Tile roof on a Sahuarita master-planned community home, drone view

Service Areas/Sahuarita

Sahuarita tile, due now.

Pima County, Arizona

ZIPs · 85629 · 85614 · 85622

Roofing for Sahuarita and Green Valley — concrete and clay tile, asphalt shingle, and flat-roof systems for the Rancho Sahuarita, Quail Creek, and Madera Highlands communities.

  • Free estimate within 24 hours
  • Family-owned · Tucson · Since 2014
  • 1,000+ roofs across Pima & Cochise County
  • Drone-inspected — start to finish
  • Federal: Fort Huachuca · Sierra Vista AFB · Tucson VA

Free Sahuarita inspection.

We'll call you back within 24 hours.

Active in Rancho Sahuarita, Madera Highlands & 3 more.

In short

Coronado Roofing serves Sahuarita and Green Valley with concrete and clay tile re-roofs, flat-roof coating and replacement, and asphalt shingle work. We're family-owned in Tucson since 2014, drone-inspect every job, and work primarily across Rancho Sahuarita, Madera Highlands, Quail Creek, and the Green Valley flat-roof Santa Fe homes. Most Sahuarita re-roofs we do are concrete-tile underlayment replacements on master-planned community homes built between 2000 and 2010 — the tiles are usually still sound; the felt beneath them is at end of life.

Our work in Sahuarita.

Sahuarita sits south of Tucson along the Santa Cruz River, between the Santa Rita Mountains and the Sierrita range. The town grew fast in the 2000s — most homes here are master-planned community concrete tile, hitting the 15–20 year mark where the first signs of underlayment fatigue start showing up. Green Valley, just south, leans older with more retirees and a Santa Fe-style flat-roof mix. We work both regularly, including the Quail Creek active-adult community on the north end of Green Valley and the older Continental subdivision near the Pima Air & Space corridor.

Field notes from Sahuarita

Concrete tile dominates the master-planned Sahuarita communities. Green Valley has more variation — flat-roof Santa Fe-style homes, some clay tile, some shingle. Lots of original 2000s-era roofs across both areas are now mid-life and need either underlayment replacement or proactive inspection.

Sahuarita gets the same monsoon exposure as Tucson but with slightly less heat-island effect from being south of the city. Wind during summer storms can be intense in the open desert. Green Valley sees more dust accumulation on flat roofs from the surrounding agricultural areas, which can shorten coating life if not maintained.

Neighborhoods —Rancho SahuaritaMadera HighlandsQuail CreekSahuarita town coreGreen Valley (nearby)

Landmarks —Santa Rita Mountains (east)Sierrita Mountains (west)Santa Cruz RiverASARCO Mission MineMadera CanyonSahuarita LakeQuail Creek Country Club

Why us, here

Why Coronado for Sahuarita.

A few of the reasons Sahuarita homeowners hire us specifically.

  • We don't walk your tile to inspect it.

    Most Sahuarita roofs are concrete tile from the 2000s — old enough to crack underfoot. We fly a drone over the entire roof, document with 4K imagery, and you see the same footage we do. No cracked tiles caused by the inspector.

  • We know the master-planned community standards.

    Rancho Sahuarita, Madera Highlands, and Quail Creek all have HOA architectural standards on tile profile, color, and underlayment spec. We've done enough work in these communities to know what gets approved and what doesn't, so the submittal goes through clean.

  • Polystick TU MAX underlayment as our default.

    Self-adhered modified bitumen rated for Sonoran heat and UV. The 2000s-era Sahuarita roofs that are failing now mostly have basic 30-lb felt under them. The replacement spec we install is built to outlast the original by a decade-plus.

  • Insurance-grade documentation built in.

    If a Sahuarita monsoon storm or hail event triggers a claim, our drone footage and written assessment are the documentation adjusters accept. We work directly with State Farm, Allstate, Farmers, and others — you don't have to be the middleman.

  • Family-owned, no subcontracted re-roofs.

    Every roof we install is done by a Coronado crew. No day-labor, no subcontracted-out re-roofs that disappear when something needs warranty work two years later. We've been here since 2014 and we'll still be here when you call.

Recent work

Roofs we've finished in Sahuarita.

  • Tile re-roof · Rancho Sahuarita

    Tile re-roof · Rancho Sahuarita

  • Underlayment swap · Madera Highlands

    Underlayment swap · Madera Highlands

  • Flat-roof coating · Green Valley

    Flat-roof coating · Green Valley

  • Mid-life inspection · Quail Creek

    Mid-life inspection · Quail Creek

What to expect

How a Sahuarita re-roof goes.

From the first call to the final walkthrough.

  1. 01

    Drone inspection

    We schedule a flight and document the entire roof — overhead pass plus close-ups of every penetration, valley, and ridge. 30–45 minutes on site for most Sahuarita homes. Free.

  2. 02

    Written assessment

    Within 48 hours: stills, video, and a plain-language report ranking what needs immediate attention, what can wait, and what's still in good shape. No upsell.

