Roofing · Step-by-Step Guide

How to Manage Change Orders Professionally and Get Paid for Extra Work in Roofing

A tech discovers extra scope on-site — a corroded pipe, an unplanned material upgrade, an additional hour of labor. He calls it in verbally. The customer nods. The invoice comes out two weeks later with line items nobody recognizes. No ReKeying means scope changes captured in the field flow directly to the invoice with a digital approval trail.

6 Steps3 Mistakes to AvoidFree Prototype Offer

Watch: Uncle Steve Explains How to Manage Change Orders Professionally and Get Paid for Extra Work in Roofing

What This Looks Like in Roofing

The Scenario

A roofing crew tears off a flat roof and discovers saturated decking over 800 square feet that requires replacement before the new membrane can go down. The PM calls the GC. Verbal authorization is given. The $6,400 extra is invoiced — and disputed because no change order was signed.

The Real Cost

Undocumented roof deck discovery change orders are among the most commonly disputed line items in commercial roofing. Average dispute: $3,000–$9,000 per incident.

63% of roofing contractors report change order disputes as their top accounts-receivable problem.

NRCA Contractor Financial Health Survey, 2024

6 Steps to Manage Change Orders Professionally and Get Paid for Extra Work in Roofing

Follow these steps in order. Each step builds on the previous one.

  1. 1

    Define What Counts as a Change Order vs. Included Work

    Scope creep happens when the boundary between included work and extra work is unclear. For each job type, define in writing what is included in the base price and what requires a change order.

  2. 2

    Create a Standard Change Order Process Your Techs Can Execute in the Field

    Your change order process must be usable in the field. Techs need to be able to describe the additional work, generate a price, and get customer approval — all from a mobile device while on-site.

  3. 3

    Build a Field Price Book for Common Change Order Items

    Techs should not be estimating change order pricing from memory. A digital price book with pre-built pricing for common additional work items gives techs fast, consistent pricing that maintains margins.

  4. 4

    Get Written Approval Before Starting Any Change Order Work

    The single most important rule: no work starts until the change order is approved in writing. A verbal approval from a customer who is not on-site creates a dispute. A signed change order (even via digital e-sign) is a contract.

  5. 5

    Track Change Orders Separately From the Original Scope

    Invoice line items that mix original scope with change order work are disputed at higher rates. Keep change orders on separate line items so the customer can clearly see what they authorized and when.

  6. 6

    Review Change Order Approval Rate Monthly to Identify Barriers

    If customers frequently decline change orders, the issue may be pricing, communication, or how your team presents additional work. Track approval rate by job type, by tech, and by customer type.

Signs You Need to Fix This in Your Roofing Operation

Undocumented change orders are the #1 source of invoice disputes. The average disputed amount is $1,200–$4,000 per incident. At 5 disputes per month, that is $72K–$240K/year in contested revenue.

3 Mistakes Roofing Operators Make

These mistakes are the most common reasons implementations fail. Avoid them.

Doing the Work and Then Asking for Approval

Work completed before approval is granted is almost never fully collected. Customers who would have approved a change order before the work was done will often dispute the same charge after the fact.

Using Verbal Change Order Approvals

Verbal approvals are disputed on 40–60% of jobs where the customer was not present when the additional work was discovered. Written approval — even a text message reply — is far stronger.

Not Training Techs to Present Change Orders Confidently

Techs who are uncomfortable presenting additional work will undercharge or skip the change order entirely. Change order presentation is a skill that must be trained.

How We Help Roofing Operators Fix This

Reading the guide is step one. Step two is having a working solution built for your specific workflow. Here's how we do it:

1

Map Your Workflow

We study exactly where change order management happens in your roofing operation — the forms, the handoffs, the pain points.

2

Build a Working Prototype

Not a demo. Not a slide deck. A real, functional prototype that eliminates the pain point and works with your existing tools.

3

Prove It Before You Pay

You test the prototype on a real job. If it doesn't fix the problem, you don't pay. No ReKeying, guaranteed.

Skip the Steps — Get a Working Prototype for Your Roofing Operation

Tell us about your operation and we'll build you a working solution. No ReKeying. No commitment. No credit card.

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How to Manage Change Orders Professionally and Get Paid for Extra Work in Roofing | Simply Connected Systems