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Roofing in Deer Trail, Colorado
Front Range hail belt
Deer Trail, Colorado sits on the hail-prone Front Range. This hub aggregates Deer Trail's roofing permit and contractor-registration requirements, local roofing suppliers, and impact-resistant material options — every fact linked to its sourced directory record.
Roofing permits & building code in Deer Trail
Roofing permit and contractor-licensing rules in Deer Trail are set locally by Town of Deer Trail Building Permits. Colorado has no statewide roofing license, so registration is handled at the local level — always confirm the current requirements with the authority before starting work.
Adopted building code
Ordinance No. 253, an emergency ordinance passed in 2016, adopts by reference the International Building Code, 2012 Edition; the International Plumbing Code, 2012 Edition; the International Mechanical Code, 2012 Edition; the International Fire Code, 2012 Edition; the International Fuel Gas Code, 2012 Edition; the International Residential Code, 2012 Edition; the International Energy Conservation Code, 2009 Edition; the International Property Maintenance Code, 2012 Edition; the International Existing Building Code, 2012 Edition (all as published by the International Code Council); and the National Electrical Code, "most current edition adopted by the State of Colorado," as published by the National Fire Protection Association. This is the most recent building- code adoption ordinance found in the Town's published ordinance list.
Permit process
All Town of Deer Trail permits, including building permits, must be completed online via a web form; applicants receive a confirmation email as the Town processes the application. Ordinance No. 253 (adopted 2016) makes it "unlawful for any person to erect, construct, reconstruct, alter, remove or change the use of any building or other structure within the town without first obtaining all permits required by the Building Code," and provides that anyone who commences work before obtaining the necessary permit is subject to a fee equal to 100% of the original building fee in addition to the required permit fees. The Town's public ordinance list does not carry a roofing-specific permit requirement or a published contractor-licensing/registration program, so those items are not asserted here; a caller should confirm reroofing- specific permitting directly with Town Hall.
View the full Deer Trail permitting authority record →
Impact-resistant roofing materials for Deer Trail hail
Deer Trail sits on Colorado's Front Range, part of the hail-prone corridor insurers call "hail alley." For hail exposure, the highest impact rating a roof covering can earn is UL 2218 Class 4. These cataloged material categories reach Class 4:
Class 4 impact-resistant materials
Browse every option on the Class 4 impact-resistant materials hub, and read the Class 4 impact-resistant shingles buyer's guide. Many Colorado insurers offer a premium credit for a documented Class 4 roof — confirm terms with your carrier.
Local permitting authority
Roofing guides