Why Frisco Is a High-Opportunity Roofing Market
Frisco is one of the fastest-growing cities in the United States, with tens of thousands of homes built in the late 1990s through early 2010s now approaching the 15-to-25-year mark — the window when asphalt shingles typically reach the end of their rated lifespan. Age-related granule loss and UV degradation are already present on many roofs throughout master-planned communities like Starwood, Plantation Resort, and Stonebriar before a single hailstorm ever hits.
Layer storm activity on top of that aging housing stock and the replacement math becomes straightforward. Denton County recorded hail events with stone sizes of 1.00, 1.25, and 2.00 inches between September 2025 and June 2026, alongside several significant wind events. Large-format hail at those sizes causes measurable granule loss and bruising on three-tab and architectural shingles — damage that shows up clearly in overhead imagery even when it is not visible from the street.
Roofbird has already scanned residential neighborhoods across Texas, including published open scan reports for Parker County, Deaf Smith County, and Maverick County. That existing coverage demonstrates the imagery resolution and scoring accuracy contractors can expect when they run their own scans across Frisco ZIP codes like 75033, 75034, and 75035.
How Roofbird Scores Frisco Rooftops
When you draw a target area in Roofbird, the platform pulls current and historical aerial and satellite imagery for every residential structure inside that boundary. A computer-vision model evaluates each roof and assigns a condition score from 0 (severely damaged) to 10 (like-new). The score is based on visible damage signals: granule loss patterns, missing or displaced shingles, algae or moss staining, hail spatter marks, and curling or cupping at shingle edges.
Each flagged property comes back with its street address, the specific damage signs detected, an estimated roof size in squares, and a suggested door-knock pitch line tailored to what the imagery actually shows. You can also generate a door-hanger PDF for a property directly from the dashboard, ready to print before you head out for the day.
It is worth being clear about what the score represents: it is an AI assessment from overhead imagery, not a physical inspection. Scores are a prioritization tool. They tell you which doors are most worth knocking on in a given area — they do not replace an in-person assessment or guarantee that a homeowner will sign a contract.
- Damage signals detected: granule loss, missing shingles, algae/moss, hail spatter, curling edges
- Each lead includes address, damage notes, estimated squares, and a pitch line
- Door-hanger PDFs generated directly in the dashboard
- Scored leads returned in minutes after drawing your target zone
- Covers any Frisco zip code: 75033, 75034, 75035, and adjacent areas
Exclusive Leads vs. Shared Marketplace Leads
Pay-per-lead marketplaces like Angi, HomeAdvisor, Thumbtack, Networx, and Modernize sell the same homeowner contact to multiple contractors simultaneously — often four or more. By the time you call that lead, you are already in a price race. Margins compress, close rates drop, and the platform captures most of the economics.
Roofbird works differently. You source your own leads directly from imagery data. Nobody else sees the list you generate for your chosen Frisco neighborhoods. Because the lead originates with you rather than a marketplace, you approach the homeowner as an expert who has already identified a problem with their specific roof — not as one of several contractors who bought the same name from a third-party database.
Roofbird also offers geographic exclusivity through zip code slots. Once a contractor holds the slot for a given Frisco zip code, that zip is removed from availability for other subscribers, protecting the lead pool you have built.
Targeting Frisco Storm Damage: What the NOAA Record Shows
NOAA storm records for Denton County over the last 18 months document hail events on September 6, 2025 with stone sizes of 1.00 inch, 1.25 inches (reported twice), and an additional 1.00-inch event, alongside multiple wind events the same day. A further hail event on June 3, 2026 logged stones at 2.00 inches — a size that routinely causes insurance-grade damage to asphalt shingles.
The September 2025 cluster is particularly relevant for canvassing strategy. Multi-event days mean a single neighborhood may have absorbed back-to-back impacts within hours, compounding damage that a homeowner might not have noticed because neither storm alone appeared severe from the ground. Roofbird's overhead scoring is well-suited to identifying that kind of cumulative, low-visibility damage across a large number of addresses quickly.
Contractors targeting Denton County storm work should consider cross-referencing Roofbird's condition scores with storm event dates. Homes scored 3 or below in a path that aligns with the September 2025 or June 2026 storm tracks are strong candidates for insurance-assisted replacement conversations.
Getting Started in Frisco: Pricing and Trial
Roofbird offers a free trial that includes 25 scored leads with no credit card required. You can sign up, draw a zone over a Frisco neighborhood, and have a ranked list of addresses in front of you within minutes — without a sales call or a demo request.
The Hunter plan is priced at $199 per month and is designed for contractors running consistent canvassing and door-knocking operations. Geographic exclusivity via zip code slots is available on paid plans, which matters in a competitive market like Frisco where multiple storm-restoration crews operate across Denton County.
The platform is entirely self-serve. There is no onboarding sequence to complete and no account manager to wait on. If you want to test whether the imagery quality and scoring are useful for your Frisco territory, the free trial is the most direct way to find out.
Practical Canvassing Strategy for Frisco Roofers
Frisco's grid of master-planned subdivisions makes it well-suited to systematic canvassing. Neighborhoods are typically dense, with similar build years clustered together, which means a Roofbird scan of a single subdivision can surface a high concentration of age- and storm-damaged roofs in a compact area — reducing drive time between doors.
A practical workflow: run a Roofbird scan on a target zip code the evening before a canvass day, sort results by condition score to build a priority route, print door-hanger PDFs for the top-scored addresses, and begin knocking the following morning. For homes where no one answers, the door-hanger references the specific roof concern identified from imagery, giving the homeowner a concrete reason to follow up rather than a generic offer.
After a named storm event in Denton County, the same workflow applies but with tighter geographic targeting. Draw the scan boundary around the storm track rather than an entire zip code, run the score, and prioritize homes in the 0-to-4 range. That approach lets a small sales team work a post-storm market methodically without relying on homeowners to self-identify damage and contact them first.