the cheapest quote without understanding what’s actually been left out.
In this guide, Thomas Doherty — owner of TD Roofing Contractors with 20 years working on Bristol’s rooftops — breaks down the real cost of a new roof in Bristol in 2026. Every figure below reflects what we actually charge, and what you should expect from any reputable Bristol roofer.
Before we get into numbers, you need to understand the five variables that move the price on any roof replacement in Bristol. Get these right and a quote makes sense. Miss them and you’re comparing apples with oranges.
1. Property type and roof size A Victorian terrace in Bedminster with a simple duo-pitched roof covering 40m² is a fundamentally different job to a large Edwardian detached in Westbury-on-Trym with hip ends, valleys, and 120m² of slate. Size and complexity are the two biggest cost drivers on any roof replacement.
2. Roofing material Concrete interlocking tile sits at the affordable end. Natural Welsh slate sits at the premium end. The gap between them on a typical Bristol semi-detached can be £4,000–£6,000 for the same roof. The right material depends on your property type, your neighbourhood, and — in Conservation Areas — what Bristol City Council will accept.
3. Scaffold requirements Scaffold on a Bristol roof replacement is not optional — it’s a legal requirement for work at height. What varies is the complexity and cost of the scaffold. A two-storey terrace in Horfield needs a different scaffold setup to a three-storey townhouse on a steep hillside in Clifton or Totterdown. Scaffold typically accounts for 15–25% of the total job cost.
4. Structural timber condition When the old roof covering is stripped, the timbers underneath are exposed. If those timbers are sound, the job proceeds as quoted. If there’s rot — and on Bristol’s older Victorian and Edwardian stock there frequently is — the quote needs to increase to cover repairs. Any roofer who guarantees a fixed price without a thorough survey before stripping is either guessing or planning to hit you with extras later.
5. Material specification Not all quotes are equal even when they specify the same material. There’s a significant difference between a breathable underlay and a basic felt, between dry ridge fixings and mortar-bedded ridges, between Code 5 lead in the valleys and cheaper alternatives. A low quote that leaves out proper underlay, lead work, or dry verge systems is not a genuine saving — it’s deferred cost.
These figures include scaffold, strip-out of the existing covering, new breathable membrane, battens, tile or slate, lead work on valleys and chimney junctions, and ridge finishing. They do not include structural timber repairs, which are quoted separately once the roof is stripped and the condition is assessed.
Bristol’s most common property type — the two-up two-down or three-bedroom terrace that runs across Bedminster, Redland, Bishopston, Totterdown, Southville, and Fishponds.
| Material | Typical Cost |
|---|---|
| Concrete interlocking tile | £5,500 – £8,500 |
| Clay tile | £7,000 – £11,000 |
| Fibre cement slate | £6,500 – £10,000 |
| Spanish natural slate | £8,000 – £13,000 |
| Reclaimed Welsh slate | £10,000 – £16,000 |
Bristol-specific note: Terraces in Conservation Areas — including much of Clifton, Redland, and Cotham — will typically require reclaimed Welsh or natural slate to maintain the character of the area. Bristol City Council takes a consistent position on this and applications to re-roof period properties in Conservation Areas in modern concrete tile are routinely rejected.
The interwar semis that dominate Horfield, Henleaze, Kingswood, and Staple Hill — typically larger roof areas than terraced houses with hip ends that add complexity and cost.
| Material | Typical Cost |
|---|---|
| Concrete interlocking tile | £7,000 – £11,000 |
| Clay tile | £9,000 – £14,000 |
| Fibre cement slate | £8,500 – £13,000 |
| Spanish natural slate | £10,000 – £16,000 |
| Reclaimed Welsh slate | £13,000 – £20,000 |
Bristol-specific note: Interwar semis in Henleaze and Horfield were commonly built with clay pan tiles — a specific profile that requires matching or replacement in kind. Finding matching clay pan tiles for repair work can be challenging, which sometimes pushes homeowners toward a full re-roof in a compatible modern clay tile rather than continued patching.
