Mesa, AZ · 2026 cost guide

How much does a tile roof cost in Mesa?

In Mesa, a tile roof costs about $15,500$39,500 in 2026 for a 1,800 sq ft clay or concrete tile roof, tear-off included — roughly $979.7–$2155.34 per square (100 sq ft). That’s in line with the Arizona average.

Estimate your Mesa project with the Roofing Square Calculator

Mesa cost breakdown

Mesa typical range$15,500$39,500
Mesa per square (100 sq ft)$979.7–$2155.34
Arizona state average$15,500$39,000
Versus Arizona averagein line with average

What’s different about Mesa

Mesa sits inside the Phoenix metro, sharing its busy labor market and permitting, with the same arid heat driving UV-resistant exterior materials.

  • Clay and concrete tile excel in hot, arid climates — they shed heat and resist sun damage.

How the cost is built

Tile-roof cost is driven by material (concrete tile is cheaper than clay or slate), roof pitch, and structural needs — tile is heavy, so framing sometimes has to be reinforced. Tile lasts 50+ years and excels in hot, sunny climates but costs more to install than asphalt or metal.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a tile roof cost in Mesa?

In Mesa, a tile roof costs about $15,500 to $39,500 in 2026 for a 1,800 sq ft clay or concrete tile roof, tear-off included — roughly 979.7–2155.34 per square (100 sq ft). That's in line with the Arizona average, reflecting local labor and permit costs.

What affects the cost of a tile roof in Mesa?

Mesa sits inside the Phoenix metro, sharing its busy labor market and permitting, with the same arid heat driving UV-resistant exterior materials. Clay and concrete tile excel in hot, arid climates — they shed heat and resist sun damage.

How can I get an accurate tile roof estimate in Mesa?

Use the free Roofing Square Calculator to plug in your real measurements, then collect two or three local Mesa quotes to compare. Prices vary by neighborhood, access, and project complexity.

Tile roof cost in other Arizona metros

Keep planning

Related calculators

The Mesa figure scales the Arizona cost range by a local metro index, then adjusts for the city’s labor market and climate. A 2026 planning estimate, not a quote — get local bids. See our methodology.