Serving the Nature Coast & Tampa Bay Since 2010
(352) 810-4026
Tri Peak Roofing — Built Tough. Built Right.

Where We Work

Pasco County Roofing

From Holiday to Wesley Chapel, Tri Peak has covered Pasco County since 2010 — honest pricing, quality workmanship, and a warranty on every roof. Roof replacement, repair, inspections, and storm-damage work for local homeowners.

Cities We Serve in Pasco County

Holiday

Holiday sits directly on the Gulf of Mexico along the Anclote/Baillies Bluff Road corridor (Key Vista Nature Park and Anclote Gulf Park both front the Gulf here), so waterfront and near-waterfront homes face sustained salt-air corrosion on fasteners, flashing, and metal roof components even outside direct storm impact — galvanic corrosion on exposed nail heads and vent stacks is a recurring local failure mode, more pronounced than in inland Pasco. The area's older housing stock (median build year ~1976) means a large share of roofs are on second or later reroof cycles, and Holiday's sizeable mobile/manufactured home population adds roofing profiles (metal, low-slope, shingle-over-metal) that need different inspection and insurance handling than standard shingle roofs. Year-round UV exposure and the Tampa Bay region's near-daily summer convective storm pattern (June-September) plus direct hurricane/tropical storm exposure August-October accelerate shingle granule loss and stress roof-to-wall connections. Holiday's coastal position likely places much of the city within the Wind-Borne Debris Region, which drives both code-minimum fastening/opening-protection requirements and the economics of the wind mitigation inspection homeowners rely on for insurance savings — verify WBDR status per parcel given how close many Holiday neighborhoods sit to the Gulf shoreline.

Roofing in Holiday

Hudson

Hudson sits directly on the Gulf of Mexico at the northern edge of Pasco County, with extensive canal and waterfront frontage, so roofs face sustained salt-air corrosion on fasteners, flashing, vent stacks, and metal roofing components even in years without a direct hurricane strike — galvanic corrosion and accelerated fastener failure are common local issues, especially on the older shingle and metal roofs near the canal networks. The area's older housing stock and heavy manufactured/mobile-home presence mean many roofs are on repeat reroof cycles and require the metal/tie-down-specific permitting Pasco County applies to those structures, distinct from stick-built product approval paperwork. Year-round UV exposure plus Tampa Bay's near-daily summer convective storm pattern (June-September) and direct hurricane/tropical storm exposure (August-October) accelerate granule loss and stress roof-to-wall connections; Hudson's coastal Wind-Borne Debris Region status and higher-end Vult (roughly 150 mph coastal, tapering inland) make secondary water barrier installation and correctly documented nailing/fastening schedules — not just code minimums — the deciding factor in both storm performance and insurance wind-mitigation credit eligibility.

Roofing in Hudson

Land O' Lakes

Land O' Lakes is inland — roughly 15-20 miles from the Gulf coast with no tidal/coastal frontage — so it sees materially less direct salt-air corrosion on fasteners, flashing, and metal roof components than Pinellas or coastal Pasco/Hillsborough properties, even though it still sits inside the statewide Wind-Borne Debris Region trigger at Pasco's 140+ mph design wind speed. The area's dense tree canopy (especially around older lake-adjacent lots like Lake Padgett Estates) creates ongoing debris and gutter-fouling issues, and central Florida's intense summer convective thunderstorm season (near-daily June-September storms, frequent lightning and hail) plus full Atlantic hurricane season exposure (August-October) both stress roofs independent of coastal storm surge risk. Year-round UV load is still severe this far south in Florida and drives standard shingle granule loss and tile/underlayment aging regardless of inland location, and the area's many freshwater lakes create localized humidity and algae/moss growth conditions on north-facing shingle roofs near the water.

