The short answer

Architectural shingles last roughly twice as long as 3-tab shingles in Maryland's climate, cost about 20-30% more, look significantly better, and carry better warranties. For almost every homeowner reading this, architectural is the right answer.

The longer answer — and the cases where 3-tab still makes sense — below.

3-tab shingles: what they are

3-tab shingles are the classic, flat, single-layer asphalt shingles you see on a lot of older homes. Each shingle has three "tabs" cut into it, creating the appearance of three separate shingles in a row. They were the standard residential roofing product from the 1960s through the early 2000s, and they're still available everywhere.

Typical 3-tab specs:

  • Lifespan: 15-20 years in the Mid-Atlantic (less near the coast)
  • Wind rating: 60 MPH standard, 70 MPH with high-wind installation
  • Warranty: typically 20-25 years (prorated)
  • Cost: roughly $1.50-$2.00 per square foot installed

Architectural shingles: what they are

Architectural (also called "dimensional" or "laminated") shingles are multi-layer asphalt shingles with a tapered, three-dimensional appearance. They look more like cedar shake or slate from the street, and they're significantly thicker and heavier than 3-tabs.

Typical architectural specs:

  • Lifespan: 30-50 years in the Mid-Atlantic
  • Wind rating: 110-130 MPH on impact-rated lines
  • Warranty: 30 years to lifetime (non-prorated on premium lines)
  • Cost: roughly $2.00-$3.50 per square foot installed

Why architectural wins for Maryland specifically

Three Maryland-specific factors push almost every honest contractor to recommend architectural:

  1. Humidity and algae: Our summers grow moss and algae fast. Premium architectural lines include copper or zinc strips that fight algae growth. Most 3-tab lines do not.
  2. Freeze-thaw: The Mid-Atlantic gets 20-40 freeze-thaw cycles per winter. Thinner 3-tab mats crack and lift faster than thicker architectural mats.
  3. Wind events: Derechos, Nor'easters, and remnant hurricanes regularly produce 60+ MPH winds. 3-tab is the first product to lift and tear. Architectural's heavier mat and stronger seal strip hold significantly better.

When 3-tab still makes sense

  • You're listing the house in 6-12 months and just need to pass inspection
  • Detached garage, shed, or outbuilding where you don't care about appearance or longevity
  • Matching an existing 3-tab roof for a partial replacement (rare; usually full replacement is the better call)

For your primary residence: skip 3-tab. The total cost-of-ownership math is not close.

Brands worth installing

We install GAF Timberline (Timberline HDZ is the workhorse for residential), CertainTeed Landmark, and Owens Corning Duration. All three are top-tier manufacturers with strong warranty programs. Brand matters less than installation quality — but those three are the safest defaults.

What the cost difference looks like

On a typical 2,000 sq ft Calvert County roof, the architectural upgrade adds roughly $1,500-$3,500 over 3-tab. Spread over a 30-year roof life vs. an 18-year roof life, you save money the moment you cross year 19 — and you spend that decade with a roof that looks dramatically better.

Want a real number for your home?

Book a free on-site inspection and we'll write you a line-item estimate with both options. No pressure to upgrade — just clarity on what each one actually costs.