The larger detached properties found in Westbury-on-Trym, Stoke Bishop, Henleaze, and the roads off Clifton Down. More complex roof structures, larger areas, and frequently higher specifications.
| Material | Typical Cost |
|---|---|
| Concrete interlocking tile | £9,000 – £16,000 |
| Clay tile | £13,000 – £20,000 |
| Fibre cement slate | £11,000 – £18,000 |
| Spanish natural slate | £14,000 – £22,000 |
| Natural Welsh slate | £18,000 – £35,000+ |
Bristol-specific note: Large Edwardian detached properties in BS9 commonly have multiple chimney stacks, hip and valley configurations, and extensive leadwork that significantly increases the cost versus a straightforward duo-pitched roof of the same total area.
The 1950s to 1990s housing stock that dominates Filton, Bradley Stoke, Kingswood, and Staple Hill. Typically concrete interlocking tile on low to medium pitches, simpler roof configurations.
| Material | Typical Cost |
|---|---|
| Concrete interlocking tile | £5,000 – £9,000 |
| Fibre cement slate | £6,500 – £11,000 |
| Modern clay interlocking tile | £8,000 – £13,000 |
Bristol-specific note: Low-pitched roofs on post-war properties — many pitched below 30 degrees — require careful underlay and tile specification to perform correctly. The correct underlay for a low-pitched interlocking tile installation is not the same product as for a steeper Victorian roof. This is a common area where cheaper quotes cut corners.
The most widely used roofing material on modern and post-war Bristol housing stock. Durable, affordable, and available in a range of profiles and colours. Lifespan of 40–60 years with correct installation and maintenance.
Best for: Post-war semis and terraces in Filton, Bradley Stoke, Kingswood, Staple Hill Not suitable for: Conservation Areas or period properties where the visual character of the street matters Typical installed cost: £55–£90 per m²
More expensive than concrete but longer-lasting — well-maintained clay tiles can last 80–100 years. Available in traditional pan tile profiles for interwar properties and plain tile formats for Victorian stock. The correct material for many of Bristol’s interwar semis.
Best for: Interwar properties in Henleaze, Horfield, and Bishopston where original clay tile is in place Not suitable for: Modern new builds where concrete tile performs equally well at lower cost Typical installed cost: £90–£140 per m²
A manufactured alternative to natural slate — considerably cheaper, lighter, and available in profiles that broadly replicate the look of Welsh slate. Lifespan of 25–40 years. Not accepted in all Conservation Areas.
Best for: Period terraces outside Conservation Areas where budget is a consideration Not suitable for: Listed buildings or Conservation Area properties where natural slate is required Typical installed cost: £80–£120 per m²
Quarried slate from the Galicia region of Spain — a genuine natural product at a more accessible price point than Welsh. Performs well in Bristol’s climate and has a lifespan of 75–100 years. Visual appearance is slightly different to Welsh slate — darker, more uniform.
Best for: Period properties where natural slate is required but budget doesn’t extend to reclaimed Welsh Not suitable for: Properties in Conservation Areas where Bristol City Council specifically requires Welsh or local stone slate Typical installed cost: £110–£160 per m²
The gold standard for Bristol’s period housing stock — authentic Welsh slate salvaged from demolition projects and re-graded for reuse. Matches the original material on Bristol’s Victorian and Edwardian rooflines exactly. Lifespan of 100+ years where the material itself is sound.
Best for: Conservation Area properties, listed buildings, and any period property where visual authenticity matters Not suitable for: Modern or post-war properties where it’s unnecessary and cost-prohibitive Typical installed cost: £160–£250 per m²
Scaffold is a fixed requirement on any full roof replacement — there are no shortcuts here. What varies is the configuration and cost depending on your property.
| Property Type | Typical Scaffold Cost |
|---|---|
| Standard two-storey terrace | £500 – £900 |
| Three-storey terrace (Clifton, Redland) | £800 – £1,400 |
| Semi-detached, two-storey | £700 – £1,200 |
| Large detached property | £1,200 – £2,500+ |
| Steep hillside property (Totterdown, Clifton) | Add 20–30% |
On hillside streets in Totterdown, parts of Clifton, and Cotham, scaffold design is more complex than on flat suburban terraces. Street-level anchoring points may be limited, and traffic management is sometimes required. These factors add to the scaffold cost and should always be specified in the quote before work begins — not presented as an extra after the scaffold goes up.
This is where Bristol homeowners get caught out. A quote that looks competitive on paper often leaves out items that are non-negotiable on a properly specified roof replacement.
A complete new roof quote should specify all of the following:
Strip-out and disposal The existing tiles, felt, and battens need to be stripped, loaded, and taken to a licensed tip. This is included in a complete quote — if it isn’t, ask why.
