Roofing Manufacturer Warranty Comparison in Maryland & Virginia
A roof warranty has three separate layers: manufacturer material defect, contractor workmanship, and (when offered) a system warranty that covers both. Most basic shingle warranties are prorated after year 10 and exclude wind, hail, and algae unless explicitly added. The phrase 'limited lifetime' almost never means full lifetime coverage.
A roofing warranty is not one document. It is three documents stacked: a manufacturer warranty covering the material itself, a contractor workmanship warranty covering how it was installed, and (on premium installs) a system warranty from the manufacturer covering both. The headline word "lifetime" is misleading: most lifetime warranties go prorated after year 10, dropping to roughly 20 percent of replacement value by year 30. Real homeowner protection comes from understanding which layers are present, which exclusions apply, and whether the workmanship coverage survives if your contractor goes out of business. This guide walks through every layer, anchored in the Owens Corning, ProVia, James Hardie, and VELUX warranties JDH installs in Maryland and Virginia every week.
Jim Dodson
Owner, JDH Remodeling · HAAG Master Certified Inspector #992109047
I have spent 39 years on Maryland and Virginia roofs, the last 21 under JDH's roof. JDH has been an Owens Corning Platinum Preferred Contractor for more than a decade, which gives our customers access to the manufacturer-backed extended workmanship plan that survives our company. I wrote this guide because more homeowners get hurt by warranty fine print than by bad shingles, and the patterns are predictable.
I am not paid by any manufacturer to recommend their product. Every brand example in this guide is from JDH's installed portfolio: Owens Corning roofing, ProVia entry and storm doors, James Hardie fiber-cement siding, VELUX skylights, and Leaf Relief gutter protection.
The HAAG Master credential is the same one held by the majority of insurance adjusters and warranty-claims field inspectors. That is what makes this guide actionable: every loophole and rider below is the language manufacturers and adjusters use when they evaluate a warranty claim on a Maryland or Virginia roof.
Seven things every Maryland and Virginia homeowner should understand before they sign
Read these in order. They are the same seven conversations a HAAG-certified inspector has with a homeowner at the kitchen table before any contract gets signed or any shingle gets ordered.
A roof warranty is three documents stacked, not one
Every roofing job that involves a manufactured product comes with up to three separate warranties. They are written by different parties, have different terms, and cover different failures. Confusing them is how homeowners end up uncovered on a leak in year three.
Layer 1 - Manufacturer warranty (material defect)
Issued by the company that made the product (Owens Corning, ProVia, James Hardie, etc.). Covers material that fails to perform as specified. A shingle that delaminates in year seven when the published lifespan is twenty-five is a manufacturer claim. An entry door whose paint blisters before the warranted period is a manufacturer claim. This layer does NOT cover installation errors and does NOT cover storm damage unless a storm rider is included.
Layer 2 - Contractor workmanship warranty
Issued by the contractor who installed the product. Covers leaks and failures caused by how the contractor did the work. A flashing miss, a poorly nailed shingle, a poorly sealed deck penetration: those are workmanship claims. JDH's standard workmanship warranty is 5 years; some contractors offer 1 year, some offer "lifetime" of unknown enforceability. The honest question is: is the contractor still in business 10 years from now? A workmanship warranty from a company that has closed is unenforceable. This is why Layer 3 matters.
Layer 3 - System warranty (combined coverage)
Issued by the manufacturer when (1) the contractor is certified at the top tier and (2) every component of the system comes from one manufacturer. The Owens Corning Platinum Protection Limited Warranty is the canonical example: OC stands behind both material and workmanship for the entire roof assembly because JDH (a Platinum Preferred Contractor) installed an all-OC system. If JDH closes in year 15, OC's coverage persists. That portability is the entire point of a system warranty.
"Limited lifetime" almost always means prorated after year 10
The word "lifetime" on a roofing warranty is not legally bound to mean what a homeowner thinks it means. The federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act requires manufacturers to disclose warranty terms clearly, but it does not stop them from using "limited lifetime" to mean "lifetime of the warranty period, prorated after year 10." Every shingle line you'll see in MD and VA uses some version of this pattern.
Limited-lifetime (the default for premium shingles)
Full replacement-value coverage for a non-prorated period (commonly 10 years), then a steadily declining percentage of value for the remainder of the warranty term. A homeowner filing a year-25 claim on a basic limited-lifetime warranty often discovers the prorated value barely covers tear-off labor, let alone new shingles. This is the most common shock at claim time.
