Aastro Roofing

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The Bottom Line

SK Quality Roofing is a legitimate, well-reviewed roofing company based in Delray Beach with 40+ years in business and an A+ BBB rating credentials that should be taken seriously. However, when comparing on the specific factors that matter most in South Florida’s hurricane-prone environment verified HVHZ certification, generational crew continuity, and commercial-grade experience Aastro Roofing’s 80+ years & generations of uninterrupted local operation and fully certified HVHZ status make it the more verifiably documented choice for Broward and Palm Beach County homeowners.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Sources: Company websites, Florida DBPR (myfloridalicense.com), and BBB.org profiles accessed June 2026.

CategoryAastro RoofingSK Quality Roofing
Years in Business80+ years (est. 1940s)40+ years (per website)
BBB RatingA+ Accredited (since 3/3/2017)A+ Accredited (since 9/16/2009)
HVHZ Certification✅ Fully Certified⚠️ Not Listed on Website
License #CCC1330967 (Active)CCC1336888 (Active, DBA: Filiberto Campos)
Service AreaBroward & Palm Beach CountiesPalm Beach, Broward, St. Lucie Counties
HQ Location159 NW 1st St, Deerfield Beach, FL772 SW 17th Ave, Delray Beach, FL
Free Inspection✅ Yes✅ Yes
Commercial Roofing✅ Yes⚠️ Primarily Residential (per current site)
Financing AvailableContact for details✅ Yes ($0 Down options listed)
Google Review Count4.9 stars (public profiles)300+ reviews (per own website; claims 5.0)

Key Flags to Note:

  • HVHZ Certification: Aastro’s HVHZ certification is publicly verifiable and documented. SK Quality Roofing’s website makes no reference to HVHZ certification, which is a meaningful distinction for properties in Broward County, where HVHZ standards are legally required. (Source: skqualityroofing.com, reviewed June 2026)
  • License Name Discrepancy: SK Quality Roofing’s Florida DBPR license (CCC1336888) is listed under the individual name Filiberto Campos doing business as S K Quality Roofing, Inc. whereas their website and BBB profile present the company under its trade name. This is common and legal in Florida, but worth noting when verifying contractor credentials. (Source: Florida DBPR, myfloridalicense.com)
  • Commercial Roofing: SK Quality Roofing’s current website and service menu are focused on residential roofing. Aastro Roofing’s public permit records on BuildZoom show 797 building permits including commercial renovation projects. (Source: BuildZoom)

Here’s the Dirt: Low Ratings & Public Complaints

Per the research protocol, the following table lists all publicly available negative consumer feedback (3 stars or below) and BBB complaint data found for both companies at the time of research (June 2026). Absence of data in any cell reflects the public record not an assumption.

SourceAastro Roofing — Low Ratings / ComplaintsSK Quality Roofing — Low Ratings / Complaints
Angi / HomeAdvisorNo verified ≤3-star reviews found in public Angi records at time of research.1 reviewer (Angi) reported a metal roof rusting after install; company responded disputing the claim, attributing it to superficial metal shavings from installation. 1 reviewer paid $99 for inspection and never received the promised written report. 1 HomeAdvisor reviewer stated they were in a ‘major dispute’ concerning family safety.
BBB ComplaintsBBB profile shows A+ accreditation since 3/3/2017. No complaint count listed in publicly available snippet. (Source: BBB.org)BBB profile shows A+ accreditation since 9/16/2009. No complaint count listed in publicly available snippet. (Source: BBB.org)
Google / Birdeye4.9-star rating across public review platforms. No ≤3-star reviews surfaced in research. (Source: BuildZoom, Angi)Website claims 5.0 stars across 300+ reviews. Birdeye profile (108 reviews at time of crawl) showed 4.9 stars. No individual ≤3-star Google reviews surfaced publicly in research.

What the Dirt Tells Us

Both companies carry strong overall ratings across review platforms — this comparison isn’t about one company being ‘clean’ and one being ‘problematic.’ What the data does show is a meaningful difference in scale and volume of the public record.

  • Aastro Roofing: No verified sub-4-star reviews surfaced across Angi, Google, or BBB public profiles during this research. Their 80+ year track record and $2,000,000 insurance policy (Source: BuildZoom) suggest a long-standing pattern of accountability.
  • SK Quality Roofing: Three independently documented consumer concerns were found on Angi and HomeAdvisor specifically around a metal roof rust dispute, an unfulfilled inspection report commitment, and one open safety dispute. The company’s own website also includes a testimonial noting ‘some issues on the beginning’ of a project before being resolved. These are not disqualifying, but they represent the type of post-storm communication gaps that matter most when underlayment or flashing failures emerge weeks after a job is complete.

In South Florida’s volatile weather environment, the gap between a resolved and an unresolved post-install complaint can translate directly into hidden water intrusion, structural rot, or denied insurance claims.

What Homeowners Can’t See

A finished roof looks the same from the street whether the underlayment is properly lapped, the flashing is correctly seated at every valley and penetration, and the fastener patterns meet HVHZ load requirements or not. The failure points that cause catastrophic roof damage during a South Florida hurricane are almost entirely invisible after installation is complete.

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While SK Quality Roofing has handled many standard residential projects successfully, public consumer feedback from Angi and HomeAdvisor highlights at least one documented instance of a post-install material dispute (the rusting metal roof case) and an unfulfilled inspection documentation commitment. According to public consumer feedback, these types of post-project communication gaps are precisely the scenarios that become most consequential when a hidden underlayment failure or storm damage claim surfaces months later.

  • HVHZ-certified contractors must document specific fastener patterns, Miami-Dade NOA-approved materials, and secondary water barrier compliance. Non-HVHZ work in Broward County can result in failed inspections, voided manufacturer warranties, and rejected insurance claims.
  • A secondary water barrier (SWB), a self-adhering membrane beneath the primary roof covering, is mandatory in HVHZ zones. Its proper installation is invisible after the fact, making contractor certification and crew accountability the only reliable safeguard.
  • Roof flashing failures account for a significant percentage of South Florida post-storm leaks. Generational crews who have repaired storm damage on the same roofing

Aastro Roofing

1 article(s) published
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Aastro Roofing

1 article(s) published
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