Roof Drainage & Water Flow Explained (Why Water Goes Where It Shouldn’t)
Roof systems are designed to shed water predictably. When drainage paths are altered or obstructed, water follows unintended routes that lead to saturation, leaks, and accelerated material failure.
This page explains how water is meant to move across roofs and why drainage problems are often misdiagnosed as material defects.
How Roof Drainage Is Intended to Work
Roofs rely on gravity, slope, and surface continuity to direct water toward eaves, gutters, drains, or scuppers. Even small changes in geometry can alter flow behavior.
Primary Factors That Control Water Flow
- Roof slope and pitch
- Roof geometry and intersections
- Surface continuity and seams
- Drainage components (gutters, drains, scuppers)
Common Drainage Disruptions
Drainage failures typically result from obstructions or design changes that interrupt water movement.
| Disruption | Effect on Water Flow |
|---|---|
| Debris buildup | Water backs up and pools |
| Ice dams | Water forced under roofing materials |
| Ponding areas | Prolonged saturation of materials |
| Improper slope transitions | Water redirected toward vulnerable details |
Ponding Water and Saturation
Standing water increases exposure time and overwhelms materials not designed for continuous contact. Even water-resistant layers degrade under prolonged saturation.
Why Drainage Issues Are Misdiagnosed
Leaks often appear away from drainage failures. As water migrates through roof assemblies, the visible damage may be far from the original cause.
Drainage and System Interactions
Drainage problems interact with ventilation, insulation, and flashing details. Correcting surface drainage without addressing these interactions leads to repeat failures.