Table of Contents
  1. Annual Visual Inspection (No Ladder Required)
  2. What Professionals Check That You Can't
  3. After Any Significant Weather Event
  4. Gutters: The Roof's Support System
  5. The Maintenance Items Most Homeowners Miss
  6. How Long Should Your Roof Last?

Roof Maintenance Checklist: What Homeowners Miss

Most homeowners think about their roof exactly twice: when they buy the house and when it leaks. The gap between those two moments — which can be 5, 10, or 15 years — is where all the preventable damage happens.

A well-maintained roof lasts its full expected lifespan. An unmaintained one in the same climate, from the same materials, installed the same year, can fail 5–10 years early. The difference is almost entirely in what you catch and address before it compounds.

Annual Visual Inspection (No Ladder Required)

You don't need to get on your roof to conduct a meaningful annual inspection. A pair of binoculars from the ground covers most of what you need to see.

What to look for from the ground:

What Professionals Check That You Can't

An annual professional roof inspection ($150–$400) is worth having every few years, and immediately after any significant hail or wind event. Inspectors check things that aren't visible from the ground:

After Any Significant Weather Event

Hail and high winds cause damage that isn't always visible immediately but can shorten shingle life dramatically. After any storm with winds over 50 mph or hail of any size:

Gutters: The Roof's Support System

Gutters aren't technically part of the roof, but their failure is one of the top causes of roof and soffit damage. Clean gutters 1–2 times per year (spring and fall) and after any significant storm that drops debris. Blocked gutters cause:

The Maintenance Items Most Homeowners Miss

In order of how often they're overlooked:

  1. Pipe boots: The rubber collars around roof vent penetrations. Cheap to replace ($20–$50 per boot), expensive to ignore (water intrusion into walls). Replace every 10–15 years proactively.

  2. Ridge cap inspection: The shingles at the peak of the roof experience the most UV exposure and wind stress. They often fail before the field shingles.

  3. Valley flashing: The metal channels where two roof planes meet accumulate debris and are prone to water pooling. Keep them clear.

  4. Attic ventilation: Inadequate ventilation bakes shingles from the inside out in summer and creates moisture damage in winter. A ventilation assessment every 5 years is worthwhile.

  5. Overhanging branches: Any branch that contacts or overhangs the roof abrades shingles and provides a pathway for squirrels and other pests to access the roof. Trim branches at least 6 feet from the roof surface.

How Long Should Your Roof Last?

Standard 3-tab asphalt shingles: 15–20 years. Architectural (dimensional) shingles: 25–30 years. Metal: 40–70 years. Tile: 50+ years.

If your inspection report noted the estimated remaining life of the roof, that's your baseline. Adjust based on what you find in annual inspections. A roof that's 15 years old and showing granule loss, curling shingles, and moss growth is closer to end-of-life than one that's 15 years old and looks clean. Use your eyes; the calendar is only a rough guide.

Keep your home running smoothly

KotiCare turns your inspection report into a personalized maintenance plan.

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