Ontario roofer licensing requirements 2026. No mandatory trade license but WSIB, liability insurance, working-at-heights training, and manufacturer certifications explained.
Licensed Roofer Requirements in Ontario (2026)
1. Quick answer: The Legal Reality
In Ontario, residential roofing is classified as a voluntary trade. There is no mandatory provincial license specifically labeled "Roofer." However, all professional roofing contractors must maintain a Certificate of Recognition (COR) or equivalent safety standards, carry WSIB coverage for all employees, and hold a minimum of $2,000,000 in commercial general liability insurance. While the trade itself is voluntary, the building envelope installation must comply strictly with the Ontario Building Code (OBC), Division B, Part 9, Section 9.26.
2. Regulatory bodies that govern this trade in Ontario
While there isn't a singular "Master Roofer" license, roofing contractors operate under a web of oversight designed to protect the homeowner and the worker. If you are hiring a roofer in the GTA, Ottawa, or the North, verify their compliance with these four pillars:
Skilled Trades Ontario (STO): Formerly the Ontario College of Trades, STO manages the apprenticeship pathways. While roofing is voluntary, many professional contractors employ "Journeyperson" roofers who hold a Certificate of Qualification (C of Q). You can verify their status at skilledtradesontario.ca.
Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB): This is non-negotiable. If your roofer does not have an active WSIB account, you—the homeowner—can be held liable for injuries occurring on your property under the Workplace Safety and Insurance Act. Use the WSIB Compass portal to check their status using their legal business name.
Ministry of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development (MLITSD): They enforce the . Roofers are required to have fall protection training (Working at Heights certification). You can confirm their training status by requesting their "Working at Heights" card. See .
GAF Master Elite Certified, HAAG Certified Inspector, 15+ years experience
David Martinez is a GAF Master Elite Certified roofing contractor and HAAG Certified Roof Inspector with 15 years in the roofing industry. He has overseen more than 2,000 roof replacements and repairs, specializing in asphalt shingle, metal, and flat roofing systems.
Municipal Building Departments: Whether you are in Mississauga, London, or Sudbury, roofing often requires a building permit if structural changes (re-decking) are involved. The municipality enforces the Ontario Building Code (OBC). Always check with your local municipal office to see if a permit is required for your specific shingle replacement or flat roof conversion.
3. Licensing levels and certification tiers
Because roofing is a voluntary trade in Ontario, the "hierarchy" is based on industry-standard certifications rather than a government-mandated license. However, high-end contractors prioritize the Red Seal and manufacturer-certified installer status.
Certification Tiers for Ontario Roofers
Tier
Requirements
Scope of Work
Apprentice
Registered with STO; 0-3 years field experience
Must work under a C of Q holder; no independent high-risk labor
Journeyperson
Completed 4,000+ hours; passed provincial/Red Seal exam
Lead roles, structural assessment, complex flashings
Master/Certified Installer
Manufacturer certification (e.g., GAF Master Elite)
Full warranty backing, advanced system design
Business/Trade
HST registration, WSIB, Liability Insurance
Legal contracting, invoicing, project management
Apprenticeship: An apprentice in Ontario typically logs 4,000 hours of on-the-job training. While they can perform tasks like shingle stripping, they must be supervised by a Journeyperson when performing flashings or structural repairs.
Journeyperson (C of Q): A Journeyperson has demonstrated competency through both theory and practice. When you see this certification, you are paying for someone who understands the dew point, vapor diffusion, and thermal bridging—not just someone who can nail down shingles.
The "Red Seal" Significance: While not mandatory for residential roofing, a Red Seal roofer has passed the Interprovincial Standards Red Seal Program exam. This signifies a national standard of excellence. Always ask, "Does your lead on-site have a C of Q?"
4. Insurance and bonding requirements
Never hire a contractor who cannot produce a current Certificate of Insurance (COI). In Ontario, a residential roofer should carry at least $2,000,000 CAD in Commercial General Liability (CGL).
Why this is non-negotiable:
Property Damage: If a roofer drops a bundle of shingles through your vaulted ceiling or inadvertently creates a leak during a heavy storm in the Niagara region, you need their insurance to pay for the repair.
WSIB Coverage: If an employee falls from your roof and isn't covered by WSIB, your homeowner's insurance may be invoked to pay for their disability, or you could face a civil lawsuit. Always request a "Clearance Certificate" from the WSIB website dated within 30 days of the project start.
Errors and Omissions: For larger roof replacements (e.g., commercial or high-end residential flat roofs), ensure they carry E&O insurance. This covers design failures—such as an improperly calculated drainage slope that leads to structural collapse.
