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Why Roof Leaks Often Start After a Storm (Not During It) | ROOFNOW™

Why Roof Leaks Often Start After a Storm (Not During It)

Many roof leaks are first noticed hours or even days after a storm has passed. This delay often causes confusion about whether the storm was responsible.

Key concept: Storms initiate damage, but leaks appear once water travels through the system.

Wind Damage Without Immediate Leakage

High winds can lift roofing materials, loosen flashing, and stress fasteners without allowing immediate water entry. These changes may not leak until the next rain event.

Saturated Roof Assemblies

During storms, insulation and decking can absorb moisture without producing visible leaks. Water may continue migrating after the storm ends, eventually reaching interior surfaces.

Delayed Water Pathways

Water that enters during a storm may take time to move through layers of the roof system. Ceiling stains often appear long after rainfall stops.

Thermal and Structural Movement After the Storm

Temperature changes following a storm can cause materials to expand or contract, opening pathways that allow trapped water to escape.

Inspection reality: The storm causes the damage, but the leak becomes visible only after internal water movement.

Related deep-dive explanations:

Summary: Roof leaks often start after storms because damage occurs first, then water migrates through the system before becoming visible inside the building.

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