RoofQuantiX charges per report with no subscription fees, no setup costs, and no minimum commitments. Here's the full price list for all report types:
| Report Type | Price | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Residential | $29 | Single-family homes, townhomes, small duplexes |
| Commercial | $49 | Flat and low-slope commercial roofs, larger footprints |
| Blueprint | $55 | New construction, architectural coordination, CAD diagrams |
| MultiFamily | $85 | Apartment complexes, HOA communities, multi-building portfolios |
| Siding | $75 | Exterior wall measurement for siding replacement |
Report pricing at RoofQuantiX is based on property type and size classification, not on roof complexity, pitch, number of planes, or geographic location. You pay the same $29 for a simple gable roof as for a complex multi-hip residential roof.
Across the broader industry, the factors that typically influence aerial report pricing include:
A single-family residential property is fundamentally different from a 50-unit apartment complex. Commercial properties often have larger footprints and require more processing time. The price tiers reflect this difference — $29 for residential, $49 for commercial, $85 for multifamily.
Blueprint reports ($55) cost more than standard aerial reports because they include CAD-style diagramming and additional detail — pitch diagrams, elevation views, and dimensioned drawings suitable for architectural coordination. This additional production work justifies the higher price point.
Some report providers charge a premium for express delivery. At RoofQuantiX, the pricing structure is straightforward — see the pricing page for current delivery tier pricing. Express delivery is available at a modest premium over economy.
The industry's dominant providers (like EagleView) operate on subscription models where you pay a monthly or annual fee for access to a certain volume of reports. The per-report cost can appear lower on paper, but you pay whether you use the reports or not. RoofQuantiX's pay-per-report model means you only pay when you actually need a report — no wasted subscription costs during slow months.
No Hidden Fees
RoofQuantiX pricing is all-inclusive. No account setup fees, no monthly minimums, no cancellation fees. You pay the listed price per report, and that's it.
Contractors ordering 10 or more reports per month qualify for bulk pricing. The more reports you order, the lower the per-report cost. This benefits:
Contact RoofQuantiX directly or visit our bulk pricing page for current volume tiers. For contractors doing 50+ reports per month, the per-report savings can be substantial.
Let's be direct: the question isn't whether you can afford a $29 report. The question is whether the business outcome justifies the cost. Here are three ROI scenarios:
You manually measure a 28-square residential roof and underestimate by 2 squares — a 7% error, well within the range of manual measurement variability. You realize mid-job that you're short materials. Emergency same-day shingle delivery costs $150 rush fee plus $220 for 2 extra squares plus 2 hours of crew downtime at $180/hour = $710 extra cost. The $29 report would have prevented this.
Two contractors bid on the same job. One shows up with a handwritten estimate. You show up with a printed aerial report with exact measurements, a roof diagram, and a detailed material breakdown. The homeowner perceives you as more professional and more thorough. On a $9,000 job with a $1,500 profit margin, winning this bid over the competitor returns $1,471 net (after report cost). You only need to win one extra job per year to justify months of report spending.
Your estimator makes $55,000/year — roughly $26.50/hour fully loaded. A manual measurement visit takes 90 minutes including drive time. That's $40 in labor cost plus fuel. An aerial report costs $29. You save $11 per property plus fuel — and your estimator gets 90 minutes back to do higher-value work. Across 15 properties per month, that's $165/month in saved labor just on the time delta.
Order your first RoofQuantiX residential report for $29. No account required, no subscription. Delivered in 2-12 hours to any US address.
Order a $29 ReportThe aerial roof measurement report market in 2026 includes several providers. Here's a general market comparison based on publicly available information:
For contractors who don't want to be locked into a monthly subscription or who have variable report volume month to month, the pay-per-report model is typically more cost-effective. See our full EagleView alternative comparison for a detailed side-by-side analysis.
Many contractors order reports only for new leads — not for every job. Others order on every single estimate. Here's a framework for deciding:
Most high-performing roofing businesses report that ordering reports on all qualified leads — not just confirmed jobs — increases their close rate because they walk into every appointment better prepared and more professional-looking than competitors.
See all report types, delivery speeds, and volume discount tiers on the RoofQuantiX pricing page.
View PricingProfessional aerial roof measurement reports from $29. Delivered in as fast as 2 hours to any US address. No site visit required.
A residential roof measurement report from RoofQuantiX costs $29. This includes all measurements — total area, pitch per plane, ridge, hip, valley, eave, rake, penetrations, and waste factor — delivered in 2-12 hours.
Yes. RoofQuantiX offers bulk pricing for contractors ordering 10 or more reports per month. Volume discounts reduce the per-report cost, making high-volume operations even more cost-effective.
No. RoofQuantiX does not require a subscription. You pay per report ordered — no monthly fees, no minimum commitments, and no setup costs.
On a 25-square residential job worth $8,000-$12,000, a $29 report that prevents a single material over-order or under-order of 2 squares easily saves $200-$400. The ROI is 700-1400% on every job where measurement accuracy matters.
Detailed pricing and feature comparison between RoofQuantiX and EagleView.
EducationWhat drives report accuracy and why affordable doesn't mean inaccurate.
EducationCompare cost, accuracy, and time for both measurement methods.