Prorated (the default for basic shingles)
Declining-value coverage from year one. A 25-year prorated warranty on a basic three-tab shingle pays roughly 60 percent at year 10 and roughly 25 percent at year 20. Functionally, prorated warranties protect the manufacturer's downside more than the homeowner's.
Fixed-term, non-prorated (rare, expensive, real)
Full replacement value for the entire warranty term, no proration. These exist on premium products with system installations (Owens Corning's Platinum Protection has a 50-year non-prorated workmanship component; James Hardie's HZ5 limited warranty for fiber cement is 30-year non-prorated). The premium is usually worth it on a 30-year asset; the homeowner just has to know to ask.
Transferable warranties sell homes. Non-transferable ones reset to zero at closing.
Transferability matters most when you sell. A transferable roof warranty signals to a buyer's home inspector that the roof carries documented coverage; a non-transferable warranty resets to zero at closing.
Three patterns dominate in MD and VA:
- Single-transfer (the common default). Most manufacturer warranties allow one transfer, typically within the first 5 to 10 years of installation, sometimes for a small fee. After the single transfer is used or the window closes, the warranty becomes effectively non-transferable.
- Time-windowed automatic transfer. James Hardie's HZ5 limited warranty transfers automatically with the property for the first 15 years, no paperwork required. This is unusually generous and worth highlighting in a real estate listing.
- Non-transferable workmanship. Contractor workmanship warranties almost never transfer (unless manufacturer-backed via a system warranty). The new homeowner inherits only the manufacturer's piece, which is usually the smaller piece.
If you're planning to sell: always confirm in writing how many transfers are allowed, what the time window is, what the fee is, and what documentation the new owner needs. Maryland's Attorney General has flagged warranty transferability as one of the most-disputed terms in residential construction. Virginia's consumer protection office tracks similar complaints.
MD AG: home improvement consumer rightsThe five exclusions that void warranties most often in MD and VA
After 39 years and several thousand inspections in Southern Maryland and Northern Virginia, the same five exclusions void warranties over and over. These are not edge cases. These are the patterns.
Loophole 1 - Ventilation non-compliance
Almost every manufacturer warranty (including Owens Corning's) requires attic ventilation to meet the manufacturer's specification, typically 1 sq ft of net free vent area per 150 sq ft of attic floor space, with balanced intake and exhaust. If the ventilation falls below spec, the warranty is voided. Many homes in Calvert and St. Mary's counties have insufficient soffit intake; the roof gets installed, the homeowner has no idea, and the claim filed eight years later is denied because of ventilation. JDH's forensic inspection includes attic ventilation calculation before the install proposal even leaves our hands.
Loophole 2 - Roof-over installations
Installing new shingles directly over an existing layer (a "roof-over" or "overlay") voids most manufacturer warranties. It is faster and cheaper for a contractor, and it cripples the homeowner's coverage. ASTM D3462 standard installations require full tear-off and re-decking inspection. A bid that's noticeably cheaper than competitors often has a roof-over hiding in it.
Loophole 3 - Failure to register the warranty
Manufacturer warranties commonly require registration within 60 to 90 days of installation completion. Miss the window, lose the warranty (or drop to a much lower default coverage tier). The contractor is supposed to register; many don't, then blame the homeowner at claim time. Get registration confirmation in writing, with the registration number, at handover.
Loophole 4 - Mixed-brand installs
A system warranty requires all components from one manufacturer: shingles, underlayment, starter strip, hip-and-ridge, ventilation. Mix a different brand's underlayment to save $40 per square and the system warranty evaporates. The homeowner drops back to the basic manufacturer warranty on the shingles alone.
Loophole 5 - Contractor going out of business
If the contractor folds, the workmanship warranty closes with them. The only workmanship protection that survives is one that is manufacturer-backed (which only contractors at the top tier can offer). The Owens Corning Platinum Protection Limited Warranty includes a 50-year non-prorated workmanship component issued by OC directly, so the coverage outlives JDH (or any other Platinum Preferred Contractor) if we ever close. This is the most underrated reason to choose a manufacturer-backed extended plan.
Three riders to check before you sign
Base manufacturer warranties cover material defect, not weather damage. To get coverage for the things that actually hit a Maryland roof, three specific riders should be checked on the contract.
Wind rider
Asphalt shingles are tested under ASTM D7158 for wind resistance, classified D (60 mph), G (110 mph), or H (150 mph). The default install in much of MD and VA is Class D or G; an upgrade to Class H is usually a small upcharge. Coastal counties (Calvert, St. Mary's, Anne Arundel, parts of Charles, all of the VA Northern Neck) should default to Class H. The FEMA Wind Retrofit Guide recommends Class H or better for any coastal residential construction.