Roofing in Land O' Lakes

New Port Richey

New Port Richey sits directly on the Pithlachascotee ('Cotee') River just a few miles inland from the Gulf of Mexico, with the Gulf Harbors area providing direct canal/Gulf access — properties here face real salt-air corrosion exposure on fasteners, flashing, vents, and metal roofing components, comparable to other close-to-coast Tampa Bay cities. The city's mature tree canopy in older residential neighborhoods (especially around Sims Park and the historic core) adds debris-impact and gutter/valley-clogging considerations on top of standard wind exposure. Year-round UV load and Tampa Bay's intense summer convective storm season (near-daily thunderstorms June-September) plus direct hurricane/tropical storm exposure August-October accelerate shingle granule loss and stress roof-deck attachment; the city's Wind-Borne Debris Region status (given its close-coast Vult) drives both the mandatory nailing/secondary-water-barrier affidavit at final inspection and the wind-mitigation inspection economics homeowners use to offset rising premiums.

Roofing in New Port Richey

Port Richey

Port Richey sits directly on the Gulf of Mexico coast at the mouth of the Pithlachascotee River, so roofs face constant salt-air corrosion on fasteners, flashing, and metal drip edge/vent components, compounded by the shallow-water/marshy coastal exposure typical of this stretch of Pasco County. The city's older housing stock means many roofs are on second or later reroof cycles, and heavy manufactured/mobile home density adds distinct metal roof-over and shingle-over-metal considerations not present in newer inland Pasco subdivisions. Year-round UV exposure and Tampa Bay's active convective storm season (near-daily summer thunderstorms plus direct hurricane/tropical storm threat August-October) accelerate granule loss and stress roof-deck attachment; being squarely in the Wind-Borne Debris Region at coastal Vult levels (~150 mph Risk Category II) makes secondary water barrier compliance and verified nailing schedules especially consequential here, both for code compliance and for the wind-mitigation inspection savings homeowners rely on given the area's insurance pressure.

Roofing in Port Richey

Trinity

Trinity sits roughly 5-8 miles inland from the Gulf of Mexico, so it avoids the most severe direct salt-spray corrosion seen in beachfront Pinellas cities, but Tampa Bay's humid, near-daily summer convective thunderstorm pattern (June-September) plus the region's full hurricane-season exposure (August-October) still drive granule loss, UV degradation, and wind-uplift stress on shingle and tile roofs alike. Trinity's mature tree canopy — a defining feature of its 1990s-2010s golf-course-community landscaping (especially in Longleaf and Champions Club) — creates real debris-impact and gutter/valley-debris load during storms, and overhanging limbs are a recurring reason HOAs cite for both roof damage claims and required tree-trimming ahead of storm season. Because much of Trinity was built to older, less stringent code than current FBC 8th Edition requirements, reroofs here often represent a meaningful upgrade in wind-uplift rating and secondary water barrier protection versus the original 1990s/2000s construction, which is a useful, honest talking point for homeowners weighing reroof timing against insurance wind-mitigation credits.

Roofing in Trinity

Wesley Chapel

Wesley Chapel sits inland in northeast Pasco County, roughly 20+ miles from the Gulf, so it lacks the direct salt-air fastener corrosion that drives coastal Pinellas roofing failures — the local stressors are instead intense year-round UV, near-daily summer convective thunderstorms (June–September), and full exposure to hurricane and tropical-storm wind bands moving inland off the Gulf (August–October). The ~140 mph Risk Category II Ultimate Design Wind Speed places the area at or just inside the Wind-Borne Debris Region threshold, so wind uplift on roof edges and the roof-to-wall connection — not salt corrosion — is the governing design concern, and secondary water barrier / sealed-deck detailing matters both for code and for surviving the wind-driven rain these inland storms bring. Mature oak and pine canopy in the older, more established sections (parts of Meadow Pointe and the pre-boom pockets) adds tree-debris impact and shading/moss considerations on north-facing slopes, while the newer production communities have sparser canopy but tightly-packed rooflines. The near-uniform 1995–2020s build era means large clusters of homes hit reroof age together, and the dense HOA/ARC layer means color and profile compliance is a routine part of every job here.

Roofing in Wesley Chapel

Get Your Free Roof Inspection Today

Honest assessment, clear pricing, and no pressure. Talk to a real Tri Peak roofer — not a call center.

Call NowFree Inspection