Hail season, and an install crew that can’t be slowed by January — that’s the steel pitch in two lines. Steel is the most impact-resistant of the common cladding options, it installs year-round, and it lasts 50+ years with near-zero maintenance. The trade-offs: higher upfront cost and the chance of denting.
Hail and a winter-proof schedule
Why does steel make sense in hail-prone Minnesota?
Two reasons stack up fast in the Twin Cities. First, hail: steel is the most impact-resistant of the common cladding options — it resists puncture and won’t crack or shatter the way vinyl or fiber cement can. Second, scheduling: steel installs year-round, so a January storm doesn’t have to wait for spring to get repaired. It also shrugs off temperature swings and runs near-zero on maintenance.
For an owner running a long hold on a hail-exposed building, that combination is what drives the lowest lifecycle cost despite the higher install price.
The trade-offs
What’s the catch with steel siding?
Two things. Steel costs more upfront — roughly $11–$18/sq ft installed in Minnesota — and a severe storm can dent it. Denting is a cosmetic outcome, not a structural one: steel resists puncture and cracking, but it isn’t dent-proof. Historically it also offered fewer residential-style profiles, though that selection keeps widening.
For hail expectations, the dent point is the honest framing: steel takes a visible ding where vinyl or fiber cement would crack or shatter. On a 50-year wall, most owners take the dent over a replacement on a 25-year one.
Reviewed against public source material from Ben Juncker and Craftsmans Choice, without presenting their contractor credentials as this sites own.
Cost and lifecycle
What does steel siding cost, and does it pay off?
Steel runs roughly $11–$18/sq ft installed in Minnesota — comparable to fiber cement upfront, but with the lowest lifecycle cost thanks to a 50+ year life and near-zero maintenance. On a long hold, the maintenance and replacement savings are where steel earns back the price gap.
| Factor | Steel / metal |
|---|---|
| MN cost ($/sq ft) | ~$11–$18 installed |
| Lifespan | 50+ yr |
| Hail | Most impact-resistant common option (can dent) |
| Fire | Excellent |
| Cold/freeze-thaw | Excellent (no brittleness) |
| Maintenance | Near-zero |
| Install | Year-round; specialized |
Typical Twin Cities ranges; confirm with live quotes.
How it compares
Steel vs. fiber cement vs. engineered wood?
Steel leads on hail, fire, and lifecycle maintenance; fiber cement leads on traditional resale look with a Class A rating; engineered wood leads on upfront cost and cold flex. For hail-exposed, long-hold, or low-maintenance buildings, steel is the lifecycle choice. For budget-driven or look-driven projects, the others can fit better.
| Material | Hail | Fire | Maintenance | Lifespan | Cost | Best when |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Steel | Most impact-resistant | Excellent | Near-zero | 50+ yr | $$$ | Hail-prone, long hold |
| Fiber cement (Hardie) | Moderate | Class A | Low | 50+ yr | $$$ | Fire rating + resale |
| Engineered wood (LP SmartSide) | Strong | Combustible | Low-moderate | 40–50 yr | $$ | Value + cold/hail |
See /services/fiber-cement-siding/ and /services/engineered-wood-siding/, or the full matrix at /guides/choosing-siding-material/.
FAQ
Steel & metal siding for multifamily — common questions
Q: Is steel siding worth the higher upfront cost? For hail-prone, long-hold, or low-maintenance buildings, usually yes — a 50+ year life and near-zero maintenance produce the lowest lifecycle cost. For short holds or tight upfront budgets, engineered wood or vinyl may be the better fit.
Q: Does steel siding dent in hail? A severe storm can leave cosmetic dents, but steel won’t crack, shatter, or puncture the way vinyl or fiber cement can — it’s the most impact-resistant of the common cladding options. For most owners, a dent on a 50-year wall beats cracking on a shorter-lived material.
Q: Can steel siding be installed in a Minnesota winter? Yes — steel installs year-round, where some materials are constrained by cold. That removes the winter scheduling bottleneck and is a real advantage for storm response and tight capital timelines.
Q: Is this site a steel siding contractor? No — this is an independent Minnesota commercial and multifamily siding planning and connection resource. It helps owners and managers pick a material, scope the project, and use a comparable scope when they talk with contractors.
Find the lifecycle winner for your building.
Tell us about the building, the hail exposure, and your hold strategy, and we’ll help you weigh steel against the alternatives on lifecycle cost — not just upfront price.