How to Read the Comparison Below
Before the table, it helps to understand what actually drives skylight outcomes in Markleville. The unit itself matters less than people think. Flashing quality, deck condition around the curb, attic ventilation, and installer technique matter more. A premium skylight installed poorly will leak. A mid tier unit installed with a manufacturer step flashing kit and proper ice and water shield will stay dry for two decades. That is why we look at the whole system during every free roof inspection, not just the glass.
The table compares the four scenarios we see most often when a homeowner calls us about a skylight. Costs reflect typical Markleville pricing in current dollars and assume standard asphalt shingle roofs at average pitch. Steep pitches, cathedral ceilings, and finished drywall shafts push numbers up. Read the implications section after the table carefully, because the right choice often depends on how old your roof is, not how old the skylight is.
| Scenario | Typical Cost Range | Labor Time | Lifespan After Work | Best Fit | Common Pitfalls |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| New skylight install (fixed, deck mounted) | $1,800 to $3,200 per unit | 1 day, sometimes 2 with interior shaft | 20 to 25 years with quality flashing kit | Homes with dark interior rooms, recent or new roof, unobstructed rafter bays | Framing conflicts, undersized rough opening, skipped ice and water shield |
| New skylight install (vented or solar powered) | $2,600 to $4,500 per unit | 1 to 2 days | 20 to 25 years, motor 10 to 15 | Bathrooms, kitchens, stairwells, anywhere humidity builds | Wiring runs, rain sensor placement, improper slope |
| Flashing repair and reseal | $450 to $900 | 2 to 4 hours | 3 to 8 years if unit itself is sound | Leaks traced to flashing only, unit under 15 years old, glass seal intact | Hidden deck rot, failed seal masked by sealant, recurring ice dam damage |
| Full skylight replacement (same opening) | $1,400 to $2,800 per unit | 4 to 8 hours | 20 to 25 years | Failed glass seal, cracked frame, unit over 18 years old | Matching curb sizes, coordinating with existing shingle color and age |
| Replacement during full roof replacement | Add $900 to $1,900 per unit | Folds into roof schedule | Matches new roof life | Any skylight over 12 years old when the roof is being redone | Homeowners who try to save money and regret it within 5 years |
What the Numbers Actually Mean for Your House
The most important line in that table is the last one. If you are already scheduling a full roof replacement, replacing a skylight that is more than a decade old costs a fraction of what a standalone swap would run later. The crew is on site, the shingles are off, the flashing is being rebuilt anyway, and the incremental labor is minimal. We have watched too many homeowners decline the add on, save about $1,200, then pay $2,400 three years later when the old skylight fogs or leaks onto a new ceiling. That is not a pitch. It is math we have seen play out on hundreds of Markleville roofs.
The flashing repair line is the second place homeowners misread. A $600 reseal feels like a bargain compared to a $2,500 replacement, and sometimes it is the correct move. But if the leak has been active through more than one freeze cycle, the deck under the curb is often soft. Sealant over rot buys you a season, not a decade. Our crews pull back shingles and probe the deck before quoting a repair, because quoting blind is how short warranties get written. If you suspect a leak but have not confirmed the source, our guide to roof leak detection and repair walks through the isolation steps we use in the field.
Venting and solar units deserve a separate note. In Markleville kitchens and bathrooms, a vented skylight can drop humidity enough to reduce condensation on nearby windows through winter. The motors and rain sensors are reliable, but they are electronics on a roof, so plan on a service call somewhere around year twelve. Budget accordingly. Fixed units have fewer failure points and usually outlast the warranty if the flashing was installed correctly. When a Markleville Roofing solar powered model is specified with the factory flashing kit and installed on a roof with at least 3/12 pitch, we rarely see callbacks inside the first decade. It is the mixed brand installations, where a generic flashing is forced onto a name brand curb, that fill up our service calendar.
Finally, pay attention to your attic. Poor ventilation shortens skylight life by trapping heat against the glass seal in summer and feeding ice dams in winter. We often find that a skylight problem is actually a ventilation problem wearing a different mask. Fixing the airflow sometimes extends the skylight another five years with no other work.
Sizing, Placement, and the Shaft You Do Not See
Homeowners usually focus on the skylight size, but the interior shaft between the roof deck and the ceiling does more work than the glass when it comes to daylight quality. A straight shaft delivers a tight beam of light that moves across the floor as the sun tracks. A flared shaft, where the ceiling opening is wider than the roof opening, spreads light across a larger area and softens the contrast. For narrow rooms in Markleville ranch homes, we often recommend flaring two sides of the shaft and leaving the other two straight. The drywall work adds about $400 to $700 to the project, but the daylight payoff is significant.
Placement also matters more than most guides admit. North facing skylights deliver even light with almost no heat gain, which suits offices and studios. South facing units bring warmth and glare, so we pair them with integrated blinds or low-E coated glass. East and west exposures produce the harshest summer heat load and the heaviest winter condensation, and they are the placements where we push hardest for a Markleville Roofing unit with a laminated inner pane. Talk through these tradeoffs before the hole gets cut, because a skylight in the wrong spot is an expensive lesson.
The Hidden Cost of a Cheap Skylight
The cheapest skylight is rarely the least expensive one over time. A bargain unit saves money at purchase and then spends it back in failed seals, fogged glass, and leaks that the thin warranty does not cover, often within a decade. Worse, a leak that goes undetected behind a finished ceiling can rot decking and feed mold long before the stain appears, turning a skylight problem into a roof and drywall problem. A quality unit, properly flashed, costs more up front and far less across the twenty or thirty years it stays in the roof. For a Markleville home, the durable choice is almost always the better value, and the savings on a cheap unit have a way of disappearing the first time the seal lets go. That is the calculation we walk every homeowner through before they buy, so the decision rests on the cost over the life of the unit rather than the number on the showroom tag. The light is the same either way. The difference is how many times you pay for it.