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Roof Inspection

Buying New Construction in Savannah? Why You Still Need a Roof Inspection

📅 5 Nisan 2026 · 8 min read

Brand new suburban house under construction with partially finished roof

Brand new suburban house under construction with partially finished roof

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Samed Guvenc — Founder & Director, Talya Roofing
Samed Guvenc·Atlas Pro+ Certified Contractor
Brand new suburban house under construction with partially finished roof
Roof Inspection

Buying New Construction in Savannah?

Why You Still Need a Roof Inspection

A new home doesn't guarantee a perfect roof. Savannah's 2026 construction boom means rushed installations are common. Learn what a 3rd-party roof inspection catches that builders naturally miss.

The Myth of the 'Perfect' New Build

It is a common misconception among homebuyers in master-planned communities across Chatham and Bryan counties: "The house is brand new, so the roof must be flawless." Unfortunately, the opposite is frequently true. When production home builders are trying to finish 40 houses in a single subdivision, quality control often suffers on the items you can't see from the driveway.

Savannah's Construction Boom Equals Rushed Work

Coastal Georgia is experiencing massive growth. To keep up with demand, general contractors rely heavily on sub-contracted labor crews paid by the piece (or "by the square"), not by the hour. When crews are rushing to finish a roof so they can move on to the house next door, critical installation steps are skipped.

Common Mistakes on Brand New Roofs

  • 1

    High or Overdriven Nails

    Pneumatic nail guns set to the wrong pressure will blow right through the shingle mat or leave the nail head sticking up. This voids the manufacturer's warranty and practically guarantees a leak during the first hurricane.

  • 2

    Missing Step Flashing

    Where the roof meets a vertical wall (like a dormer), metal step flashing must be woven into every shingle layer. Rushed crews often use one continuous piece of cheap L-flashing, which leaks easily.

  • 3

    Inadequate Attic Ventilation

    Soffit vents get painted over, or ridge vents are hastily cut too narrow. Without proper airflow, the attic overheats, cooking the new shingles from the inside out and promoting aggressive mold growth.

Inspector looking at misaligned step flashing and exposed nails on a new roof

Exposed nail heads and sloppy flashing are common on new construction and will quickly lead to water intrusion.

Why the County Inspector Isn't Enough

Wait, doesn't the city or county inspect the house? Yes, but a municipal building inspector is checking for minimum code compliance—not quality of workmanship. Furthermore, they are inspecting 15 to 20 houses a day. They almost never get up on the roof to check flashing details or nail placement. They do a quick visual check from the ground and sign off.

The 1-Year Builder Warranty Deadline

Most new builds in Georgia come with a standard "1-year bumper-to-bumper" builder's warranty. This is your golden window. If your roof has an installation defect, it might not leak visibly during the first six months. By year two or three, when water finally damages your drywall, the builder will claim it's no longer their problem.

What a Third-Party Roof Inspection Entails

Before closing (or right before your 1-year warranty expires), hire an independent, licensed roofing contractor to perform a thorough inspection. We look for:

  • Proper nail placement and depth
  • Correct overlap in valleys
  • Secure pipe boots and vent seals
  • Adequate ventilation mapping
  • Flashing integration at all transitions
  • Shingle overhang at the drip edge

With our detailed photographic report, you can force the builder to fix the defective roof on their dime, not yours.

Protecting Your Largest Investment

Buying a new home is a massive financial commitment. Do not rely entirely on the builder's word that the roof is sound. An independent inspection is a minor investment that provides major peace of mind.

Schedule Your Pre-Closing or End-of-Warranty Inspection

Don't let the builder's warranty expire on a defective roof. Talya Roofing provides honest, unbiased inspections for new home buyers in Savannah.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I get my new construction roof inspected in Savannah?

Absolutely. New construction roofing defects are found in roughly 30% of third-party inspections. Common issues include improper nailing patterns, misaligned flashing, and inadequate ventilation. An independent inspection before your builder warranty expires protects your investment.

How soon after closing should I inspect a new roof?

Schedule a third-party roof inspection within the first 6 months of closing, but definitely before the 1-year builder warranty deadline. This gives you time to document any defects and have the builder correct them at no cost to you.

What do new construction roof inspectors look for?

A thorough inspection checks nail placement and pattern compliance, step flashing alignment at walls and chimneys, boot seal integrity around pipe penetrations, attic ventilation balance (intake vs. exhaust), and proper underlayment installation. These are details the county inspector doesn't evaluate.

Does the county building inspection cover roof quality?

No. County inspectors verify minimum code compliance — they check that materials meet standards and basic installation requirements are met. They do not evaluate workmanship quality, which is where most new construction defects occur.

Samed Guvenc — Founder & Director of Talya Roofing, Savannah GA

Samed Guvenc

Founder & Director, Talya Roofing LLC

Atlas Pro+ Certified Contractor

Published: 2026-04-05Updated: 2026-04-11
GA LicensedAtlas Pro+Owner-Operated
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