When shingles blow off, what catches the water? Your secondary water barrier is your last line of defense against water damage. Here is why it matters and how it works.
Not all underlayments are created equal. Here is how they compare when your primary roof fails.
Traditional tar paper. Stapled to deck. Cheap but has gaps at seams and staple holes let water through.
Plastic-based, stronger than felt. Better at resisting wind but still stapled and does not seal around nails.
Self-adhering membrane. Sticks to deck and seals around every nail that goes through it. Your real protection.
HVHZ code requires secondary water barrier in specific locations at minimum.
Install from edge to at least 24 inches up the roof slope. This is where wind-driven rain hits hardest.
Extend 24 inches on each side of the valley centerline. Water concentrates here during heavy rain.
Pipes, vents, skylights - extend SWB at least 12 inches in all directions from the penetration.
Where roof meets walls, run SWB up the wall at least 4 inches and 24 inches onto the roof.
Install 12 inches on each side of hip and ridge lines where shingles are most likely to blow off.
Many contractors install SWB over the entire deck. More expensive but maximum protection.
Get complete roof system analysis for your Broward County project. Know exactly what protection you need.
Calculate Now