What happens if they lack insurance? You are the primary insurer. If they damage a neighbor’s property or injure a third party, your homeowner’s insurance premium will skyrocket, or the claim may be outright denied because you knowingly hired an "unqualified" contractor.
5. How to verify a contractor's license in Ontario
Verification is a four-step process that takes less than 15 minutes of your time. Do not skip this; it is the difference between a 20-year roof and a 2-year disaster.
Request the Business Number: Every legitimate Ontario business must have an HST/Business number. Use the Canada Revenue Agency GST/HST Registry to confirm the business is active.
Verify WSIB Status: Go to the WSIB Compass portal. Input the contractor’s legal name. It must return a "Clearance Certificate." If it says "No record," do not pay them a single cent.
Check the "Working at Heights" Training: All roofers in Ontario must have completed the mandatory Ministry of Labour-approved Working at Heights training. Ask for their wallet card or certification number and verify it against the contractor’s registry if provided.
Manufacturer Certification: Visit the manufacturer’s website (e.g., GAF, IKO, BP). Look for a "Find a Contractor" tool. These manufacturers vet their installers for financial stability and proper installation practices.
Red Flags:
They only accept cash.
They don't have a branded truck or a physical office address.
They cannot provide a copy of their insurance policy.
They refuse to provide a written contract detailing the scope of work.
6. Consequences of hiring an unlicensed contractor
Hiring "the guy with the lowest bid" often leads to catastrophic financial loss. In Ontario, the legal and financial ramifications are severe.
Scenario A: The Leak Disaster. You hire an uninsured, unregistered contractor. They install the shingles improperly (wrong nail placement, missing ice and water shield). Six months later, during a wet November in the Ottawa Valley, the roof leaks, causing $15,000 in water damage to your drywall and insulation. Your home insurer discovers the work was not performed to OBC standards by a certified professional. Result: Your claim is denied.
Scenario B: The Workplace Accident. A worker falls off your roof because they weren't wearing a harness. The Ministry of Labour investigates. They find the contractor has no WSIB coverage and no fall-protection training. You are now tied up in legal proceedings for years, and your property is a crime scene. Result: Thousands in legal fees and immense personal liability.
Resale Disclosure: If you sell your home in the GTA and the roof inspection reveals non-compliant work, you must disclose this in the Seller Property Information Statement (SPIS). If you can't prove the work was done by a licensed pro, you may be forced to lower your asking price by $10,000–$20,000 to account for a full re-roofing expense.
7. Ontario-specific regulations and building code
The Ontario Building Code (OBC) Part 9.26 is the rulebook for your roof. Every licensed contractor must understand the requirements for:
Ice and Water Shield: In Northern Ontario, you must have a minimum of two rows of self-adhering polymer-modified bitumen membrane at the eaves.
Ventilation: The OBC requires a specific ratio of net free ventilation area (NFVA) to attic floor area (typically 1:300). Improper ventilation leads to mold growth and premature shingle blistering.
Fasteners: The OBC mandates that nails must penetrate the roof deck. Many unlicensed contractors use staples, which are banned for shingle application under most manufacturer warranties and local municipal bylaws.
Regulatory Changes (2024-2026): Recent updates to the Skilled Trades Ontario Act have focused on increasing the rigor of safety audits. Furthermore, municipalities like Toronto and Hamilton have introduced stricter "Green Roof" bylaws and white-roof requirements for specific flat-roof applications to combat the urban heat island effect.
Permits: Do not assume you don't need a permit. If your roof replacement involves removing structural sheathing or changing the pitch, you are legally required to obtain a building permit. Your contractor should handle this, but you must ensure the "Final Inspection" card is signed off by a municipal building inspector.
8. How licensing affects pricing
Pricing in Ontario is a reflection of risk. An unlicensed contractor saves money by ignoring WSIB premiums (roughly 6-8% of payroll), skipping liability insurance, and ignoring building code requirements for materials.
Licensed/Pro Contractor: A 1,500 sq. ft. roof replacement usually ranges from $8,500 to $14,000 CAD + HST. This includes high-quality underlayment, proper ventilation upgrades, code-compliant flashing, and a 10-year workmanship warranty.
Unlicensed/Fly-by-Night: You might get a quote for $5,000 to $6,000 CAD. However, you are paying for a lack of safety, likely sub-par "contractor grade" shingles, and zero recourse when the roof leaks in two years.
