The median Palm Springs home was built in 1978. That's a city full of roofs in their second or third cycle — storm-tested, sun-cooked, and due. Quillus mails the 100 homes nearest your last job — with a satellite view of their own roof — within 24 hours.
No card required · a free demo card, mailed to you
Measured from the Quillus address map and U.S. Census data — the same numbers the product runs on.
Mailable homes
Across 33 Census block groupsTypical 100-home radius
Median distance to the 100th-nearest home, sampled from real addressesHomes per sq mi
Approximate — Census land areaMedian home value
Median year built
The age of the roof deck under the shinglesOwner-occupied
The reader usually owns the roofThe roof stock
With a median build year of 1978, Palm Springs's typical roof deck has carried at least one full shingle cycle, often two. When one house on a 1978-era street replaces, the rest of the street is staring at the same actuarial table.
The street math
Palm Springs runs dense — roughly 6,159 homes per square mile. Around a typical Palm Springs job site, the 100 nearest homes sit within about 380 feet — we measured it against our address map, not a ZIP-code guess. On streets this tight, one job is visible from fifty porches, and a postcard lands while the dumpster's still out front.
The customer
The median Palm Springs home is worth $276,200. 50.3% owner-occupancy means a healthy mix — homeowners who decide on the spot, plus landlords who own several roofs at once.
See the full walkthrough on the neighborhood marketing for roofers page — or try it with your last job's address.
Enter the job-site address. Quillus pulls the 100 physically closest Palm Springs homes from its address map — the actual street, not the whole ZIP.
Each neighbor gets a postcard with your finished job on the front and a satellite view of their own roof on the back — in mailboxes while your sign is still in the yard.
Every card carries its own QR code tied to one address. See which neighbors looked, when, and follow up on the warm ones.
23,046 mailable residential addresses carry a Palm Springs mailing address in the Quillus map (33 Census block groups). You don't mail all of them — Quillus finds the 100 homes physically closest to a job you just finished and mails only those, so every card lands on a street that watched your crew work.
Close. We sampled real Palm Springs addresses against our map: the 100 nearest homes around a typical job site sit within about 380 feet (115 meters). That's the same street and the next one over — not a ZIP-code blast across town. That distance is the campaign's proximity radius — the working unit of proximity mail marketing.
Yes. The median Palm Springs home was built in 1978, which puts the typical roof in its second or third shingle cycle — prime replacement territory.
The median Palm Springs home is valued at $276,200; 50.3% of occupied homes are owner-occupied; median household income is $72,000. In plain terms: real equity in the house, and the decision-maker usually lives under the roof you would be replacing.
Inside 24 hours. Finish the tear-off, snap the photo, pick the 100 nearest homes on the map, and the cards are printed and in the mail stream the same day — in Palm Springs mailboxes while your sign is still in the yard.
Two places: the Quillus address map (155M+ geo-located U.S. addresses — the Palm Springs home count and street-distance figures are measured from it directly) and the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey 5-year estimates (2024 vintage) for home values, build years, and occupancy. Figures are city-level aggregates, refreshed when new ACS data ships.
Try Quillus with the address of your last job. See the block. Mail yourself a free demo card.
Try the demo
Proximity Mail Marketing for the trades. Built in Ohio. Mail in 24 hours. Tracked per card.
Product
Company