Asphalt vs. tile vs. metal roofing in San Diego — honest cost-per-year math
Every new roof decision in SD County comes down to three real contenders: asphalt architectural shingle, concrete or clay tile, and standing-seam metal. Each has a climate profile + cost-per-year math that's specific to our county. Here's the honest comparison.
The short version
Asphalt architectural wins on upfront cost and is the right answer for 60-70% of SD homes. Tile wins on lifespan and is the Mediterranean/Spanish home default. Metal wins on long-term cost-per-year and is trending in SD luxury + modern builds. Cost-per-year (purchase price / years of life) is the real comparison metric — and asphalt's advantage shrinks when you include full cost over 40+ years.
Side-by-side
| Dimension | Asphalt architectural | Tile or metal |
|---|---|---|
| Installed cost (2,000 sq ft roof) | $11,000–$17,000 | Tile: $18,000–$28,000 · Metal: $28,000–$40,000 |
| Typical lifespan (SD coastal) | 18–22 years | Tile: 40–50+ years · Metal: 40–50+ years |
| Typical lifespan (SD inland) | 22–28 years | Tile: 50–80+ years · Metal: 50+ years |
| Cost per year (coastal) | $500–$850/year | Tile: $360–$700/year · Metal: $560–$1,000/year |
| Fire rating | Class A (most shingles) | Tile: Class A · Metal: Class A |
| WUI zone compliance (CBC Chapter 7A) | Yes (Class A) | Yes (both) |
| Weight (sq ft) | 2–3 lbs | Tile: 8–12 lbs · Metal: 1–1.5 lbs |
| Needs structural review on existing home? | No | Tile: Sometimes (pre-1980 homes) · Metal: No |
| HOA restrictions in SD | Usually allowed | Often the mandatory standard in Spanish-style HOAs |
| Solar panel reinstall cost after re-roof | $1,500–$3,000 | Tile: $2,500–$4,500 · Metal: $1,000–$2,000 |
Asphalt architectural — pros
- Lowest upfront cost
- Widest contractor availability — easy to get competitive quotes
- Lightweight — no structural concerns on any SD home
- Modern architectural shingles look substantial, much better than old 3-tab
- Class A fire rating meets Chapter 7A WUI requirements
Asphalt architectural — cons
- Shortest lifespan (18-22 years coastal)
- Granule loss visible on aging roofs
- Salt-air degradation accelerates service life drop
- Multiple replacements over a home's 50-80 year usable life
Tile or metal — pros
- 2-3× lifespan of asphalt
- Cost per year typically lower than asphalt over 40+ years
- Tile matches Spanish/Mediterranean SD architecture
- Metal reduces attic temps 15-30% vs asphalt (cooling load reduction)
- Often HOA-mandated in established SD neighborhoods
- Much better resale value signal on a mid-century or custom home
Tile or metal — cons
- High upfront cost (2-3× asphalt)
- Tile weight may require structural review on pre-1980 homes
- Fewer contractors work tile well — vet thoroughly
- Metal can be noisy in rain without proper underlayment (rare issue)
- Higher solar-panel reinstall cost after re-roof (tile)
When Asphalt architectural is the right call
- Tract home in NCI, South County, or East County
- Budget-constrained install
- Homeowner planning to sell within 5-7 years
- Standard post-1990s construction in non-luxury markets
When Tile or metal is the right call
- Spanish / Mediterranean / mission-style home (tile)
- Luxury coastal home where upfront cost isn't the constraint (metal or tile)
- Homeowner planning to stay 15+ years (cost-per-year math flips)
- HOA requires tile specifically
- Modern or contemporary architecture (metal)
FAQ
Does metal roofing really make the house hotter in summer?
Opposite — a properly installed metal roof with reflective coating and radiant barrier underlayment runs 50-100°F cooler than asphalt during peak summer sun. Translates to noticeably lower attic temps and AC load reduction. The 'metal is hot' myth comes from unventilated metal roofs on barns and sheds; residential metal roofs with proper attic ventilation are measurably cooler.
How hard is it to add solar panels to a tile roof?
Harder than asphalt but not prohibitively so. Two common approaches: tile-integrated mounting (lift tiles, attach flashing + mount, replace tiles — more expensive) or tile-hook mounting (specialized hooks fit under tile without removal — cheaper). Solar installers who work SD often offer both; ask specifically how they handle tile. Metal standing-seam is the easiest for solar — standing-seam clamps don't puncture the roof at all.
What's the cost-per-year for each material?
On a 2,000 sq ft coastal SD roof: asphalt ~$14k / 20 years = $700/year. Concrete tile ~$22k / 45 years = $490/year. Metal standing-seam ~$34k / 45 years = $755/year. Tile wins on pure cost-per-year — but the upfront capital requirement is 50% higher. Metal's per-year cost is close to asphalt but buys 2x the life, which is why luxury installs often pick it anyway.
Does tile require a reinforced roof structure?
Pre-1980 SD homes sometimes need structural review before tile install — original framing may be sized for lighter asphalt. Post-1980 homes built with tile consideration can usually handle 8-12 lb/sq ft loads without issue. We check framing during the estimate and flag if structural engineer review is needed (usually a $400-800 add).
What about TPO / modified bitumen for flat roofs?
Those are separate. TPO (thermoplastic polyolefin) and modified bitumen are flat-roof materials — not comparable to pitched-roof asphalt/tile/metal. Most SD homes have pitched roofs, but mid-century moderns and ADUs often have flat sections that use TPO. Title 24 cool-roof-rated TPO is standard spec now.
Running the cost-per-year math on a replacement?
We do a free material-selection walkthrough. Drone roof photos + structural review + 3 material options quoted.
Call (858) 808-6055