Roofers in Glastonbury
A historic market town in the heart of the Somerset Levels, known for the Tor and a high concentration of period and listed buildings.
Same-day response — we're based just outside town.
Roofing services we offer in Glastonbury
Most jobs we take on locally are on older homes around Wick, Bove Town and Northload Street where the existing roof has had decades of patch-up work.
Roof Repairs in Glastonbury
Honest, properly diagnosed roof repairs in Glastonbury — fixed once, fixed right.
Read more →Emergency Roof Repairs in Glastonbury
24-hour roof emergency response in Glastonbury — make-safe first, full repair planned next.
Read more →New Roofs in Glastonbury
Full new roof installations in Glastonbury, built with quality materials and finished properly.
Read more →Flat Roofs in Glastonbury
Modern flat roof installations and replacements across Glastonbury — EPDM, GRP and felt.
Read more →Slate Roofs in Glastonbury
Traditional slate roofing in Glastonbury — installation, repair and restoration done sympathetically.
Read more →Tiled Roofs in Glastonbury
Tiled roof installation, replacement and repair across Glastonbury, finished with modern dry-fix detailing.
Read more →Chimney Repairs in Glastonbury
Chimney repointing, re-flaunching, flashing and rebuilds in Glastonbury, finished to last.
Read more →Lead Work in Glastonbury
Traditional lead flashings, valleys and details across Glastonbury — properly dressed and properly finished.
Read more →Fascia, Soffit & Guttering in Glastonbury
Fascia, soffit and gutter replacement in Glastonbury — water in the right place, woodwork protected.
Read more →Repointing in Glastonbury
Properly specified repointing in Glastonbury — lime where it should be, cement where it should be.
Read more →
Local context
Stone cottages, Victorian terraces around the town centre, post-war semis on the outskirts and a mix of barn conversions in the surrounding villages.
Damp, low-lying terrain around the Levels keeps moisture in the air for long stretches of the year, which is hard on tired mortar, lead and timber rooflines.
Large parts of the town centre fall inside the Glastonbury Conservation Area, so visible roof changes often need to use sympathetic materials.
Postcodes covered: BA6.
About working in Glastonbury
Glastonbury sits in Somerset, served by Somerset Council, with a postcode of BA6. Just off the A39, with the M5 (J23) around 15 minutes away at Bridgwater, which is how we reach jobs in Wick and Bove Town and the wider Wells and Bridgwater area quickly.
- Local authority
- Somerset Council
- County
- Somerset
- Postcode district
- BA6
- Transport
- Just off the A39, with the M5 (J23) around 15 minutes away at Bridgwater
- Regional centre
- Wells and Bridgwater
Local building stock includes listed period cottages, Victorian terraces, post-war semis, barn conversions — the kinds of roof we work on day in, day out across Glastonbury.
Where we cover around Glastonbury
Just off the A39, with the M5 (J23) around 15 minutes away at Bridgwater. Our typical service radius from Glastonbury is around 6 miles, comfortably reaching the Wells and Bridgwater area.
Recent work in Glastonbury
Slate RoofsConservation-area re-roof in natural slate
Bove Town, BA6 · Glastonbury
Full strip and re-slate completed in 9 days with matched reclaimed slate.
Nearby towns we also cover
Sorted by real distance from Glastonbury.
Areas of Glastonbury we cover
Roofing across Glastonbury by neighbourhood and postcode sector.
- Roofers in WickBA6 8 · about a mile and a half north-east of Glastonbury town centre
- Roofers in Bove TownBA6 8 · five minutes' walk north-east of the High Street
- Roofers in NorthloadBA6 9 · the heart of Glastonbury, just off the High Street
- Roofers in BeckeryBA6 9 · about a mile west of the town centre, towards the A39
- Roofers in EdgarleyBA6 8 · around a mile south-east of the town centre, towards Wells
Street-level notes from Glastonbury
What we actually see on these roofs, by area and era.
Bove Town
Listed cottages with original lias-stone walls and natural slate — lime mortar only on visible work, dry-fix dressed in if it can stay hidden.
Northload Street
Town-centre shopfronts with hidden rear roofs above flats — access is from rear yards via Magdalene Street, scaffold goes in piece by piece.
Wick Lane
Tight rural lanes — full-size tipper won't get up most of them, we price for a small grab and a longer day.
Wells Road / Coursing Batch
1960s–70s semis with original concrete interlocking tiles, most now in their second set of fixings — nail-sickness is common here.
Beckery Old Road
Industrial-era brick stock with low-pitch roofs over former workshops — usually flat felt or modern EPDM rather than tile.
Dating the roof on your property
- Pre-1850Lias-stone walls, oak rafters, natural slate or hand-made clay tileLime-mortar bedding only; matched reclaimed materials on visible elevations; almost always inside the Conservation Area.
- 1880–1910Brick or stone Victorian terraces with original natural slateNail-sickness is the dominant issue — most original fixings are at the end of their life now.
- 1930s–50sInter-war and post-war semis with concrete double-Roman tileFelt is past its life on any roof not re-covered since the 1990s — re-roof rather than patch when leaks recur.
- 1970s–80sEstate-built semis with cement-bedded angular ridgesRidge re-bedding to high-bond mortar or dry-fix is the most common single job we do on this stock.
What we see by season in Glastonbury
- AutumnLevels mist holds moisture against north slopes — moss thickens fast on properties backing onto open ground.
- WinterWind off the Levels drives rain horizontally — chimney back-gutters and lead apron failures show up first.
- SpringFreeze-thaw at the end of February cracks tired ridge bedding — most ridge re-bed quotes come in March.
- SummerLong dry spells shrink timber rooflines on south-facing terraces — gutter brackets pull, water tracks behind fascia.
Local questions specific to Glastonbury
- Do I need conservation consent for roof work in central Glastonbury?
- Inside the Glastonbury Conservation Area (most of the High Street, Bove Town, Northload and Magdalene Street) like-for-like material replacement is usually approved without separate consent, but any change of material or visible profile needs listed building or planning consent through Somerset Council.
- What's the typical roof spec for a Bove Town cottage?
- Natural slate or matched reclaimed clay tile, lime-mortar bedding, dressed Code 5 lead at all flashings and Code 4 at minor details. Cement and synthetic alternatives don't read right and rarely get past conservation.
- How does the Tor affect roofs nearby?
- Properties up Bove Town and Wellhouse Lane are noticeably more wind-exposed — we always quote heavier ridge fixings (clipped dry-fix or high-bond mortar) on properties within sight of the Tor path.
Roofing guides relevant to homes in this area
Plain-English diagnostic and decision guides — what we'd actually tell you at the kitchen table.
Local roofers ready to help in Glastonbury
Tell us what you need on your roof in Glastonbury and we'll get back to you with honest advice and a clear quote.