Hail rider
Standard manufacturer warranties exclude hail. Some premium product lines include a hail rider for storms up to a specified impact rating (typically UL 2218 Class 4). Without an explicit hail clause, hail damage is an insurance question, not a warranty question. That distinction matters because the answer changes who pays.
Algae rider (the "black streaks")
The dark vertical streaks on aged asphalt shingles are typically Gloeocapsa magma, a cyanobacteria that thrives in MD/VA humidity. Many premium shingles (including OC Duration with Streak Guard) come with a 10-year algae warranty as standard; basic lines often exclude it entirely. If the contract doesn't mention algae, assume zero coverage.
FEMA Wind Retrofit Guide (PDF)The Three Layers, Compared
A homeowner comparing two contractor proposals should know how to read the warranty stack on each. The table summarizes the three layers from Section 1, what each typically covers, and what to verify before signing.
| Layer | Issued by | Typical term | Covers | Verify before signing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Manufacturer (material defect) | Manufacturer (e.g., Owens Corning, James Hardie) | Limited-lifetime with 10-yr non-prorated + prorated tail | Product failing to perform as specified | Depreciation schedule, registration deadline, exclusions |
| Contractor workmanship | Installing contractor | 1, 5, or "lifetime" of contractor's choosing | Installation errors (flashing, nailing, deck prep) | Duration, scope, remediation process, contractor solvency |
| System (combined) | Manufacturer (top-tier certified contractor required) | 50-year non-prorated workmanship + lifetime material | BOTH material defect AND workmanship under one document | All components single-brand, registration confirmed, transfer terms |
Brand examples in this table are products JDH installs. JDH is an Owens Corning Platinum Preferred Contractor, ProVia Platinum Dealer, James Hardie Elite Preferred, and VELUX Skylight Specialist.
How to Review a Roofing Contract Before You Sign
An 8-step warranty review a Maryland or Virginia homeowner can run on any contract in 20 minutes.
Confirm three warranty documents are present
Ask for the manufacturer warranty PDF, the contractor workmanship warranty (in writing), and the certificate of insurance. If any of the three is missing, the contract is incomplete.
Read the depreciation schedule, not the headline year
A "lifetime" warranty is almost always prorated after year 10. Find the depreciation chart in the manufacturer PDF and note the percentage of value remaining at year 15, 20, and 25.
Confirm transferability terms in writing
Is the warranty transferable, how many times, within what window, and at what fee? Transferability sells homes; non-transferability subtracts from resale value.
Identify the wind, hail, and algae riders
Are they included as standard, available as an upgrade, or excluded entirely? An ASTM D7158 Class H (150 mph) wind rating is recommended in MD and coastal VA; the default install is often Class D or G (60 to 110 mph).
Verify the system warranty requirements
If a system warranty is being offered, all components (shingles, underlayment, starter, hip and ridge, ventilation) must be from the same manufacturer. Mixed-brand installs void system coverage.
Verify ventilation compliance
Most manufacturer warranties require attic ventilation to meet the manufacturer's specification (typically 1 sq ft of net free vent area per 150 sq ft of attic floor space, split balanced intake and exhaust). Have the contractor confirm in writing that the installation meets spec.
Confirm registration responsibility
Many manufacturer warranties require registration within 60 to 90 days of install. Who is responsible? Get it in writing that the contractor registers, with a copy of the confirmation provided to the homeowner.
Ask for the extended manufacturer-backed plan terms
If a manufacturer-backed extended workmanship plan is offered (a common option with Platinum Preferred contractors and similar tiers), get the cost, coverage period, and claims process in writing. This is often the most valuable single line item in the warranty package.
Why Warranty Claims Get Denied
A JDH HAAG Master Certified walkthrough of the PCC Method (Problem, Cause, Consequence) on a Southern Maryland roof. The same documentation a manufacturer needs to honor (or deny) a warranty claim.
From the JDH Remodeling channel · PCC Method on a real Southern Maryland roof.
Bring your warranty paperwork to a JDH inspection
We will mark the prorated cliffs, the exclusions, and the transferability terms before you sign anything. A HAAG Master Certified inspector walks the roof and reviews the document at the same visit.
