Common Roofing Problems: Warped Flashing
Work With the Best Roofing Contractors in Central Texas
Quality is at the heart of our Austin roofing company in every project we take on. Contact our experienced Central Texas roofers for a same-day, pressure-free inspection. Call 512-375-3654 to book your free inspection.
If you need a new roof installed, LOA is the roofing company to call! Our roofing experts are known for providing quality workmanship at a fair price. If you own a house or business in Central Texas you can't afford to work with another roofer.
Find out how much roof replacement will cost in Austin, Texas and the surrounding areas.
Discover What Can Cause Warping and How to Fix It When Roof Flashing Fails
When roof flashing gets warped, it's not sitting flush against the roof and walls, and that's when the trouble starts. Warping is a slow, mechanical failure that shortens and distorts the metal so it no longer covers the areas it was meant to protect.
It's a common roofing problem in Central Texas. Our roofing experts explain why roof flashing gets warped, the damage it can cause and what you can do about warped flashing to correct and prevent it.
Why Roof Flashing Gets Warped
Warping usually isn't a random occurrence or something that happens suddenly. It's almost always driven by movement and weather that warps the flashing over time.
- Thermal Expansion and Contraction: Metal flashing constantly expands in high heat and contracts in the cold. Over years of temperature changes, especially in areas where it can change quickly, the metal can wrinkle and shorten leaving gaps at the ends or along seams.
- Freeze–Thaw Cycles: Water that gets under or behind flashing can then freeze, expand and pry it up. Repeated freeze–thaw cycles in the winter can bend or buckle the metal and loosen fasteners.
- Building and Soil Movement: Foundation settling or structural movement causes shifts around chimneys, walls and roof planes – all areas where flashing is located. The flashing is attached to the surface, so any movement can bend or bow it away from the surfaces it's supposed to protect.
- Age and Corrosion: As flashing rusts or loses its coating, the thin spots bend more easily under wind pressure and minor impacts, leading to buckling and warping.
- Improperly Installed or Repaired Flashing: Poor installation can cause a wide range of problems. Flashing installed under tension, with inadequate allowances for expansion, the wrong fastener placement or sloppy bends is more likely to warp prematurely.
What Happens When Flashing Gets Warped
Buckled or wrinkled flashing is one of the clearest visual signs that your roof's waterproofing measures aren't what they should be. Once flashing is no longer flat and sitting tight against the surface, water stops flowing over it cleanly and starts going under, behind or through it. When that's the case, problems will soon follow.
- Water Leaks: Warping creates gaps between the flashing and roofing materials, wall cladding or chimney, allowing water to run behind and below them instead of being diverted off the roof. That's why warped or buckled flashing is strongly associated with leaks around chimneys, skylights and roof-to-wall intersections.
- Shortened Coverage Area: Wrinkled metal of any kind effectively "shrinks" in length, so edges and corners flashing once covered are now exposed. These uncovered areas become exposed to moisture during wind-driven rain.
- Rot, Mold and Insulation Damage: The water that's allowed to penetrate through warped flashing soaks the roof decking, rafters, fascia and wall framing. Over time this leads to wood rot, mold growth in attics and walls and wet insulation that's ineffective.
- Roof Surface Damage: Asphalt shingles and other roof materials around warped flashing may start to curl, crack or lift as moisture repeatedly gets underneath them, shortening roof life in those sections. The problem can also cause roof shrinkage at penetration points.
- Escalating Structural Issues: If warping is driven by foundation or structural movement, leaks will only make matters worse. You can eventually see stress cracks in walls and around chimneys along with worsening flashing separation.
In short: warped roof flashing can't reliably direct water anymore. It becomes a weak link that slowly spreads damage outward from what began as a small defect.
How to Fix Warped Roof Flashing
The right repair depends on how badly the flashing is warped and what it has already damaged. You'll need to:
1. Inspect and Determine the Extent of the Problem
From the ground and roof level, look for visibly buckled, lifted or loose flashing along chimneys, step flashing, roof valleys, skylights and roof edge flashing. Note whether warping is localized or widespread, which could indicate bigger structural movement or long-term thermal stress. Next, check in the attic and the ceilings near those areas for stains, damp insulation, mold growth or darkening of the roof deck.
2. Expose the Area
Carefully remove overlying roofing material around the warped section so you can see the full extent of the flashing metal, fasteners and the area beneath. Check the decking, wall sheathing and framing for signs of rot, mold or decay where water has been getting in.
3. Decide If You Can Fix Existing Flashing
Minor Warping: If the metal is still structurally sound and warping is minimal, a roofer may be able to gently re-bend and re-seat it making sure it lies flat without stress and has proper overlap.
Significant Warping: If flashing is badly wrinkled, shortened, cracked or corroded, or if the original layout/design was inadequate, the flashing should be replaced, not just hammered back down.
4. Ensure Proper Installation
Cut out the warped section and install new flashing that's made with the appropriate metal, thickness, width and shaped for the specific detail (step flashing, counter flashing, valley metal, apron flashing, etc.). Fasten the flashing in the right locations so it can move slightly with temperature changes without buckling again. Integrate new flashing with roof surfaces in the correct sequence. It needs to overlap with the next piece of flashing to create a continuous water-shedding path.
5. Repair Secondary Damage
Replace rotten decking, fascia or wall sheathing. Remove and replace any mold-damaged insulation and interior finishes. Allow everything to dry thoroughly before closing up cavities and repainting or re-covering interior surfaces.
How to Prevent Roof Flashing Failure From Warping
- Use Quality, Properly Sized Flashing: Choose corrosion-resistant metals that are the right gauge and dimension for your roof and the local climate. Thin, undersized pieces of flashing are far more likely to warp and wrinkle.
- Allow For Movement: Install flashing with enough length and proper fastening pattern so it can expand and contract without buckling. Avoid installing it under obvious tension or forcing it to bridge gaps it can't span.
- Control Moisture: Keep sealants and laps in good shape so water can't get under the flashing and freeze.
- Monitor Structural Movement: If your home has known foundation or settlement issues, regularly inspect chimney and wall flashing for separation and warping, and coordinate roof repairs along with structural fixes.
- Schedule Regular Roof Maintenance: Have a qualified roofer check flashing at least annually and after major storms to look for early signs of wrinkling, lifting or gaps.
Warped flashing is the roof's way of telling you that movement, temperature swings or moisture are stressing critical points and there could be bigger problems. Catching warped flashing early and fixing it correctly can prevent years of hidden water damage and extend the lifespan of the entire roofing system.
The roofing contractors at LOA can take care of all your flashing needs, including repairs to existing flashing that's warped. Get in contact today to schedule a free inspection and estimate.