Based in Hythe on the Waterside and working across Southampton, the New Forest and out to Winchester and Salisbury. Not sure if we cover you? Give us a call and ask, the chances are we do.
Hythe is home. Shoreside Roofing is based here on the Waterside, so in Hythe you get a genuinely local roofer, not one travelling in.
Dibden Purlieu is five minutes from our base, and its bungalow and chalet roofs under the forest-edge trees keep us busy with moss, gutters and repairs.
Marchwood mixes an older village core with big modern estates, so the work runs from tired roofs on period cottages to repairs and rooflines on newer builds.
Totton is just across the water from us, and its interwar semis and the Victorian terraces around Eling are reaching the age where re-roofs make sense.
Fawley sits at the exposed end of the Waterside, and its older cottages and refinery-era terraces take the Solent weather head-on.
Holbury’s post-war semis and bungalows are prime candidates for re-roofs, fascia renewals and moss scraping, and we are only minutes away.
Blackfield’s bungalows and chalet homes towards Langley and Lepe are a short run from our base, which is handy when a leak needs looking at fast.
Beaulieu’s estate cottages and listed period homes call for careful, sympathetic roofing in slate and tile, which is exactly how we like to work.
Lyndhurst’s Victorian villas and arts-and-crafts houses sit in the heart of the National Park, where matching materials and a sympathetic job matter.
Brockenhurst’s cottages and substantial Victorian villas are classic New Forest roofing: slate, plain tile and plenty of tree cover dropping debris on them.
Lymington’s Georgian townhouses and quayside cottages face the Solent weather square on, and period roofs here deserve a proper job.
New Milton’s 1930s bungalows and the clifftop homes at Barton take real coastal exposure, so sound fixings and flashings matter here more than most places.
Southampton’s Victorian and Edwardian terraces in Shirley, Portswood and Bitterne are bread-and-butter work for us, from slipped slates to full re-roofs.
Eastleigh’s railway-town terraces and modern estates are an easy run up from the Waterside for repairs, re-roofs and roofline work.
Romsey’s period cottages and Victorian villas around the Abbey suit the tile, slate and leadwork we do best.
Winchester has one of the heaviest listed stocks in Hampshire, and roofing period homes here is about matching materials and doing the job right.
Salisbury is the Wiltshire side of our patch, and its Georgian, Victorian and medieval-core homes get the same careful treatment as the rest.
Tell us where you are and what the roof needs and we’ll come out for a free look.
Tell us where the job is and what it involves and we’ll come back to you with a free quote.