Breathable membrane underlay Modern roof replacements use a breathable membrane, not the traditional black bitumen felt. It performs significantly better in Bristol’s climate, prevents condensation build-up, and is required by BS 5534. A quote that specifies “felt” without clarifying the type warrants a question.
New timber battens The existing battens are stripped with the old tiles. New treated timber battens are required before the new covering is fixed. Any quote that doesn’t specify new battens is planning to reuse the old ones — which, on a Victorian or Edwardian roof, may be original timber that should not be reused.
Lead work — valleys, chimney flashings, soakers Lead at valley junctions and around chimney stacks is a separate line item. A quote that doesn’t specify lead type and gauge (Code 4, Code 5) or that simply says “lead work included” without breakdown is vague for a reason. Code 5 is the correct specification for valley gutters. Code 4 is acceptable for chimney step flashings. Anything cheaper is a compromise.
Ridge finish — dry ridge or mortar Traditional mortar-bedded ridge tiles need repointing every 15–20 years. Modern dry ridge systems — mechanically fixed without mortar — carry 20+ year guarantees and are significantly more durable in Bristol’s freeze-thaw climate. Dry ridge costs slightly more but is the better long-term choice. A complete quote should specify which system is being installed.
Scaffold erect, hire, and strike The full scaffold cost — erection, hire for the duration of the job, and striking on completion — should be a single line item in every quote. Quotes that show scaffold erection but not hire or strike are incomplete.
Most online roofing cost guides are written for a generic UK audience. Bristol has specific factors that affect pricing in ways the national averages don’t capture.
Conservation Areas and material requirements Approximately 30% of Bristol’s residential housing stock falls within a Conservation Area designation. In these areas, Bristol City Council can and does require specific materials — particularly reclaimed or natural slate — on re-roofing projects. Getting this wrong means a planning enforcement notice and a requirement to re-roof again in the correct material at your cost. We always check Conservation Area status before specifying materials on a quote.
Steep hillside access — Totterdown, parts of Clifton and Cotham Bristol’s hillside neighbourhoods present genuine access challenges that flat-city roofers underestimate. Scaffold on a sloping street, materials delivery to a property accessible only via steps, and the physics of working on a steep-pitched roof above a busy pavement all add time and therefore cost. If a quote for a Totterdown terrace looks suspiciously similar to a quote for a Horfield semi, the access complexity hasn’t been factored in.
Victorian nail sickness — additional strip-out complexity On many Bristol Victorian properties, the original slates are fixed with wrought iron cut nails that have corroded into the battens. Stripping these slates is slower and more labour-intensive than stripping a modern concrete tile roof. This adds to strip-out labour costs and should be factored into any quote on pre-1920 properties — it usually isn’t on lower quotes.
Period property chimney stacks Most Victorian and Edwardian Bristol properties have one or more chimney stacks. Correctly flashing a period chimney stack in Code 5 lead — with step flashings, soakers, and a correctly formed cover flashing — is a skilled, time-consuming job. Quotes that give a single figure “including chimney flashing” without specification are often planning to use a modern proprietary flashing system rather than traditional lead, which looks wrong and performs poorly on period properties.
Knowing when to repair and when to replace is the most important decision a Bristol homeowner faces on a roofing job. Repairing a roof that should be replaced is an expensive way to delay the inevitable. Replacing a roof that could be repaired is an unnecessary spend.
Replace, don’t repair, when:
Repair is appropriate when:
We will always tell you honestly which situation you’re in after the drone survey — even when that means recommending a repair rather than the more expensive replacement.
Bristol, like any city, has its share of traders who will take advantage of a homeowner who doesn’t know what to look for. Here’s what we’ve seen repeatedly — and what to watch for.
Storm chasers knocking doors after bad weather After any significant storm affecting Bristol — particularly the south-westerly Severn Estuary gales that hit the city in autumn and winter — there will be traders knocking on doors across Clifton, Redland, and Totterdown claiming they’ve “noticed damage” to roofs while working in the area. This is a high-pressure sales tactic. Legitimate roofers don’t solicit work this way. If someone knocks your door after a storm, ask for a written quote and get at least two others before committing.
