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Why Roof Leaks Often Happen During Heavy Rain (Not Light Rain) | ROOFNOW™

Why Roof Leaks Often Happen During Heavy Rain (Not Light Rain)

Some roofs only leak during heavy rainstorms while remaining dry during light or moderate rainfall. This pattern often leads to confusion about the true cause.

Key concept: Heavy rain exposes system limits that light rain does not reach.

Drainage Capacity Can Be Overwhelmed

Roof drainage systems are designed for specific flow rates. During intense rainfall, water can accumulate faster than it can drain away.

When water depth increases, it can reach seams, flashing, or penetrations that remain dry under lighter rain.

Wind-Driven Rain Changes Water Direction

Heavy storms are often accompanied by wind. Wind-driven rain can push water upward or sideways, forcing it into overlaps and transition points not designed for reverse flow.

Short-Term Ponding and Water Backup

Even on sloped roofs, heavy rain can cause brief ponding at valleys, edges, or clogged drainage points. This increases pressure on waterproofing details.

Why Leaks May Stop When the Storm Ends

Once rainfall intensity drops, drainage catches up and water levels fall. Entry points are no longer submerged, masking the underlying vulnerability.

Inspection reality: A leak triggered only by heavy rain often indicates a drainage or transition failure, not a surface defect.

Related deep-dive explanations:

Summary: Roof leaks that occur only during heavy rain are usually caused by overwhelmed drainage, wind-driven water, or submerged transition points. These conditions do not exist during light rainfall.

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