Roofing Nail Guns
& Fasteners for Pros
Coil nailers, cap staplers, siding guns, and the parts that keep them running — built for working roofers and serious DIYers.
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The brands working roofers actually buy.
Featured Products
Hand-picked by our pros

Metabo HPT
Metabo HPT NV45AB2 1-3/4" Coil Roofing Nailer 15° Pneumatic Pro Series
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Bostitch
Bostitch Coil Roofing Nailer 15° Pneumatic 7-Year Warranty 3/4" to 1-3/4", RN46
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Milwaukee
Milwaukee M18 FUEL 2909-20 Cordless Coil Roofing Nailer - No Hose, No Compressor
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DeWalt
DeWalt 20V MAX DCN45RNB Cordless Coil Roofing Nailer - Battery Powered, No Compressor
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MAX USA
MAX USA MAX CN445R3 SuperRoofer Coil Roofing Nailer, 3/4" to 1-3/4" | Pro Roofing Tool
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Stinger
Stinger 3/8" Crown x 3/8" Leg Galv. Staples w/Caps | Contractor Pack
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Stinger
Stinger CH38A Auto Hammer Cap Stapler, 3/8" | Contractor Pack
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SureFit
RidgeLock 80/12 - 1/2" Leg 20ga. Staple Galvanized | Contractor Pack
View productGuides, Calculators & Buying Help
Everything a roofing crew needs to choose the right nailer, nails, and setup.
Roofing Nail Gun Not Firing? 8 Fixes
Diagnose a dead roofer in five minutes — the eight problems that cause 95% of misfires.
Read GuideHow Many Nails Per Square? + Calculator
The math on 4-nail and 6-nail patterns plus a calculator that gives you the box count.
Read GuideWhat Size Air Compressor Do You Need?
CFM, tank size, and the compressor specs that actually keep a roofing crew firing.
Read GuideBostitch RN46 & BRN175A: Full Guide
The two pneumatic Bostitch roofers, what each one is for, and how to keep them alive.
Read GuideSiding vs Roofing Nailer: Key Differences
Why a siding gun won't drive a coil roofing nail and vice versa — head shape, angle, and load.
Read GuideShop Bostitch Roofing Nailers
RN46-1, BRN175A, replacement parts, and the O-ring kits that keep them firing.
Read GuideHow to choose the right roofing nailer
Picking a nailer is mostly about the job in front of you. For asphalt shingles, underlayment, and felt paper, a coil nailer fits 7/8" to 1-3/4" smooth or ring-shank fasteners and reloads fast — the standard setup on most production crews. Cap nailers and cap staplers are built for synthetic underlayment and housewrap where a wide plastic cap holds the material against wind uplift.
Pneumatic vs. cordless
Pneumatic guns from Bostitch, MAX, and Metabo HPT stay the lightest in the hand and never run out of power, but you'll need a compressor and a 50-ft hose snaking up the ladder. Cordless models from DeWalt and Milwaukee skip the hose entirely — handy for repairs, ridge caps, and small jobs where dragging air isn't worth it. Battery life is usually rated in shingles per charge rather than nails.
Depth, triggers, and shingle guides
Look for tool-free depth adjustment so you can dial nails flush without overdriving and tearing the shingle mat. A selectable trigger (sequential for accuracy, bump-fire for speed) is standard on pro models. A built-in shingle guide helps you nail the exposure line consistently across a course.
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