The people behind the promise
Meet the family standard behind your roof.
Mitch and Clay built Ketron Roofing around a straightforward idea: serve Kootenai County homeowners carefully, communicate plainly, and recommend the work a roof actually needs.
- Family-owned
- Residential only
- Kootenai County only
A family affair, made more exact
Local does not have to mean informal.
Your roof protects one of the biggest investments you will ever make. Ketron’s version of a family business is warm and accessible, but it is also organized: a clear appointment, a careful inspection, a written scope, communication through the work, and a clean handoff.
Mitch and Clay are the brothers behind the Ketron name. Ketron has been family-owned since 2016 and focuses on residential roofing for homeowners in Kootenai County.
That focus leaves room for an honest answer. If a repair or a roof-care visit is the sensible move, the conversation can begin there. If replacement is warranted, the homeowner gets a direct path to discuss architectural shingles or standing seam metal without being pushed through a generic sales funnel.
Choose the easiest way to start a conversation, or read how the 17-point roof and attic inspection helps separate symptoms from causes.
The Ketron Standard
Protect the property. Control the work. Stay accountable.
This is the operating promise every service page points back to.
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01
Protect what is below
Before roof work begins, the plan accounts for landscaping, exterior finishes, access, and the parts of your home that should not become collateral damage.
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02
Clean in three passes
The cleanup expectation is built into the work: crew pickup, magnetic fastener sweep, and a final walkthrough rather than one rushed pass at the end.
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03
Stand behind the answer
Ketron keeps the conversation open after the work. Questions get answered, the scope stays understandable, and a concern is treated as something to resolve.
A clear service ladder
Start with the condition, not the biggest project.
Ketron offers roof repair, roof care, a structured roof-and-attic review, replacement, and standing seam metal. The useful next step depends on the roof as it exists and the question the homeowner needs answered.
Smaller roofing needs do not get ignored. Repair, roof care, and the 17-point inspection create practical options when a complete replacement is not the right answer. The result is a service model built around stewardship instead of a one-size-fits-all sale.
A clear next step
Tell Mitch and Clay what is happening with your roof.
Choose a time for a real conversation, or see automatic shingle and metal planning ranges for your home.