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Metal Roof Underlayment Canada — 2026 Complete Guide to Moisture, Protection & Building Science

This guide explains underlayment systems used beneath metal roofing in Canada, including moisture protection, vapour diffusion, thermal behaviour, ice-dam resistance, and long-term deck preservation. It integrates practical installation knowledge from roofnow.ca with building-science education from new.roofnow.ca/blog.

Underlayment is one of the most critical components of any metal roofing system. It serves as the final moisture barrier, a thermal buffer, and a structural safeguard for wood decking.

1. Role of Underlayment Under a Metal Roof

Underlayment provides multiple layers of protection:

  • Moisture barrier
  • Secondary waterproofing
  • Thermal buffer between metal and wood
  • Slip sheet to reduce panel abrasion
  • Emergency temporary waterproofing before metal installation

It works in combination with ventilation and insulation to maintain roof health.

2. Types of Underlayment Used in Canada

The main underlayment categories include:

  • Synthetic underlayment (polypropylene / polyethylene blends)
  • Ice-and-water membrane (peel-and-stick)
  • Traditional roofing felt (rarely used under metal today)
  • Self-adhered vapour barriers (specialty applications)

3. Why Synthetic Underlayment Dominates Modern Metal Roofing

Synthetic membranes offer benefits that felt cannot:

  • Much higher tear resistance
  • Better UV exposure durability
  • Superior slip-resistance for installers
  • Lower risk of wrinkling under metal
  • Dimensionally stable in temperature swings

4. Vapour Behaviour & Permeability

Underlayment regulates vapour movement from inside the home toward the roof deck. Most modern synthetics:

  • Provide moderate vapour permeability
  • Prevent moisture accumulation beneath metal panels
  • Allow small droplets to evaporate naturally

5. How Underlayment Manages Moisture

Moisture protection includes:

  • Blocking wind-driven rain
  • Preventing meltwater entry from ice dams
  • Shielding decking from condensation

6. Ice-and-Water Shield on Eaves & Valleys

Peel-and-stick membranes are critical in Canada because they:

  • Self-seal around nails and fasteners
  • Protect vulnerable eave edges
  • Create waterproof barriers in valleys
  • Prevent ice-dam infiltration

7. Temperature Behaviour & Thermal Expansion

Metal roofing expands and contracts significantly in Canadian climates. Underlayment must:

  • Withstand temperature swings from −40°C to +40°C
  • Stay flexible in extreme cold
  • Prevent friction damage from metal movement

8. Protecting Wood Decking

Underlayment is the final defence for roof sheathing. It protects against:

  • Condensation cycles
  • Wind-driven rain
  • Leaks from ice dams
  • High humidity in poorly ventilated attics

9. Underlayment Interaction With Condensation

Condensation forms on the underside of metal panels during rapid overnight cooling. Underlayment mitigates this by:

  • Collecting micro-droplets
  • Preventing water penetration into decking
  • Allowing evaporation when temperatures rise

10. Installation Best Practices

Proper installation ensures longevity:

  • Full deck coverage from eaves to ridge
  • Overlapping rolls by manufacturer specifications
  • Correct nail or cap-fastener spacing
  • Ice-and-water shield installed to minimum 3 ft above exterior wall

11. Common Underlayment Failures

Most failures are caused by poor installation, not material quality:

  • Punctures before metal installation
  • Inadequate overlap leading to water entry
  • Wrong fasteners used
  • Felt wrinkling under metal

12. Underlayment Performance in Hot vs. Cold Roof Systems

Underlayment behaves differently depending on attic design:

  • Cold roof: ventilation allows moisture to escape above insulation
  • Hot roof: underlayment must handle higher humidity levels

13. Underlayment Behaviour During Storms

Underlayment becomes the temporary roof if metal panels blow off. Synthetic underlayments offer:

  • Higher wind uplift resistance
  • Better tear strength during storm exposure
  • Improved UV tolerance while awaiting repair

14. Lifespan Expectations

Synthetic underlayment typically lasts:

  • 25–50+ years depending on brand
  • Ice-and-water membrane: 25–40 years

15. Underlayment Upgrade Costs in Canada

Typical pricing:

  • Synthetic underlayment: $0.25–$0.60 per sq. ft.
  • Ice-and-water shield: $0.75–$1.50 per sq. ft.
  • Full underlayment system: $500–$2,500+

Main Website: roofnow.ca
Knowledge Center: new.roofnow.ca/blog

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