
New Port Richey, FL
Shingle Roofing in New Port Richey, FL
Architectural asphalt shingle roofs — the Florida value choice. Honest pricing, quality workmanship, and free inspections for New Port Richey homeowners.
GAF Certified
6 Counties
Since 2010
Warranty-Backed
Architectural asphalt shingles remain the most popular roofing choice in our area for good reason: strong value, wind-rated performance, and a wide range of colors. We install GAF and other premium shingle systems to spec.
Local & Trusted
Every shingle roofing in New Port Richey is done right and backed by our workmanship warranty. We’ve worked Pasco County roofs since 2010.
Why New Port Richey Homeowners Choose Tri Peak for Shingle Roofing
- GAF & premium shingle systems
- Wind-rated installation
- Wide color selection
- Great value per year of protection
Permits & Inspections in New Port Richey
New Port Richey is an incorporated city with its own Building Division (part of the Development Department) that issues roofing permits for properties inside city limits — addresses outside the city limits (unincorporated Pasco, including nearby Port Richey-adjacent and Trinity-area parcels) permit instead through Pasco County Building Construction Services. City Building Division: City Hall, 5919 Main Street, New Port Richey, FL 34652, phone 727-853-1047; permits/plans can be submitted digitally to permitting@cityofnewportrichey.org or in person. Note: the separate, smaller City of Port Richey (its own incorporated municipality just north/east of New Port Richey, easily confused by name) has its own building department too — always confirm the parcel's actual jurisdiction before filing, since city limits here are irregular and pocketed within unincorporated Pasco.
Roofing (reroof) permits are submitted via the city's Building Permit Application along with a roofing-specific product approval form listing the Florida Product Approval numbers for each system component (underlayment, shingle/tile/metal system, fasteners). The city publishes and requires a notarized Roof Inspection Affidavit (a licensed roofing/general contractor or engineer must examine the deck nailing and/or secondary water barrier installation and attest it was done per the Hurricane Mitigation Retrofit Manual under FS 553.844) before the final roof inspection can be closed out. Typical inspection sequence on a reroof is: dry-in/felt inspection, nail-off (deck nailing) inspection, in-progress checks as applicable, then final — with the affidavit required at or before the final. Fees are calculated from job valuation per the city's adopted fee schedule; plan review and inspection scheduling turnaround varies with Building Division staffing and is best confirmed directly with the office at time of permitting rather than assumed.
Florida Building Code & Wind Requirements
Pasco County (including New Port Richey) falls under the Florida Building Code 8th Edition (2023)/ASCE 7-22 wind maps in the range generally cited for the Tampa Bay coastal corridor — approximately 150 mph Ultimate Design Wind Speed (Vult) for Risk Category II structures near the coast, tapering somewhat moving inland/east across the county, with Risk Category III/IV requiring higher values per the FBC wind speed line maps. New Port Richey, sitting directly on the Pithlachascotee River near the Gulf, is within the Wind-Borne Debris Region (triggered at Vult ≥140 mph generally, or ≥130 mph within one mile of the coast with Exposure D), meaning impact-rated or shutter-protected openings apply on new construction and qualifying reroof/opening work. This is NOT the Miami-Dade/Broward HVHZ — standard Florida Product Approval governs, not Miami-Dade NOA. Verify the exact Vult and Risk Category for the specific parcel using the official FBC wind speed maps or ASCE Hazard Tool before publishing or bidding, as values shift across the county and even within the city depending on distance to the coastline.
