5:30 AM
Beat the heat — early start
Roofing is brutal under afternoon sun. Crew arrives at 5:30, sets up safety harnesses and the ladder hoist, and tears off the old shingles by 7.
How to become a roofer: training, safety certifications, salary expectations, and career paths in the US, Poland, and the Netherlands.
Roofing is hard work — and that's exactly why it pays well and has plenty of openings. Most people don't want to spend their days on a roof in the sun or cold, which means those who do are always in demand. The median salary in the US is about $47,110, but experienced roofers and foremen regularly earn $60,000–$80,000+[1]. Storm damage, aging roofs, and new construction keep the work pipeline full year after year, and OSHA fall-protection standards drive employer demand for trained, certified workers[4].
Roofers install and repair roofs on residential, commercial, and industrial buildings. The work includes tearing off old roofing materials, inspecting the decking underneath, installing underlayment and waterproofing membranes, and laying the final roofing material — whether that's asphalt shingles, metal panels, clay tiles, EPDM rubber, TPO, or built-up roofing. Roofers also install flashing around chimneys, vents, and skylights to prevent leaks. The job demands physical endurance, comfort with heights, and attention to weather conditions.
What the trade actually looks like hour by hour — not just the skill list.
5:30 AM
Roofing is brutal under afternoon sun. Crew arrives at 5:30, sets up safety harnesses and the ladder hoist, and tears off the old shingles by 7.
9:00 AM
Roll out synthetic underlayment, install ice-and-water shield at the eaves and valleys, set new step-flashing around chimneys and wall intersections.
12:00 PM
Snap chalk lines for course alignment, nail shingles with a coil gun (4 nails each, in the nailing strip exactly — too high or too low voids the warranty).
3:30 PM
Tarps come down, debris into the dumpster, then a rolling magnet sweeps the lawn for stray nails. Homeowners notice the cleanup as much as the roof itself.
Complete high school or GED
Join a roofing crew or apprenticeship program
Complete OSHA 10 or OSHA 30 safety training
Learn materials and techniques (1–3 years on the job)
Obtain roofing contractor license where required
Pursue manufacturer certifications for specialty roofing
Pick your country for the exact licensing path
Roofing rewards experience and ambition. Career paths include:
Estimated startup cost: $800–$3,000 for hand tools, nailer, and safety gear
“I was hauling materials and doing whatever the foreman needed for years. Once I started focusing on roofing, everything changed. I learned shingle patterns, flashing techniques, and ice-dam prevention. Within three years I was running my own crew and setting my own rates.”— Carlos V., Former Laborer, now Roofing ContractorRead full story
Moving from IT / Tech to Roofer is a realistic switch. Below are the skills that transfer and the typical hurdles.
Transfers
Watch out
Moving from Office / Knowledge work to Roofer is a realistic switch. Below are the skills that transfer and the typical hurdles.
Transfers
Watch out
Moving from Retail / Customer service to Roofer is a realistic switch. Below are the skills that transfer and the typical hurdles.
Transfers
Watch out
Real programs with paid training and licensing pathways — official government portals and the unions / vocational schools that actually place people.
U.S. Department of Labor's Registered Apprenticeship finder — filter by trade, state, and ZIP for paid, registered programs nationwide.
Open
Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers — ductwork, HVAC installation, and metal-roof systems through 4–5-year apprenticeships.
Open
Associated Builders & Contractors runs the largest non-union apprenticeship network — over 800 chapters and training centres nationwide.
Open
Listings are curated by the HireLocal editorial team — opening a program takes you to the program's own site. We don't take a cut on placements.
Estimate what you'd earn with your specific trade, region, experience level, and any regulated specialty certs.
Estimated pay
$52,500–$85,000/ year
Country base × region 1.25 × experience 1.00 × specialty 1.00 = total 1.25× the country journeyman range.
Estimate only. Real pay depends on employer, hours, and local market. Multipliers calibrated from BLS / GUS / CBS / INE 2024 — see methodology on the salary comparison page.
See how roofer pay stacks up against other trades, by country.
View salary comparisonSalary figures, employment projections, and licensing requirements are sourced from the following official references.