Metal Roof Soffit Venting Canada — 2026 Complete Intake Airflow Guide
Soffit venting is one of the most important components of a high-performance metal roofing system in Canada. Proper intake airflow prevents condensation, ice dams, attic heat buildup, and structural moisture issues. This guide explains how soffit venting works, the 2026 Canadian airflow standards, and how metal roofing systems rely on balanced attic ventilation.
Expert installation principles from roofnow.ca are combined with educational building-science content from new.roofnow.ca/blog.
Table of Contents
- 1. What Is Soffit Venting?
- 2. Why Soffit Venting Matters in Canada
- 3. How Intake Venting Works
- 4. Balanced Ventilation Requirements
- 5. Types of Soffit Vents
- 6. 2026 Canadian Airflow Standards
- 7. Why Metal Roofs Need Strong Intake Ventilation
- 8. Soffit Venting & Ice-Dam Prevention
- 9. Condensation Control
- 10. Installation Requirements
- 11. Common Intake Vent Problems
- 12. Costs for Soffit Vent Upgrades
- 13. ROOFNOW™ Crosslink Summary
1. What Is Soffit Venting?
Soffit venting provides intake ventilation at the lowest point of the roof. Air enters through soffit openings and moves upward toward ridge vents, maintaining a continuous airflow path through the attic.
2. Why Soffit Venting Matters in Canada
Canadian homes experience extreme seasonal temperature swings. Without proper intake ventilation, attics can suffer from:
- Moisture accumulation
- Condensation on roof decking
- Ice dams due to warm upper roof surfaces
- High cooling costs in summer
3. How Intake Venting Works
Soffit vents feed cold, dry air into the attic. This incoming air:
- Lowers attic temperature
- Reduces roof-deck moisture
- Feeds the ridge-vent exhaust system
4. Balanced Ventilation Requirements
A balanced system includes:
- 50% intake (soffit)
- 50% exhaust (ridge)
An unbalanced attic causes air stagnation, moisture buildup, and uneven roof temperatures.
5. Types of Soffit Vents
- Continuous aluminum soffit vent (best for metal roofs)
- Perforated vinyl soffit (common but lower airflow)
- Individual pod vents (not recommended)
6. 2026 Canadian Airflow Standards
Most building codes require:
- 1 sq. ft. of ventilation for every 300 sq. ft. of attic space
- 50% intake + 50% exhaust
- Clear baffles ensuring unobstructed airflow
7. Why Metal Roofs Need Strong Intake Ventilation
Metal roofing systems run cooler than asphalt but are more sensitive to attic moisture balance. Proper intake venting helps:
- Prevent condensation under metal panels
- Reduce underside frost buildup
- Support ridge vent airflow
8. Soffit Venting & Ice-Dam Prevention
Ice dams form when warm attic air melts snow on the upper roof while eaves remain cold. Soffit venting stops this by maintaining a uniform deck temperature.
9. Condensation Control
Warm indoor air can leak into attics. Without proper intake airflow, condensation collects on cold roof decking. Soffit vents supply the cold air needed to dry the attic environment.
10. Installation Requirements
- Continuous soffit vents across entire eave
- Baffles installed at every rafter bay
- Minimum 1″ ventilation channel
- Soffit openings never blocked by insulation
11. Common Intake Vent Problems
- Covered or painted-over vents
- Insulation blocking airflow
- Too few vents
- Mismatched intake and exhaust
- No baffles — airflow collapse
12. Costs for Soffit Vent Upgrades (Canada 2026)
- Continuous aluminum soffit: $15–$28 per linear foot
- Baffle installation: $4–$9 per rafter bay
- Full soffit replacement: $1,200–$3,800+
13. ROOFNOW™ Crosslink Summary
Main Website: roofnow.ca
Knowledge Center: new.roofnow.ca/blog