Central Valley & Bay Area Homeowner Guide • 2026

Roof Warranties Explained for Central Valley & Bay Area Homeowners

Manufacturer vs. workmanship coverage — what each warranty covers, what voids them, and why manufacturer certifications unlock the strongest coverage you can get.

By Brian Espindola, Owner-Operator • CSLB #1142280 • Updated June 11, 2026

A roof warranty sounds simple until you read one. There are two main kinds, they cover different things, and the wrong installer can quietly void the whole thing. This guide explains how roof warranties actually work — in plain terms — so Central Valley and Bay Area homeowners know exactly what they're buying.

I'm Brian Espindola. I run NuShake Roofing out of Ripon and roof homes across the Central Valley, the Sacramento metro, and the East Bay under my own C-39 license, CSLB #1142280. I've also earned five manufacturer certifications, which is what lets me register the strongest warranties for my customers. Here's the part most homeowners never get told.

Quick answer

Every roof has two warranties. The manufacturer warranty covers the materials — shingles that fail too soon. The workmanship warranty covers the install — flashing, nailing, and labor mistakes. You need both, because a defect and an installation error are different problems with different fixers. The longest, fullest warranties are only available through manufacturer-certified contractors like NuShake.

The Two Warranties Every Roof Should Have

Think of your roof as two things sold together: the materials and the labor to install them. Each has its own warranty.

Manufacturer warranty Workmanship warranty
Covers Defects in the materials Mistakes in the installation
Who backs it The shingle manufacturer The roofing contractor
Example claim Shingles crack or lose granules early Flashing leaks because it was installed wrong
Typical length Decades, often prorated after a period A few years up to 25 years

Manufacturer Warranty: The Materials

This warranty comes from the company that made your shingles — GAF, CertainTeed, Owens Corning, and so on. It covers material defects. If your shingles fail before they should because of how they were made, this is the warranty that pays.

Be careful with the word "lifetime." Many standard shingle warranties are called lifetime but only offer full coverage for an initial period. After that, coverage is prorated, meaning the payout shrinks each year. The real value lives in the details.

Workmanship Warranty: The Install

Even perfect shingles leak if they're installed badly. The workmanship warranty covers labor. That means flashing, underlayment, nailing patterns, and the dozens of small details that decide whether a roof keeps water out. This warranty comes from your contractor, so it's only as good as the contractor behind it.

A fly-by-night roofer might offer a one-year workmanship warranty and be gone by year two. That's why who installs your roof matters as much as what goes on it.

Why a Material Warranty Isn't Enough

Here's the trap. Many roof problems are installation problems, not material problems. Most leaks start at flashing, valleys, and penetrations — all install details. The manufacturer won't cover those. Only a workmanship warranty will.

So if a roofer waves a "lifetime" material warranty at you but offers a thin workmanship warranty, you're only half covered. The half most likely to fail is the half left exposed.

What Voids a Roof Warranty

Warranties have conditions. Break them and coverage can disappear. The most common ways homeowners lose protection:

The pattern to notice

Almost every warranty-voiding event traces back to the installer. A certified, careful contractor protects your warranty by doing the work the way the manufacturer requires. A cheap, rushed crew can void it before the first rain.

How Certifications Unlock Better Warranties

This is the part most homeowners never hear. Manufacturers reserve their strongest warranties for contractors they've certified. A non-certified roofer literally cannot offer them, no matter how good the work is.

To become certified, a contractor has to prove their license, carry proper insurance, and maintain a track record the manufacturer accepts. So the certification protects you twice: you get a vetted installer, and you get access to coverage others can't provide.

GAF Master Elite

GAF Master Elite is GAF's top tier, held by only about two percent of roofers in the country. It lets the contractor register enhanced warranties like the Golden Pledge. That plan backs both materials and workmanship for far longer than a standard warranty. NuShake holds GAF Master Elite.

The Other Certifications

NuShake holds four more credentials, and each one does something specific for your warranty:

One honest note: Owens Corning's top-tier Platinum Protection warranty is reserved for Platinum Preferred contractors. NuShake does not hold that tier, so we will never claim that warranty. If any roofer offers you that warranty, ask for proof of their tier. You can see every credential we do hold on our certifications page.