Verbal quotes with no written breakdown A legitimate quote for a new roof in Bristol should be in writing, should itemise every element of the job, and should specify the materials being used. Any roofer who won’t provide a written, itemised quote is either not confident in their pricing or is planning to add extras later.
Requests for large upfront payments A deposit of 20–30% is normal and reasonable on a roof replacement. Requests for 50% or more upfront — particularly from someone you haven’t worked with before — are a significant red flag. Pay deposits by card where possible so you have chargeback protection.
Guarantees that seem too long A 10-year workmanship guarantee is credible and standard among reputable contractors. Claims of 25-year or 30-year workmanship guarantees — particularly from a company with no track record you can verify — should be treated with scepticism. The guarantee is only as good as the company behind it.
Prices that are significantly below every other quote If three roofers quote you £12,000 and one quotes £7,000, the outlier hasn’t found an efficiency the others haven’t. Something has been left out or compromised on — whether that’s the underlay specification, the lead grade, the batten quality, or the scaffold design.
As a general guide for a typical Bristol property:
| Property Type | Typical Duration |
|---|---|
| Victorian terrace (slate) | 5–8 working days |
| Semi-detached (tile or slate) | 6–10 working days |
| Large detached (natural slate) | 10–18 working days |
| Post-war semi (concrete tile) | 4–7 working days |
These timescales assume reasonable weather. Bristol’s autumn and winter weather — particularly persistent rain tracking up the Severn Estuary — can cause delays that are outside anyone’s control. A reputable roofer will communicate clearly about weather delays and won’t leave a half-stripped roof exposed overnight without adequate temporary protection.
For a like-for-like replacement on a non-listed property outside a Conservation Area, planning permission is generally not required under permitted development. However, if you’re in a Conservation Area — which covers large parts of Clifton, Redland, Cotham, and other inner Bristol neighbourhoods — changing the material (for example, replacing Welsh slate with concrete tile) may require Conservation Area Consent. For listed buildings, Listed Building Consent is required for any material change to the roof. We advise on planning requirements as part of every quote on period Bristol properties.
The only reliable way to assess this is a proper roof inspection — ideally with a drone survey that maps the full condition of the covering, the ridge, the flashings, and the gutters before any work begins. We carry out free 4K drone surveys on every quote, which means you see exactly what’s wrong before committing to anything. As a general rule, if more than 25–30% of the covering is failing or the underlay has gone, replacement is more cost-effective than repair.
Standard rate VAT (20%) applies to new roof installations on most residential properties. Some exceptions apply — notably for properties that have been empty for more than two years, where a reduced rate may apply. This is worth raising with any roofer if your property has been unoccupied for an extended period.
Material lifespan varies significantly: concrete interlocking tile 40–60 years, clay tile 80–100 years, natural slate 100+ years, reclaimed Welsh slate 100+ years where the material itself is sound. These lifespans assume correct installation to BS 5534, proper underlay, correct fixings, and routine maintenance. A roof installed with the wrong underlay on a low pitch, or with inadequate lead at valley junctions, will not achieve anything close to the material’s theoretical lifespan.
There is no blanket grant available for roof replacement in Bristol. Some assistance may be available through Bristol City Council’s private sector housing grants for homeowners on means-tested benefits or in vulnerable circumstances — worth enquiring directly with the council if this may apply. For landlords, roof replacement costs are a capital expense deductible against capital gains tax on eventual disposal of the property.
Yes, in most cases. A roof replacement is noisy and dusty but does not normally make the property uninhabitable. The main inconvenience is noise during working hours. We protect internal areas from dust where roof space is accessible, keep worksite debris cleared daily, and ensure the property is weathertight at the end of every working day.
We cover all BS postcodes across Bristol. Every new roof quote starts with a free 4K drone survey — you’ll see exactly what’s needed before committing to a penny of work.
No verbal estimates. No vague “ballpark figures”. A written, itemised quote that specifies every material, every lead grade, every scaffold element, and every workmanship guarantee — so you can compare it properly against anyone else you speak to.
Call Thomas directly: 0117 370 9986 Mon–Sat, 8am–6pm
Or contact us online and we’ll get back to you the same day.
TD Roofing Contractors Ltd | 128 Stoke Lane, Bristol BS9 3RJ
TD Roofing Contractors are your local roofing contractors in Bristol, providing 20+ years of expert service. From emergency roof repairs to new slate installations, we cover all BS postcodes with quality and integrity.
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