  3. 03

    Itemized quote and timeline

    Written, line-itemed quote with materials, labor, and a calendar timeline. We answer questions before you sign anything — and the inspection cost is credited if you move forward.

  4. 04

    Permit and HOA submittal

    We pull the Town of Sahuarita or Pima County permit and handle HOA architectural review submittals for Rancho Sahuarita, Madera Highlands, and Quail Creek. You sign; we file.

  5. 05

    Tear-off and decking check

    Tiles carefully removed and stacked for reuse. Decking inspected — any rotted sheathing replaced before we go further. Daily nail-magnet sweep so your driveway and yard stay clean.

  6. 06

    Underlayment, flashing, and tile relay

    Polystick TU MAX or Polyglass underlayment installed per manufacturer spec. All flashing replaced — chimneys, vents, valleys, transitions. Original tiles relaid; new tiles sourced to match where pieces are broken.

  7. 07

    Final walkthrough

    You on the ground, us on the roof, showing exactly what we did. Manufacturer warranty registered in your name. Final cleanup before we leave.

Free drone inspection in Sahuaritawithin 24 hoursno pressurehonest assessment.

Call (520) 273-5626

Where we work

Service area — Sahuarita.

Roughly 12-mile radius from Sahuarita center. ZIPs we cover: 85629 · 85614 · 85622.

Common questions

About roofs in Sahuarita.

The questions we hear most from Sahuarita homeowners before signing.

01

Do you serve Green Valley as well as Sahuarita?

Yes. Same crew, same materials, same approach. Green Valley is just south of Sahuarita and we cover both as one service area. Most of our Green Valley work is on older homes with original 1980s–1990s flat-roof systems and Santa Fe-style construction, plus some tile work in the newer subdivisions and the Quail Creek active-adult community. If you're in Green Valley and need a roof inspected or replaced, the call goes the same way as a Sahuarita job.

02

When should I get a 15-year-old tile roof in Sahuarita inspected?

Now. Sahuarita's master-planned communities (Rancho Sahuarita, Madera Highlands) saw heavy concrete-tile construction in the 2005–2010 window — those roofs are now 15–20 years old, which is the early end of the underlayment failure window in our climate. Getting a drone inspection at this age tells you whether you have 5 more years or 5 more weeks before you need to act. Inspections are free and take about an hour. Better to know now than during the next monsoon storm.

03

Does dust from agricultural areas affect Green Valley roofs?

Yes, especially flat roofs with elastomeric coatings. The pecan groves and farm operations south of Green Valley generate significant dust that settles on flat roofs. Over time, this layer holds moisture, blocks the reflective coating from doing its job, and can shorten coating life by 20–30%. Annual or bi-annual cleaning is worth it. We can include a cleaning visit as part of an annual maintenance plan if you have a flat-roof building in this area.

04

What's different about roofing in Sahuarita versus central Tucson?

Climate is similar but slightly milder — Sahuarita is south of Tucson and gets less heat-island effect from being out of the urban core. Summer highs run a couple degrees cooler. Monsoon impact is similar. The main difference is the housing stock: Sahuarita is overwhelmingly newer master-planned construction with concrete tile, where Tucson has a much wider mix of older flat-roof, shingle, and varying tile generations. Pricing is similar; the work itself is similar.

05

Do I need HOA approval for a re-roof in Rancho Sahuarita or Madera Highlands?

Yes. Both Rancho Sahuarita and Madera Highlands have architectural standards covering tile profile, tile color, and (in some cases) underlayment spec. Quail Creek has its own architectural review committee as well. We've done enough work in these communities to know what gets approved without back-and-forth, and we handle the architectural submittal as part of the job. You sign the form; we file it and follow up.

06

Do you pull permits for Sahuarita roofing work?

Yes. Most Sahuarita re-roofs require a permit through the Town of Sahuarita or Pima County, depending on the property's exact location. We pull the permit, handle the inspection scheduling, and make sure final sign-off is on file. Permit fees are passed through at cost in the itemized quote — no markup.

07

Can you match the original tile profile and color on Sahuarita master-planned community homes?

Almost always. Most Sahuarita communities used a small set of common tile profiles (concrete S-tile, flat-profile concrete, occasional clay) that are still in production. We salvage your existing tiles where they're sound, then source matching replacements for broken pieces. If a profile is fully discontinued — which is rare in Sahuarita — we'll relocate originals to street-facing slopes and use close-match tiles where they're less visible. Either way, you don't get a patchwork roof.

Reviewed by —Efren CoronadoOwner & lead estimator, Coronado Roofing. Tucson roofer since 2014. Personally inspected over 1,000 roofs across Pima and Cochise County, including hundreds across Sahuarita, Green Valley, and the south Pima corridor. FAA Part 107 drone-certified.

Last updated —

Got a roof in Sahuarita?

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(520) 273-5626

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