P
Permit Prep

Synthetic tile + metal gap sample

See the packet gaps that slow tile and metal re-roof filings.

This sample shows how the $99 Florida Re-Roof Packet Check flags two higher-friction assemblies before filing: tile and metal. It highlights missing roof-system details, Product Approval / NOA matching questions, and handoff notes for the authorized contractor.

Synthetic example only. Not a real job, not a permit packet, not legal/code advice, and not an approval guarantee.

Packet-readiness memo

Sample findings

Values below are synthetic. A real paid check reopens current public sources and uses the contractor-provided job address, scope, quote, products, and roof-system details.

BlockedScope has two assembliesThe quote mentions tile on the main roof and standing-seam metal over the porch, but the packet does not yet separate manufacturer, product, Florida Product Approval / NOA, installation method, slope, and attachment details for each assembly.
MissingRoof-system fieldsAsk for deck type, slope, roof mean height, HVHZ status if applicable, underlayment, tile fastening/adhesive method, metal panel attachment, starter/hip-ridge accessories, and whether existing deck repairs are included.
Needs matchProduct Approval / NOA rowsMarketing names alone are not enough. The memo asks the office to match the actual submitted product row, approved assembly, expiration/status, and manufacturer installation instructions before portal upload.
HandoffContractor responsibility linePermit Prep can organize the packet-readiness memo and missing-info list. The licensed contractor remains responsible for filing, signatures, fees, supervision, code compliance, and final approval.

Why this matters for a first paid pilot

Tile and metal jobs are good proof points because they expose the exact admin friction this offer sells against: product-document matching, assembly-specific details, and preventable back-and-forth before a contractor files.