New Port Richey enforces the Florida Building Code 8th Edition (2023). Reroofs require nailing schedules matched to the specific Florida Product Approval of the installed system, and the city's mandatory notarized Roof Inspection Affidavit (documenting deck nailing and/or secondary water barrier per the Hurricane Mitigation Retrofit Manual, FS 553.844) must be completed by a licensed contractor/engineer and submitted before final inspection is granted — this affidavit requirement mirrors what's used city-wide across Pasco's coastal cities (Port Richey uses a nearly identical form). Being in the Wind-Borne Debris Region without being in the HVHZ means: standard FL Product Approval (not Miami-Dade NOA) for materials, but a sealed-deck/secondary water barrier is generally expected on reroofs given the coastal wind exposure, layered on top of code-minimum underlayment and fastening schedules tied to the applicable Vult for the parcel.
Insurance & Your New Port Richey Roof
Florida Statute 627.7011 prohibits insurers from denying or refusing to renew a policy solely because a roof is under 15 years old; roofs 15+ years old can preserve coverage with a certified inspection showing at least 5 years of remaining useful life (RUL), performable by a licensed contractor, home inspector, or engineer under HB 1611 (2024). Newer 2026 legislation (SB 808/HB 815, effective July 1, 2026) adds further limits on age-based non-renewals, with non-renewal notices requiring at least 120 days' written notice. New Port Richey's older core neighborhoods (much of the city was platted and built out mid-20th century) mean a meaningful share of housing stock is on second or later reroof cycles and squarely in this roof-age scrutiny zone with carriers, especially Citizens Property Insurance as private-market capacity has tightened. A wind mitigation inspection (form OIR-B1-1802) can reduce the wind portion of premiums 10-45%, and the state's My Safe Florida Home program (means-tested) can subsidize both the inspection and qualifying roof/opening-protection retrofits — directly relevant messaging given the city's coastal wind exposure and aging housing stock.
Local Roofing Conditions in 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.
HOA & Neighborhood Notes
New Port Richey has a mix of unrestricted older platted city neighborhoods (much of the historic downtown grid and mid-century subdivisions near Sims Park/Main Street have light or no HOA enforcement) alongside genuinely active deed-restricted communities on the waterfront and county-adjacent fringes. Gulf Harbors (including Gulf Harbors Woodlands, Gulf Harbors Civic Association, and the private-beach Gulf Harbors Beach Club) is the city's most organized deed-restricted/HOA area, with an active Woodlands homeowners association enforcing covenants (yard use, exterior appearance) alongside amenities like a clubhouse, pool, and boat ramp — roof material/color changes there can draw architectural review even though dues are relatively modest. Magnolia Valley has its own registered homeowners association as well. Because the city limits are irregular and interleaved with unincorporated Pasco (e.g., areas colloquially grouped with Trinity or Beacon Square are technically unincorporated county, not city), contractors should confirm both the permitting jurisdiction AND whether a specific subdivision carries HOA architectural review before assuming either applies.
Neighborhoods We Serve in New Port Richey
We install and repair roofs throughout New Port Richey, including Downtown New Port Richey / Sims Park district, Gulf Harbors, Gulf Harbors Woodlands, Magnolia Valley, Jasmine Trails, Orangewood Village, Millpond, Colonial Manor — near Sims Park (on the Pithlachascotee/Cotee River), Historic Hacienda Hotel, Orange Lake.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a permit to replace my roof in New Port Richey?
Yes, you need a roofing permit issued by the New Port Richey City Building Division if your property is within city limits.
Can my insurer drop me over my roof in New Port Richey?
Insurers cannot drop you solely because your roof is under 15 years old, but those with roofs 15 years or older risk non-renewal unless they pass a certified inspection showing at least five years of remaining useful life.
How long do shingle roofs last in Florida?
Typically 15–25 years depending on the product and exposure — proper installation and ventilation make a big difference.
Do you serve all of New Port Richey?
Yes — Tri Peak Roofing serves New Port Richey and the surrounding Pasco County area, including Downtown New Port Richey / Sims Park district, Gulf Harbors, Gulf Harbors Woodlands and beyond.
Ready for Shingle Roofing in New Port Richey?
Get a free inspection from a local Tri Peak crew — photos of what we find and a written price.
Call (352) 810-4026