Manufacturer Warranty FAQ
What is the difference between a manufacturer warranty and a workmanship warranty?+
A manufacturer warranty covers defects in the material itself (shingles delaminating, granules separating before the rated lifespan). A workmanship warranty covers errors in how the contractor installed the material (a flashing miss, a nail-line gap, a deck-preparation failure). They are separate documents from separate parties. A leak in year three that traces back to a flashing error is a workmanship claim, not a manufacturer claim, and a homeowner with only a manufacturer warranty is uncovered.
What is a system warranty?+
A system warranty is a combined coverage that the manufacturer offers when the entire roof assembly (shingles, underlayment, starter strips, hip and ridge, ventilation) is one brand AND installed by a certified contractor at the highest tier. Owens Corning's Platinum Protection Limited Warranty is a system warranty: it requires Owens Corning components throughout and a Platinum Preferred Contractor on the install. JDH Remodeling is a Platinum Preferred Contractor, which is why Owens Corning will extend coverage to workmanship through us in addition to the standard material warranty.
Does a "lifetime" roof warranty actually last a lifetime?+
Almost never, unless the document specifically says 'non-prorated.' The standard pattern is a 10-year non-prorated period followed by a prorated tail that drops to roughly 20 percent of replacement value by year 30. By the time most homeowners actually need to file a claim, the prorated value has eroded enough that the practical payout is small. The word 'lifetime' refers to the warranty period, not to full-value coverage for the period. Read the depreciation schedule before signing.
Are roof warranties transferable to a new homeowner?+
Transferability is a separate clause and varies by warranty. Owens Corning Platinum Protection allows one transfer within the first 10 years. ProVia entry door warranties are transferable for a fee with documentation. James Hardie HZ5 siding transfers with the home automatically for the first 15 years. Always confirm transferability in writing and document the transfer at sale; a verbal assurance is worth nothing at claim time.
Do roof warranties cover wind, hail, or algae damage?+
Only when explicitly added as a rider. The base manufacturer warranty covers material defect; storm-cause damage is an exclusion unless a wind rating and an algae rating are written into the contract. The default wind rating on a basic asphalt shingle install is around 60 mph; upgrading to ASTM D7158 Class H (150 mph) costs incrementally more and is rarely default. Algae streaking is usually covered for 10 years on premium lines (Owens Corning Streak Guard is one example) and zero years on basic lines.
What are the most common loopholes in a roof warranty?+
Five recurring landmines: (1) ventilation non-compliance voids most manufacturer warranties; if the attic ventilation does not meet the manufacturer's specification, the claim is denied. (2) Roof-over installations (new shingles over old) void most warranties. (3) Failure to register the warranty within the manufacturer's window (often 60 to 90 days) reduces or voids coverage. (4) Mixed-brand installs (one manufacturer's shingles with a different manufacturer's underlayment) void system warranties. (5) Contractor going out of business cancels the workmanship warranty entirely, since the obligation does not transfer; only a manufacturer-backed extended workmanship plan survives the contractor.
Are extended manufacturer-backed warranties worth the cost?+
On a JDH install, yes, because the extended manufacturer-backed plan converts the workmanship coverage from a 5-year contractor obligation into a manufacturer-issued document that survives whether or not the contractor stays in business. The cost premium is small relative to a 30-year roof asset, and the document is enforceable through the manufacturer's claims process directly. Without the extended plan, the workmanship warranty depends on the contractor still being in business 10 or 20 years out.
What documents should a homeowner have in hand before signing a roofing contract?+
Four documents minimum: (1) the manufacturer warranty PDF for the exact product line being installed, with depreciation schedule visible; (2) the contractor's written workmanship warranty with duration, scope, and remediation process; (3) the extended manufacturer-backed plan paperwork if one is being offered; (4) the certificate of insurance showing general liability AND workers compensation in force. JDH provides all four on every estimate, before the contract is signed. If a contractor cannot produce all four the same day, walk away.
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View credentials →Verify your warranty before signingBefore You Pay. Before You Pick a Contractor.
A HAAG Master Certified inspector will walk your roof, review the manufacturer and contractor warranty documents alongside the physical scope of work, and mark every loophole, prorated cliff, and missing rider before you sign anything. Free, 90 minutes on-site, no obligation. If a competitor's contract has a roof-over, a missing wind rider, or a non-transferable workmanship clause, we will tell you exactly what to ask them to add in writing.
- 90 minutes on-site · warranty PDF reviewed alongside the roof scope
- Depreciation schedule, transferability terms, and rider exclusions called out
- HAAG Master Certified inspector · same credential as warranty-claims field staff
- OC Platinum Preferred · access to manufacturer-backed extended workmanship that survives the contractor
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