Last updated: April 23, 2026
Skylights in Mission Valley, CA.
Skylights for Mission Valley homes. We connect you with a vetted local roofer from our San Diego County network for a free quote. A skylight transforms a dark room. A badly flashed skylight turns the same room into a water damage claim.
Why is skylights different in Central San Diego?
East County skylight installs emphasize glass selection, laminated or tempered glass with solar-control coating reduces the summer heat gain. Frosted or acid-etched glass for skylights that catch direct sun.
What's included in skylights in Mission Valley?
- Velux fixed (FS), vented manual (VS), electric (VSE), and solar (VSS) skylights
- Sun Tunnel (TMF/TWF) installation for interior rooms without ceiling access
- Deck-mounted and curb-mounted installations
- Flashing kit installation (shingle, tile, metal specific)
- Skylight replacement when existing units are past life
- Leak repair on existing skylights
- Interior light shaft construction and drywall coordination
- Electric and solar skylight controller setup
When does a Mission Valley home need skylights?
- Dark interior room or hallway without window access
- Bathroom without adequate ventilation (vented skylight solves both)
- Existing skylight is 20+ years old and showing signs of failure
- Active leak around an existing skylight
- Remodel adding attic conversion or vaulted ceiling
- Kitchen or great room needing natural light addition
Skylight installation in San Diego: the decisions that matter
Why the flashing kit is more important than the skylight itself
The most common skylight failure in San Diego is not the unit — it's the flashing. Velux, the dominant manufacturer, has been making watertight skylights for 80 years. The products are excellent. What fails is the integration between the skylight frame and the surrounding roof surface, and that integration depends entirely on matching the flashing kit to the roof type and installing it correctly. Velux makes four flashing kits: EW (shingle and shake), EDW and ED (tile — curb mounted to prevent tile interference), EMD (metal — for standing seam or corrugated), and custom EFW for unusual applications. Using the wrong kit is the single most common installation mistake. An EW kit installed into a tile roof will fail within 3 to 5 rain seasons because the shingle-specific saddles don't integrate with tile course heights and lapping geometry. The correct installation sequence matters as much as the right kit: step-flashing courses must interleave with roofing courses above, the head flashing must lap over the uphill course, and the sill flashing must integrate with the drainage plane below. Skipping any step creates a future leak path. We use Velux-specified kits matched to the roof type on every install. Our crews are Velux certified. This is not a corner-cutting category.
Deck-mounted vs. curb-mounted skylights: the right choice for San Diego
Velux's residential line comes in two mounting types. Deck-mounted (VS, FS, VSS series) sits directly against the roof deck with integrated flashing. These are the standard residential choice and work well on shingle, shake, and most low-profile tile. Deck-mounted is slightly lower-profile and suits most California ranch and contemporary homes. Curb-mounted (FCM series) sits on a raised wood frame (curb) built into the roof structure. Required for flat and very low-slope sections (under 15 degrees), and recommended for tile where the tile thickness creates height conflicts with deck-mounted flashing kits. Curb-mounted also has an advantage in snow (rare in San Diego but relevant for mountain-area homes in Julian, Pine Valley, or Big Bear-adjacent properties): the raised curb prevents debris and water from banking against the frame. Sun Tunnels (TMF and TWF) are a different category — rigid or flexible tubes that transfer light from a rooftop collector to an interior room without any structural change to the ceiling. The rigid version (TMF) works for rooms directly below the roof; the flexible version (TWF) can make multiple bends. Excellent option for hallways, closets, and bathrooms where a full skylight would require rafter cutting. Installed in 2 to 4 hours typically, with minimal interior disruption.
What do Mission Valley homeowners ask about skylights?
How fast can a Mission Valley roofer get out for skylights?
We can connect Mission Valley homeowners with a vetted local roofer same-day on most weekdays. Morning slots fill fastest after a storm, so call before 10 a.m. for the best same-day match. After-hours emergency requests are routed to a roofer in our network with 24/7 dispatch.
What does skylights cost in Mission Valley?
Fixed skylight from $1,850 · solar-powered from $3,500 installed. Pricing reflects what roofers in our San Diego County network typically charge. The roofer we connect you with handles the final estimate after a free on-site inspection. There is no mileage upcharge for Mission Valley.
How does Mission Valley's climate affect this service?
Mission Valley roofing is heavily commercial, Fashion Valley, Westfield, Hotel Circle, and Snapdragon Stadium-adjacent retail dominate the call mix. Single-ply TPO and modified bitumen flat-roof work are the bread and butter here.. East County skylight installs emphasize glass selection, laminated or tempered glass with solar-control coating reduces the summer heat gain.
How much does skylight installation cost?
Fixed deck-mounted Velux: $1,850–$2,800 installed with proper flashing. Vented manual: $2,400–$3,400. Solar-powered vented: $3,500–$4,800 (rain sensor closes automatically, 30% federal tax credit applies). Tubular sun tunnels: $950–$1,400. Replacement of a failing skylight: $1,200–$2,200.
Why do skylights leak?
Almost always a flashing issue, not the skylight itself. The #1 leak cause: the flashing kit wasn't matched to the roofing material (shingle vs. tile vs. metal), or the counter-flashing wasn't properly integrated with the courses of roofing above. We use Velux flashing kits specific to your roof type and install per manufacturer spec.
Where we work in Mission Valley
Homeowners who hired us for skylights in Mission Valley
Examples of the kind of feedback we work to earn on every job. Verified reviews from real customers live on our Google Business Profile and Yelp pages.
Our 1990s Spanish tile roof was leaking in three spots. Called Top Pro and they had a tile specialist out the next morning. Instead of pushing a full tear-off, the roofer they matched us with did a lift-and-relay with new underlayment and salvaged 90% of the original tiles. Crew was meticulous. Passed inspection on the first visit.
Was about to pull the trigger on a full tear-off and reroof but wanted one more opinion. Top Pro connected me with a local roofer the same day. He was the only one who actually pulled up into the attic to check for rot before quoting. Found damage the others missed. Fair price. Crew was on time every day. Saved me from picking the wrong bid.
Live three blocks from the ocean. Salt killed our old shingle roof in 12 years. Top Pro matched us with a roofer who actually does coastal metal installs. He put down stone-coated steel with stainless fasteners and coordinated the HOA design review paperwork himself. Clean lines, clean job site. No shopping around required.
Need skylights in Mission Valley?
Call to get matched with a vetted local roofer. Free same-day quotes on most repairs, fast scheduling on full roofs.