What NuShake Offers

When NuShake installs your roof replacement, you get both halves of the protection. We register the manufacturer warranty your materials qualify for, and we stand behind our own workmanship. We hold GAF Master Elite and CertainTeed Select ShingleMaster status. That lets us register the GAF Golden Pledge and CertainTeed SureStart Plus — enhanced warranties that combine materials and labor under one stronger plan.

Just as important, we install to the manufacturer's spec. That means proper ventilation, full tear-off when required, and correct flashing. Doing it right keeps your warranty valid instead of getting quietly voided.

Questions to Ask About Any Warranty

  1. Is this a material warranty, a workmanship warranty, or both?
  2. How long is full, non-prorated coverage — and when does proration start?
  3. What specifically voids this warranty?
  4. Are you certified by the manufacturer? Can I see proof?
  5. Is the warranty transferable if I sell my home?
  6. What ventilation does this warranty require, and will my roof meet it?
  7. Will the warranty be registered with the manufacturer, and will I get the paperwork?

Get a roof backed by the strongest warranties available

NuShake holds GAF Master Elite and four more certifications — so we can register enhanced, manufacturer-backed warranties most roofers can't. Free inspection, written scope, real coverage.

Schedule your free inspection →

Or call Brian directly: (209) 253-0506

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a manufacturer warranty and a workmanship warranty?
A manufacturer warranty covers defects in the roofing materials themselves, such as shingles that fail prematurely. A workmanship warranty covers mistakes in how the roof was installed, such as improper flashing or nailing. You need both. A material defect and an installation error are two different problems with two different responsible parties.
What voids a roof warranty?
Common ways to void a warranty include improper installation, poor attic ventilation, mixing materials from different manufacturers, and unpermitted work. Installing a new roof over old layers when the warranty requires a tear-off, or making unauthorized repairs later, can also void coverage. Skipping required maintenance can limit it too.
What is a GAF Master Elite warranty?
GAF Master Elite is the top tier of GAF's contractor program, held by only about two percent of roofers in the country. It allows the contractor to register enhanced GAF warranties, including the Golden Pledge, which backs both materials and workmanship for longer terms than a standard warranty. NuShake holds GAF Master Elite certification.
How long do roof warranties last?
It depends on the type. Standard manufacturer material warranties on architectural shingles are often called lifetime. In practice, coverage is prorated after an initial period. Enhanced warranties registered by certified contractors can extend full, non-prorated coverage for decades. Workmanship warranties from contractors typically range from a few years to 25 years.
Does a roof warranty transfer when I sell my house?
Many manufacturer warranties are transferable, often once, within a set window after installation. A transferable warranty can add value when you sell. Always confirm the transfer rules and any fee in the warranty document, because terms vary by product and by warranty tier.
Why do I need a certified contractor to get the best warranty?
Manufacturers only let certified contractors register their strongest warranties. The manufacturer has verified that contractor's license, insurance, and track record. So the certification protects you twice, once through a vetted installer and again through access to coverage that a non-certified roofer simply cannot offer.
What does prorated mean in a roof warranty?
Prorated means the payout shrinks as the roof ages. Many lifetime shingle warranties pay the full replacement cost only for the first several years. After that, the manufacturer covers a smaller percentage each year, and you pay the rest. Enhanced warranties registered by certified contractors stretch the full, non-prorated period much longer — sometimes for decades.
Do I need to register my roof warranty?
Often, yes. Standard material warranties may apply automatically. Enhanced warranties like the GAF Golden Pledge or CertainTeed SureStart Plus do not — the certified contractor must register them after installation. Ask your roofer to confirm the registration and hand you the paperwork. A warranty that was never registered may not be there when you need it.
Do roof repairs come with a warranty?
Usually, yes — but it is a workmanship warranty from the contractor, and it only covers the repaired area. A repair does not add new manufacturer coverage, and the terms are shorter than a full replacement warranty. Get any repair warranty in writing before the work starts, and confirm exactly what it covers.
Does a roof warranty cover storm damage?
No. Warranties cover material defects and installation mistakes — not damage from wind, hail, or falling branches. Storm damage is a job for your homeowners insurance. If a storm hits your roof, document the damage and start an insurance claim instead of a warranty claim. Our California roof insurance claim guide walks through that process.

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