CHARLOTTE · 1.13M POPULATION
ROOF10X Permit Intel covers every roofing permit issued by Mecklenburg County Land Use & Environmental Services. We index 17,400 permits a year, score them by intent, and resolve owner contact data so your reps in Charlotte are calling real homeowners with real projects in flight.
Continuous scrape of Mecklenburg County Land Use & Environmental Services — every new roofing permit indexed within 24 hours of filing.
Each permit scored by intent: re-roof, repair, new construction, insurance claim. Filter your Charlotte pipeline to only the calls worth making.
Phone, email, and mailing address resolved against parcel data. No more cold-calling random LLCs.
Median time from permit filing to indexed-in-your-CRM is under 6 hours. P95 inside 24 hours, even during North Carolina's peak storm season.
Mecklenburg County files roughly 17,400roofing permits per year — that’s about 1,450 per month on average. Against 1,080 licensed roofing contractors in the county, the work-to-shop ratio comes out to ~16 permits per contractor per year (balanced for new entrants). Mecklenburg County accounts for 31.3% of North Carolina’s tracked permit volume across 5 ROOF10X-covered counties — ranked #2 of 5 in North Carolina by filing volume.
Peak filing month for Mecklenburg County is MAY at roughly 2,248 permits — 244% higher than the JAN trough of 653. Shops staffed for the MAY peak typically run lean from DEC-JAN unless they cross-sell into the storm-tracker pipeline.
All roofing permits in Mecklenburg County are issued through Mecklenburg County Land Use & Environmental Services. ROOF10X indexes their public records inside 24 hours — median freshness in the pipeline is under 6 hours from filing to your CRM, with owner skiptrace and intent scoring pre-attached.
Mecklenburg County runs a balanced contractor market. The ~16-permit-per-shop ratio gives room for differentiation through speed and storm-canvass discipline.
Live in your workspace inside ten minutes — pre-loaded with the last 90 days of Mecklenburg County permits, owner skiptrace, and intent scoring.