Price a roof without climbing it twice.
Turn a homeowner call and a few photos of the roofline into a squares-and-materials estimate you can send the same day.
A roofing estimate lives or dies on two things: an accurate square count and an honest read on what's actually wrong up there. Most of that information is already sitting in your phone by the time you're back in the truck, in the photos you took walking the roofline and the notes from the homeowner call. FlyQuote turns that into a priced scope instead of a blank template waiting for you at your desk that night.
Built around how roofing actually gets quoted
Shingle replacements price differently than a metal re-roof, and a repair quote isn't the same animal as a full tear-off. FlyQuote reads your transcript and photos to work out which one you're looking at, then builds line items around squares, layers, decking condition, and flashing detail rather than a flat per-square guess.
Storm and insurance work moves fast, and a slow quote loses the job to whoever gets there first. Upload photos of hail damage or a leak and get a scope back while it's still fresh, instead of digging through your camera roll two days later trying to remember which slope had the soft spot.
What customers can send you before you even climb up
Publish a lead form on your site and homeowners can describe the problem and attach photos of the roof, the attic, or a ceiling stain before you've made contact. If they're on a laptop and need to grab a photo from their phone, a QR code hands the upload off without them losing their place in the form.
- Squares, pitch, and layer count worked out from your notes and photos
- Repair vs. full replacement scope kept separate on the same request
- Material selection (asphalt, metal, tile, membrane) reflected in pricing
- Photos and video attached directly to the lead, no separate email thread
You still make the final call on price. FlyQuote gets you a reviewed draft instead of a blank page, which on a busy week is the difference between quoting five roofs a night and quoting two.