If you search “best roofing companies in Logan,” you’ll find plenty of lists written by marketing companies that have never set foot in Cache Valley. This one is different in two ways: it’s written by a Logan roofing company — us, Homer Roofing — and it names our actual competitors.
Why would we do that? Because you’re going to compare roofers anyway. You should. A roof is a five-figure purchase that has to survive Cache Valley winters for decades. We’d rather you compare with good information than with guesses — even if that means introducing you to companies we bid against every week.
Full disclosure up front: we’re on this list, and we’re biased. We’ll tell you exactly why we include ourselves, and we’ll tell you what’s genuinely good about the others. Then we’ll show you how to verify all of it yourself, so you don’t have to take anyone’s word for anything — including ours.
How we picked this list
Every company below clears the bars that matter most for Logan homeowners:
- Active Utah contractor license and insurance. Non-negotiable. You can verify any license through the Utah Division of Professional Licensing (DOPL).
- Real local presence. Companies that were working in Cache Valley before the last storm and will be here after the next one.
- A track record you can verify. Years in business, permits pulled, and reputations that hold up when you ask around — because some of the best local roofers barely show up on review sites.
- Credentials worth checking. Manufacturer certifications aren’t just badges — they determine which warranties your roof can actually qualify for.
We left off out-of-state storm chasers, lead-generation websites that pose as local roofers, and companies we couldn’t verify. If a roofer knocking on your door isn’t on any list you can find, that’s worth a pause.
Roofing companies worth considering in Logan and Cache Valley
One honest note before the list: a couple of these companies barely exist online — thin review counts, in one case no website at all. We included them anyway, because we see their work on real roofs around this valley, and that’s a better signal than a star count. Where a company has almost no review record, we say so plainly.
Homer Roofing (that’s us)
We put ourselves first because it would be strange to pretend we don’t exist — but here’s the factual case, which you can verify: Homer Roofing has been headquartered in Logan since 2003, holds Utah contractor license #1092697, and is a GAF Master Elite contractor — a certification GAF limits to roughly the top 2% of roofers in North America. That certification is why our roofs can qualify for GAF’s Golden Pledge warranty, which most contractors cannot offer. Every job also carries our own lifetime workmanship warranty, and every estimate is written and itemized. Our office is at 865 W 1455 N in Logan, and you can read our Google reviews before ever calling us.
Mt. Peak Roofing
Mt. Peak (Mountain Peak Builders, Inc.) has been roofing Cache Valley since 1998 from its shop in Logan, under owner Zane Rust. They handle pitched and flat roofs — shingle, metal, and membrane — for homes and commercial buildings across northern Utah and into Idaho and Wyoming. Their online footprint is modest, but the work record behind it runs nearly three decades deep, and the reviews they do have consistently mention fast crews and quality workmanship.
Peck Brothers Roofing and Construction
Logan’s Peck Brothers is the roofer you find through a neighbor, not a search engine — they don’t even keep a website. Run by Shad Peck from a shop on the north side of town, they hold both residential and general-building licenses, have one of the deeper permit track records in the valley, and handle re-roofs, repairs, skylights, and winter snow removal. Ask around your street; chances are someone vouches for them.
Island Heights Construction
A family-owned Cache Valley fixture since 1983, based in Hyde Park and run by Alan Ringer. Island Heights is the valley’s commercial and flat-roof specialist — EPDM, TPO, PVC, metal, and built-up systems — and one of the few local shops that fabricates its own sheet metal in-house. They’ve built four decades of work almost entirely on word of mouth, so don’t expect a big review profile. If you have a flat roof, a shop, or a commercial building, this is the local call.
Apex Roofing
Apex Roofing is a small, owner-operated shop out of Clarkston, on the northwest edge of Cache Valley, run by BJ Jorgensen since 2015. They’re GAF Certified and focus on straightforward asphalt shingle replacements and repairs for the Logan area. Like several others on this list, Apex keeps almost no online footprint — you deal directly with the owner, not a sales team — so you won’t find a big review profile. If you want a genuinely local, one-crew operation and a direct line to the person doing the work, they’re worth a call.
What to verify no matter who you choose
Don’t trust lists — including this one. Verify. It takes fifteen minutes:
- License: Search the company on Utah DOPL. No active license, no deal.
- Insurance: Ask for a current certificate of insurance naming the company. Legitimate contractors send this without hesitation.
- Certification: Look the company up in the manufacturer’s own directory (GAF and CertainTeed both publish theirs). This tells you which warranties your roof can actually get — here’s what “lifetime warranty” really means.
- The estimate: Insist on a written, line-item estimate. Our estimate integrity quiz shows you the eight things a complete roofing estimate must include.
- The pressure test: Anyone who needs you to sign today is selling something other than a roof. Know the tactics before someone uses them on you.
The bottom line
Logan has several legitimate, capable roofing companies — and a rotating cast of out-of-town crews that show up after every windstorm. Stick to contractors with a local address, an active license, real credentials, and a written estimate, and you’ll end up with a roof that outlasts the salesperson who sold it.
If you’d like our honest read on your roof, schedule a free inspection — and yes, it’s genuinely fine if you’re using it to compare us against someone else on this list. That’s the point.