Roofing Leads from Contractors Who Trust You

That Actually Close.

Stop fighting for storm-chaser scraps. Get referred by insurance adjusters, realtors, and home inspectors who already vetted the homeowner.

Free to join. Cancel anytime. No credit card required.

Roofer lead gen is broken.

Here's what you're dealing with.

Shared Leads Mean Bidding Against 5 Other Roofers

You pay $200 for a "lead" on Angi or HomeAdvisor. So did four other companies. The homeowner gets 5 calls in 10 minutes. Close rate? Maybe 15%.

Storm Season Is a Free-for-All

After every hail storm, every roofing company gets the same list. You're not getting a referral — you're getting a name that 30 other contractors are already calling.

Insurance Leads Mean Fighting Adjusters

You spend an hour writing an estimate, then the adjuster lowballs it by $3,000. Half these "leads" turn into supplement battles, not paychecks.

How LeadChuck works for roofers

1

Set Your Price

You set one lead fee — that's what you pay for every referral that comes your way. Be competitive, but set a price you're comfortable with.

2

Get Referrals from Other Trades

Insurance adjusters, realtors, home inspectors, gutter companies — they run into roofing jobs constantly. When they refer to you, you get a notification with details.

3

Close Jobs, Keep the Profit

The homeowner already trusts you because a professional they hired sent them your way. Close rates are 3-4x higher than cold leads.

The referral flywheel in action

A homeowner calls you about water stains on the ceiling. You climb up, inspect the roof — shingles are fine. The problem? The HVAC condensate line is backing up in the attic. You refer the homeowner to your HVAC guy through LeadChuck. He gets the $400 repair and you earn a referral fee. The HVAC tech finishes and sees water-damaged drywall. He refers a painter through LeadChuck. That painter earns a $1,800 interior job — and the HVAC tech earns a referral fee too.

You couldn't take the job, but you earned money from the referral. One call turned into work for three contractors. That's the flywheel.

Who sends roofers leads?

These trades encounter your work constantly — and get paid to send it your way.

Insurance Adjusters

They write roof claims daily. They need reliable contractors who won't lowball supplements.

Home Inspectors

Every inspection flags roof issues. Buyers need a roofer before closing.

Realtors

Pre-listing roof inspections. Buyer repair requests. They need a roofer on speed dial.

Gutter Companies

They're up there cleaning — they see missing shingles, flashing issues, soft spots.

Solar Installers

Can't put panels on a bad roof. Every solar quote is a potential roofing lead.

Who do roofers refer out?

Every job creates referral opportunities. Turn them into income.

Painters

$50–$85

Interior water damage stains on ceilings/walls after leak repairs.

Drywall Contractors

$60–$100

Extensive water damage that needs more than paint.

Gutter Companies

$40–$75

Homeowner asks "while you're up there, can you look at the gutters?"

Insulation Contractors

$50–$90

Wet or damaged attic insulation discovered during inspection.

HVAC Techs

$60–$100

Attic ventilation issues, condensate problems, roof penetration concerns.

Siding Contractors

$75–$125

Storm damage hit the siding too — common after hail.

Simple, transparent pricing

Free to join

No monthly fees

Pay per lead

You set the price

10% platform fee

Only on lead fees

Earn referrals

Offset your costs

I was paying $250 per lead on HomeAdvisor and closing maybe 1 in 6. Last month I got 9 referrals through LeadChuck — 7 from insurance adjusters, 2 from realtors. Closed 6 of them. That's $47,000 in jobs. I also referred out 4 gutter jobs and 2 painters, made $340 back. My cost per closed deal went from $1,500 to under $200.
M

Marcus T.

Residential roofing contractor, Oklahoma City, OK · 11 years in business

Frequently asked questions

Mostly residential re-roofs, storm damage repairs, and leak inspections. Because they come from insurance adjusters, realtors, and home inspectors, they're typically ready-to-buy — not price-shopping tire-kickers.

Those leads go to 10–30 companies. LeadChuck referrals go to YOU. The referring contractor picked you specifically. There's no competition because it's a personal referral, not a broadcast.

Yes. Adjusters need reliable contractors who submit clean supplements and don't ghost claims. Getting paid $75–150 per referral doesn't hurt.

Commercial leads come through too, typically from property managers, general contractors, and facility managers. You set one flat lead price that covers all referrals — residential and commercial alike.

Instantly. Push notification, email, and SMS. You see the job details, the referring contractor's name, and the homeowner's contact info.

Ready to get roofing leads that actually close?

Join free. See leads in your area. Pay only when you accept.

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