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Roofing Science: Air Pressure, Stack Effect, and Roof Leaks

Roofing Science: Air Pressure, Stack Effect, and Roof Leaks

Water is not the only thing moving through a roof. From a roofing science perspective, air pressure differences— especially the stack effect—play a major role in roof leaks and moisture damage.

Many roof problems are driven upward from inside the home, not downward from rain.


What the Stack Effect Is

The stack effect occurs when warm air rises inside a building.

As warm air rises, it creates higher pressure at the top of the structure and lower pressure at the bottom.

This pressure difference continuously pushes air upward toward the roof.


Why Warm Air Carries Moisture

Warm air can hold more moisture than cold air.

As indoor air rises, it carries water vapour with it.

If this air escapes into the roof system, moisture is deposited as temperatures drop.


How Air Leaks Become Roof Leaks

Air escaping into the roof cavity does not travel alone.

Moving air can carry moisture into:

  • Insulation
  • Decking
  • Seams and joints
  • Flashing transitions

Once moisture condenses, it behaves like a water leak.


Pressure Works Even Without Rain

Stack effect operates year-round.

Moisture damage can occur even during dry weather if warm, moist air continuously escapes upward.

This explains rot and mold in roofs with no obvious exterior leaks.


Why Winter Makes Stack Effect Worse

The greater the temperature difference between indoors and outdoors, the stronger the stack effect.

In winter, warm indoor air rises aggressively while cold exterior temperatures promote condensation.

This combination is especially damaging to roof systems.


Common Air Leakage Paths to the Roof

Air commonly escapes through:

  • Attic access hatches
  • Recessed lighting
  • Plumbing and wiring penetrations
  • Wall-to-ceiling transitions

These paths often connect directly to the roof cavity.


Why Ventilation Alone Is Not Enough

Ventilation removes air after it enters the attic, but it does not stop air from entering in the first place.

In some cases, ventilation can increase air movement and draw more moist air upward.

Roofing science prioritizes air control before ventilation.


How Roof Systems Control Stack Effect Damage

Effective roof systems limit stack-effect damage by:

  • Sealing air leakage paths
  • Maintaining continuous air barriers
  • Using insulation correctly with air sealing
  • Ventilating only after air movement is controlled

Stopping air movement is more effective than trying to dry it later.


Roofing Science — Key Takeaway

Air pressure and stack effect drive moisture upward into roofs.

Roofs last longest when air leakage is controlled before insulation and ventilation are relied upon.


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