How Much Is a Malarkey Roof? Real Minnesota Pricing for 2026

Joe Dvorak • April 25, 2025

I've installed hundreds of Malarkey roofs across the Twin Cities. Their polymer-modified formula handles our freeze-thaw cycles better than most, and the pricing is fair. But "how much is a Malarkey roof?" isn't a simple answer. It depends on which product line you pick, your roof size, tear-off costs, and whether you're in an easy-access neighborhood or a nightmare geometry situation.

Let me break down the real numbers.

Material Costs Per Square Foot

Malarkey shingle pricing has climbed with lumber prices and supply chain reality. Here's what you're looking at in 2026:

| Product Line | Per Square Foot | Per Square (100 sq ft) | Warranty |

|---|---|---|---|

| Legacy (Economy) | $3.50-4.50 | $350-450 | 25 years |

| Vista AR (Value) | $4.50-6.00 | $450-600 | 30 years |

| Highlander NEX (Premium) | $5.50-7.50 | $550-750 | 35 years |

| Windsor (Ultra-Premium) | $7.00-10.00+ | $700-1,000+ | 40 years |

These are shingle-only costs. Labor, tear-off, disposal, and materials (flashing, nails, underlayment, ice shield) bump the total significantly.

Full Project Cost Estimate

A typical Minnesota home is 1,500-2,500 sq ft under roof. Let's break down total cost for a 2,200 sq ft roof (22 squares):

Vista AR (Mid-Range, Most Popular)

  • Shingles: 22 × $500 = $11,000
  • Labor (installation + cleanup): 22 × $250-350 = $5,500-7,700
  • Tear-off/disposal: $1,500-2,500
  • Flashing, underlayment, ice shield, nails: $800-1,200
  • Total: $18,800-22,400

Average: $20,600

Highlander NEX (Premium)

  • Shingles: 22 × $650 = $14,300
  • Labor (same rate): $5,500-7,700
  • Tear-off/disposal: $1,500-2,500
  • Materials: $800-1,200
  • Total: $22,100-25,700

Average: $23,900

Windsor (Ultra-Premium)

  • Shingles: 22 × $850 = $18,700
  • Labor: $5,500-7,700
  • Tear-off/disposal: $1,500-2,500
  • Materials: $800-1,200
  • Total: $26,500-30,100

Average: $28,300

Legacy (Economy)

  • Shingles: 22 × $400 = $8,800
  • Labor: $5,500-7,700
  • Tear-off/disposal: $1,500-2,500
  • Materials: $800-1,200
  • Total: $16,600-20,200

Average: $18,400

Why Your Quote Might Be Different

Your actual cost depends on several factors:

Roof pitch and complexity. A simple two-slope roof is faster (and cheaper) than a four-slope roof with valleys, skylights, and dormers. Steep pitches cost more in labor because they're harder to work on safely.

Tear-off difficulty. If you've got a 1970s roof with three layers of shingles, tear-off costs more than a single layer. Sometimes it's $1,500; sometimes it's $4,000.

Flashing situation. Rusted flashing gets replaced. Good flashing gets sealed and reused. One house I did last month needed $3,200 in new flashing because the original galvanized was rotted. The next one needed $400.

Geographic premium. Eden Prairie and Wayzata pricing runs higher than St. Paul or Burnsville. Contractor density, market demand, and labor costs vary by metro area.

Supply availability. Popular colors (charcoal, brown) ship faster. Rare colors or special orders might cost 5-10% more.

Off-season discounts. November-March is slow. Some contractors offer 10-15% off. Summer demand inflates prices.

What's Included in My Quote (and What Isn't)

When I quote a roof, here's what's built into the price:

  • New shingles, nails, and flashing
  • Labor for removal and installation
  • Tear-off and disposal
  • Cleanup
  • Roof inspection (free to existing customers; charged separately to new customers)
  • LIFETIME workmanship warranty

What's NOT included:

  • Structural repairs (rotted decking costs extra)
  • Roof ventilation additions or improvements
  • Gutter work (separate bid)
  • Painting or siding repairs (separate bid)

Why Malarkey Over Competitors at This Price?

Look, I could install CertainTeed or Atlas at similar price points. Malarkey's advantage for Minnesota: their asphalt is polymer-modified, which means it stays flexible in our freeze-thaw cycles. Competitors often use straight asphalt that hardens faster in cold.

That flexibility translates to fewer cracks and longer life. I've installed Malarkey roofs next to competitor roofs on identical homes. Seven years in, the Malarkey looks fresher. Not a huge difference, but measurable.

Plus, Malarkey's been solid for 100+ years. No major recalls. Warranty claims are rare. That matters when you're betting $20K on a product.

Financing Options

Most roofing jobs qualify for:

  • Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC): 4-8% depending on your credit and lender.
  • Personal loan: 6-10%, no collateral required.
  • Payment plans: Some contractors (not us) offer in-house financing at marked-up rates.
  • Insurance claim: If storm damage caused the roof failure, your homeowner's insurance may cover replacement minus your deductible.

I always recommend talking to your bank or credit union before getting roofing quotes. Knowing your financing options helps you negotiate better.

How to Save Money Without Sacrificing Quality

Go Vista AR instead of Highlander NEX. You save $3,000-5,000 for a roof that'll perform almost identically in Minnesota. The NEX adds features geared toward extreme climates (higher wind rating, etc.). We don't need that here.

Go Highlander NEX instead of Windsor. Same logic. Windsor is beautiful, but you're paying for aesthetics and 40-year warranty on a product that'll likely need replacing in 30-35 years anyway in Minnesota.

Roof in off-season. November-March, contractors are slower. Budgets are tighter. You might negotiate 10-15% off.

Do gutter cleaning yourself. That's not roofing, but it's part of roof health. Spend an afternoon with a ladder and gutters instead of paying someone $300-500 to do it twice a year.

Get a roof inspection every 5 years after year 15. Small fixes ($300-500) prevent big problems ($5,000+). This saves money over time.

FAQ

Is Malarkey better than CertainTeed or Atlas?

Not objectively. All three are solid. Malarkey excels at freeze-thaw flexibility; CertainTeed has legacy brand consistency; Atlas has strong impact resistance. Pick based on your priorities. I'm comfortable recommending any of the three.

Should I go with the cheapest option?

Not if it's more than 3 squares cheaper than the mid-range. Legacy vs. Vista AR might save $2,500 but lose 5-10 years of lifespan. Vista AR at $20K is smarter than Legacy at $17K. The extra $3K buys real durability.

Will a Malarkey roof add to my home value?

Yes, but not dollar-for-dollar. A $20K roof adds maybe $12K-15K in resale value, depending on market and home age. You're buying durability and peace of mind, not a financial investment.

How long does installation take?

One to three days for an average home, depending on weather, roof complexity, and crew size. Most projects are done inside a week.

Do you offer financing?

We don't directly, but I can recommend several lenders we work with regularly. HELOC or personal loan are usually your best options.

What if I only want to re-roof part of my roof?

It's possible but not ideal. Shingles age differently, and color matching is near-impossible after a few years. If more than 30% needs replacing, I'd recommend full replacement. If less than 10%, we can usually patch and match reasonably well.

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