Spot these before the water damage does. Most of these warning signs appear 1β3 years before a leak shows up inside.
A leaking ceiling is the most obvious sign of a failing roof β but by the time water is dripping inside your home, it's been infiltrating the structure for months. The insulation is wet, the sheathing may be rotting, and the repair scope has grown significantly beyond what a simple replacement would have cost. The roof failure was visible long before the interior damage appeared.
Here are the seven warning signs that tell experienced roofers a replacement is coming β most of which a homeowner can spot themselves with nothing more than a pair of binoculars from the ground.
Curling or cupping at the edges of asphalt shingles indicates the shingles have lost their moisture balance and are beginning to fail. This is typically caused by age, poor ventilation, or a second layer of shingles trapping heat. Curled shingles are vulnerable to wind uplift β every windstorm risks losing whole sections.
Asphalt shingles are coated with mineral granules that protect the asphalt layer from UV degradation. When shingles age, these granules begin shedding. If you're cleaning your gutters and finding large amounts of gritty, sand-like material, your shingles are in the later stages of their life. The more granule loss, the faster the underlying asphalt degrades.
A few missing shingles after a storm isn't automatically a replacement issue β but if you're losing shingles in calm weather, or replacing the same sections repeatedly, the whole roof system is compromised. Missing shingles are also an immediate water intrusion risk if not addressed within days.
On a bright day, go into your attic and look up. If you can see points of daylight through the roof decking, water can get in there too. Also look for dark staining on the rafters and sheathing β this is evidence of moisture infiltration even if there's no active drip.
Architectural shingles in Charlotte typically deliver 20β30 years of service depending on installation quality and maintenance. If your roof is approaching or past 20 years old and you haven't had a professional inspection in the last 2 years, schedule one before the next storm season. You may have more life left than you think β or you may be living on borrowed time.
A roof that sags β particularly in the middle of a slope or along a rafter line β indicates structural deck damage. This is often caused by prolonged moisture infiltration rotting the sheathing or framing. Sagging is a replacement-now issue, not a repair-and-monitor situation.
A failing roof with compromised underlayment and ventilation allows heat to escape in winter and enter in summer. If your HVAC bills have risen without any other explanation, a roof inspection is worth adding to the list of things to check.
If you're seeing one or more of these signs, a free professional inspection will give you a clear picture of what you're dealing with and how much time you have. We provide written inspection reports with photos β no obligation, no sales pressure.