Today
Overcast
93° / 72°F
Orlando roof repair, inspections, replacement planning, wind mitigation, 4-point/Citizens support, and storm documentation from TPROCO.
Tell us about your roof and how to reach you. A licensed Central Florida roofer follows up with your clear next step.
Local response From our Clermont office, typical drive-time context to Orlando is about 40–50 minutes (approximate — varies with traffic, weather, and scheduling). Licensed & insured: CBC059592 / CCC1327217 / HI4878.
No active National Weather Service alerts for Orlando right now.
Local Weather WatchCentral Florida roof conditions change fast in storm season. This local outlook helps Orlando homeowners decide when to check for leaks, lifted shingles, or storm damage.
Right now in Orlando: 92°F
Overcast
93° / 72°F
Overcast
94° / 75°F
Source: open-meteo.com (forecast) + U.S. National Weather Service (alerts). Updated Jul 2, 8:47 pm. Forecasts change; always follow official emergency guidance.
Request a Roof Inspection →Orange County communities, including Orlando, have been affected by documented severe-weather events — notably Hurricane Milton (October 2024), Hurricane Ian (September 2022) — plus routine summer thunderstorms, high wind, heavy rain, and hail. Urban rain bursts and heavy seasonal downpours can stress a roof over time, even when damage is not visible from the ground.
Historical storm activity is local context, not proof that a specific roof is damaged. A licensed roof inspection is required to document current roof condition. Sources: NOAA/NCEI Storm Events Database; NOAA Historical Hurricane Tracks.
Schedule a Storm-Damage Inspection →Local, documented guidance for mixed urban neighborhoods, infill homes, established subdivisions, and varied roof ages—with repair, replacement, inspection, and Florida insurance-report options explained clearly.
Orlando is not one roofing market. A home near an older neighborhood core can have very different roof details, access limits, and ventilation needs than a newer subdivision farther east or south. That range matters when a homeowner is deciding whether a leak needs a focused repair, whether widespread wear points toward replacement, or whether an inspection is needed for documentation. The right recommendation starts with the actual roof system—not a city-name template or a one-size-fits-all estimate.
Timothy Parks Roofing & Construction Inc. provides roof inspections, roof repair, roof replacement, storm-related documentation, wind mitigation inspections, and 4-point inspections for approved properties in Orlando and the surrounding service area. Recommendations are based on the observed roof and building—not on a city-name template.
Ready to move forward on your roof?
Orlando's many established neighborhoods, newer communities, and infill projects create a broad mix of shingle ages, tile systems, low-slope additions, porch tie-ins, and prior repairs. We look at how the roof was assembled and how later changes may be affecting drainage or leak paths.
Mature tree cover can be an asset, but limbs, leaf buildup, shaded roof sections, and clogged valleys can hide damage or slow drying. After a strong storm, the most useful inspection is one that checks the likely entry points rather than simply looking for missing shingles from the ground.
Orlando properties may be owner-occupied, rented, managed, or part of an association. Photos, written findings, and a clearly separated repair-versus-replacement scope help the decision-maker act without relying on vague verbal descriptions.
A practical first step for unexplained stains, storm concerns, a home purchase, an aging roof, or a repair-versus-replacement decision.
Useful when damage is isolated to flashing, a penetration, a valley, a small shingle area, or a roof-to-wall connection and the surrounding system still has serviceable life.
Appropriate when wear is widespread, prior repairs are multiplying, the roof system is near the end of its useful life, or the deck and underlayment need a broader reset.
Available for homeowners who need Florida insurance-related documentation. The report records observed features; it does not guarantee coverage, acceptance, or savings.
When water is actively entering the home, call first. Availability and the safest temporary response must be confirmed before anyone promises an arrival time.
Confirm the property and goal. We verify the Orlando address, ownership or authorization, active leak status, access notes, and whether the request is for repair, replacement, storm documentation, wind mitigation, or a 4-point inspection.
Inspect the relevant systems. The review follows roof planes, flashings, valleys, penetrations, transitions, drainage, visible deck concerns, and interior symptoms that can be safely accessed.
Separate urgent work from planning. The owner receives a plain-language explanation of what needs immediate attention, what can be monitored, and what should be budgeted.
Confirm permits and approvals before contracted work. The correct city, county, association, or architectural-review path is checked rather than assumed.
Document the next step. Photos and written findings are included when part of the agreed inspection or project scope.
Does the leak appear only during wind-driven rain, or during ordinary rainfall too?
Is the roof issue confined to one area, or are there warning signs in several rooms or elevations?
Are you trying to preserve a roof with useful life left, or compare the long-term cost of replacement?
Do you need photos and written findings for an owner, buyer, association, or insurance conversation?
Yes. The inspection should determine whether the problem is localized, whether the surrounding materials remain serviceable, and whether repair is a reasonable use of money. Replacement should be recommended only when the condition and risk justify it.
Yes. Older homes often require closer attention to additions, flashing transitions, ventilation changes, and previous repairs. Newer homes can still develop installation defects, storm damage, or drainage problems.
A documented inspection can include photos, observations, and the recommended next step so the decision-maker is not dependent on a verbal summary.
Move valuables away from the affected area if it is safe, avoid wet electrical fixtures, and call 407-383-9118. We will confirm the next available response rather than claim an appointment before it exists.
Timothy Parks Roofing & Construction Inc. is based at 614 E State Road 50 Suite 101, Clermont, FL 34711. Florida contractor licenses CCC1327217 and CBC059592; home inspector license HI4878. Call 407-383-9118 to request service.
A roof inspection or insurance-related inspection documents observed conditions at the time of the visit. It does not guarantee future roof performance, insurance coverage, underwriting acceptance, claim approval, or a specific premium credit. Emergency availability, appointment times, and material availability must be confirmed directly.


Licensed roofing, construction & inspection team serving the Orlando metro. Verified Google reviews appear here — no inflated numbers, ever.
Timothy Parks Roofing & Construction Inc.
614 E Hwy 50 #101, Clermont, FL 34711
407-383-9118
Licenses: CBC059592 · CCC1327217 · HI4878