Solar Panel Removal &
Reinstall
Buckeye is the fastest-growing large city in the United States. We scaled crews here because the new-construction pipeline is going to roll into a reroof pipeline within ten years.
What solar D&R looks like in Buckeye.
Buckeye's population has grown from about 6,500 in 2000 to roughly 120,000 today per the mayor's published estimates, with US Census data confirming a 24.9 percent jump from 2020 to 2024 alone. Verrado, sitting on White Tank Mountain at the eastern edge of Buckeye, was one of the original DMB master plans and now carries a fully-developed downtown core, top-50-selling status (per RCLC Real Estate Advisors), and a heavy representation of energy-efficient new builds. Tartesso to the west is newer and more value-oriented. Sundance, the active-adult community, is its own separate solar profile. Buckeye's entitled land can theoretically support 1.5 million residents at full buildout, and most of the housing stock there now is post-2010 with solar-ready or solar-installed roofs from day one.
Buckeye job mix is interesting because the housing is so new. The typical Buckeye reroof we touch is not because of underlayment failure (most of these homes are too young for that) but because of hail or microburst events on the West Valley monsoon line. Verrado's older sections are starting to hit their first solar-on-tile reset cycle in 2024-2026. Tartesso work is mostly composition shingle with smaller arrays. We also handle solar sale-ready inspections at a higher rate here because Buckeye turnover among newer builds is steady and lenders want documentation when an array is part of the sale.
Buckeye partner roofers are mostly West Valley CR-42 shops staging out of Goodyear, Avondale, and Buckeye itself, plus a few Phoenix-based production roofers willing to drive Loop 303 and I-10 west for volume. The Verrado HOA architectural process is well-documented and predictable, which makes scheduling easier here than in some older HOAs.
Buckeye covers zip codes 85326 in central Buckeye, 85396 in Verrado and the eastern edge, and 85396 also covers parts of Tartesso. I-10 and Loop 303 anchor most route plans, plus the planned State Route 30 reliever and the White Tank Mountain Regional Park. Schools cover Buckeye Union High School District, Buckeye Elementary, and Saddle Mountain Unified.









