A marketing service connecting Vermont homeowners with licensed metal roofing
contractors. Compass Camper LLC is not a licensed contractor and does not
perform roofing work.
Montpelier wears more standing seam per block than almost any downtown in America, and it earned it: the nation’s least populous state capital (8,074 residents at the 2020 census) is a 19th-century city in a snow belt, where painted metal roofs have topped the State House neighborhood for generations. We connect Montpelier homeowners with independent local contractors for free written metal roofing quotes.
50 psf
The adopted ground snow load for Montpelier on the Vermont ground snow
load map, the figure a roof here is engineered against. Statewide,
Vermont code also sets a floor: no roof may be designed for a total
snow load under 40 psf.
Published town lists mirroring the state map give this figure; the operator has flagged it for confirmation against the Division of Fire Safety map before promotion. Always confirm your address.
Confirm the value for a specific address with the Division of Fire
Safety map before any design work; brackets change at town lines and
sites above 2,500 feet need a site-specific analysis.
Roof engineering in Montpelier
Published town lists mirroring the Vermont ground snow load map place Montpelier at 50 psf, with several surrounding Washington County towns like Berlin, Northfield, and Waterbury a bracket higher at 60 psf. The county straddles the 50 and 60 psf lines, so the map, not the county name, settles any given address.
Source: VT Division of Fire Safety snow load map
Montpelier averages on the order of 94 inches of snow per season per published climate summaries, half again more than Burlington 40 miles northwest. Central Vermont’s deeper cold means less mid-winter melt and bigger standing loads between thaws, which is exactly the duty cycle standing seam and engineered snow retention are built for.
Source: Montpelier climate summary
Housing stock and roof vernacular
Census-derived data puts Montpelier’s median construction year around 1955 with roughly 38 percent of homes predating 1940. The classic Montpelier roof story is a steep 19th-century pitch that has already worn out multiple asphalt roofs while its standing seam neighbors carry on, which is why conversions dominate quote requests here.
Source: Point2Homes (Census ACS data)
Historic district note
The Montpelier Historic District, first listed on the National Register in 1978 and enlarged in 1989 and 2018, covers on the order of 450 buildings including downtown and the State House area, and the city runs an active Historic Preservation Commission. In much of central Montpelier, the roof conversation includes the district.
Source: City of Montpelier historic district documents
Vermont does not issue a state roofing contractor license. What Vermont
has instead is a residential contractor registration: under
26 V.S.A. Chapter 106, anyone contracting for residential construction over $10,000 in labor
and materials must register with the
Secretary of State, carry insurance, and use a written contract. So skip the license talk
and run these real checks instead.
Vermont Secretary of State registration
Residential contractors taking projects over $10,000 in labor and materials must be registered with the Office of Professional Regulation. Look the business up before you sign.
Registered contractors must carry liability coverage of at least $1 million per occurrence. Ask for a current certificate of insurance and confirmation of workers compensation for the crew on your roof.
Vermont law requires a written contract before work or a deposit on registered projects. A good estimate itemizes panels, gauge, finish, underlayment, flashing, and snow retention.
One form, one independent local contractor, one written quote. Put
Montpelier in the town field and pick the contact time that suits
you.
Request a Free Quote in Montpelier
When you submit this form, your information is shared with a licensed metal
roofing contractor for the purpose of scheduling your free quote.
Montpelier Metal Roofing Questions
Is standing seam appropriate in the Montpelier Historic District?
Standing seam is part of the district’s existing fabric; painted metal roofs are visible across central Montpelier. Appropriateness is judged per building, so the profile, seam height, and color for your specific home go through the city’s preservation process. The city publishes its district documents, and an experienced contractor arrives with samples the commission recognizes.
What snow load applies in Montpelier?
Published town lists mirroring the state snow load map put Montpelier at 50 psf, with nearby towns like Berlin and Northfield at 60 psf. Because the brackets change at town lines, confirm your address against the Division of Fire Safety map before design work; state code requires at least a 40 psf design roof load everywhere.
Why does Montpelier have so many metal roofs already?
Central Vermont’s snow, roughly 94 inches per season by published summaries, plus a dense stock of steep-roofed 19th-century buildings made painted standing seam the practical choice here long before it became a national trend. New installations continue a local pattern, which also smooths historic district conversations.
Who quotes my roof if I send a request from this page?
An independent metal roofing contractor working in central Vermont. VT Metal Roofing is a marketing service operated by Compass Camper LLC; the contractor you are matched with provides the free written quote and performs the work under their own registration and insurance.
Get a Free Metal Roofing Quote
Tell us about your roof and get a free, no-obligation quote from an independent local standing seam contractor who works in your part of Vermont.