Missing shingles
Open or lifted sections that leave the roof vulnerable.
Shingle Roofing
Shingle roof decisions depend on surface wear, missing tabs, flashing, ventilation details, heat exposure, and whether repair still makes practical sense.

Common roof clues are easier to evaluate when the inspection is tied to photos.
Open or lifted sections that leave the roof vulnerable.
Curling, surface wear, or visible deterioration after heat exposure.
Water entry around walls, vents, valleys, or penetrations.
Loose tabs or exposed sections after wind.
A broader decision when repairs no longer solve the roof condition.
Documentation of the final shingle field and roof details.
The scope should connect to real roof conditions, not vague sales language.
Shingle field condition and missing or lifted areas
Vents, valleys, edges, and flashing details
Repairable issues compared with replacement indicators
Written material and scope notes before work is approved
Quest keeps the decision grounded: fix the section when that is enough, or explain replacement when widespread wear makes patching a poor value.

Quest documents roof condition and explains whether the concern is isolated or widespread.
Yes. Flashing, penetrations, edges, and roof transitions are part of the review.