The "premium" you pay for a licensed contractor is actually an insurance policy against future disaster. In 2026, you are essentially paying for the contractor’s overhead: $2M liability insurance costs roughly $1,500–$3,000 annually, and WSIB premiums are a mandatory business expense. If a quote is significantly below market, they are cutting corners that will cost you double in the long run.
9. Bottom line
Always prioritize hiring a licensed, insured, and WSIB-covered contractor. While the roofing trade is voluntary in Ontario, the requirement for safety and building code compliance is mandatory. Before signing, check their WSIB clearance, request a copy of their $2M liability insurance, and verify their manufacturer certification. Use GetAHomePro.co to find contractors who have already been vetted against these Ontario-specific regulatory standards. Never settle for the lowest price; settle for the lowest risk.
Extended Technical Deep Dive: Why "Code-Compliant" Matters
In Ontario’s climate, which ranges from the humid summers of Southwestern Ontario to the brutal freeze-thaw cycles of Northern Ontario, a roof is not just shingles. It is an integrated system.
The Science of Attic Ventilation (OBC 9.19.1)
The Ontario Building Code is rigid regarding ventilation. A failure to provide proper soffit-to-ridge venting leads to "ice damming." When heat escapes from your living space, it melts the snow on the roof. This water then runs down to the cold eaves and refreezes, creating a dam that forces water under your shingles and into your attic. A licensed contractor performs a "heat loss analysis" to ensure the soffit intake isn't blocked by insulation. If your contractor doesn't talk about "baffles" or "net free area," they are not reading the OBC.
Fastening Protocols
Under the Ontario Building Code, roofing nails must be corrosion-resistant. In the salt-heavy air of the Niagara region or near the Great Lakes, standard nails will rust out in under 10 years, causing shingles to blow off in a windstorm. A professional contractor specifies stainless steel or hot-dipped galvanized nails, as required by the site-specific exposure conditions. An unlicensed contractor will use generic nails from the big-box store bin, which are often not code-compliant for long-term installation.
The "Workmanship Warranty" Gap
Manufacturer warranties (like the 50-year "lifetime" warranties you see on shingle wrappers) are often voided if the installation is not performed by a "certified" or "approved" contractor. If you hire someone unlicensed, the manufacturer will deny any claim for material failure because they can prove the installation did not meet their specific "Application Instructions." When you hire a contractor through a verified marketplace, you are ensuring that the manufacturer's warranty remains intact.
Financial Realities of 2026
With inflation impacting the cost of materials (asphalt, plywood sheathing, and copper flashing), the cost of a full roof replacement has risen by approximately 15% since 2023. Expect to pay:
Standard Asphalt Shingles: $5.50 – $9.00 per sq. ft.
Metal Roofing: $12.00 – $22.00 per sq. ft.
Disposal Fees: $400 – $800 per bin (essential to ensure shingles are recycled or dumped in a licenced facility, not a backyard burn pile).
Ensure every estimate you receive is itemized. A lump sum estimate is a red flag. A proper estimate should list:
Underlayment type: (e.g., Synthetic vs. Felt)
Ice & Water Shield location: (Must be 36" minimum from the eave)
Flashing material: (Aluminum or Galvanized)
Disposal method: (Bin provider)
Warranty terms: (Both manufacturer and workmanship)
The Verification Checklist for 2026 Homeowners
Before the first truck arrives, save this checklist:
WSIB Clearance: Current and in the company’s name.
Liability Insurance: $2M minimum, verify the policy number.
HST Number: Check against the CRA registry.
Permit Status: Determine if your project needs a building permit via your municipality's "Building Portal."
Manufacturer ID: Call the manufacturer (e.g., IKO, BP) and ask: "Is [Contractor Name] a certified installer in [Your Region]?"
By following these steps, you are not just getting a new roof; you are protecting the single largest asset in your family's portfolio. The Ontario marketplace is flooded with "handymen" who think roofing is just a nail gun and a ladder. As a contractor with 20 years in the field, I can tell you: roofing is the most technical part of the home envelope. Treat the selection process with the same seriousness you would apply to a major surgical procedure. Your home's longevity depends on it.
Final Advice on Rebates
In 2026, keep an eye on federal and provincial energy efficiency programs. While direct "roofing" rebates are rare, some municipal programs in the GTA offer incentives for "Cool Roof" or "Green Roof" installations as part of climate-resilience initiatives. Always ask your contractor, "Does my roof upgrade qualify for any current IESO or municipal efficiency incentives?" A knowledgeable, licensed contractor will know the answer immediately. An unlicensed one will look at you with a blank stare. The difference in professionalism is that stark.