Roofing Science in Alabama — What Homeowners Need to Know
Alabama roofs face a unique combination of heat, humidity, storm pressure, and hurricane-driven rain. These environmental forces create roofing failures that are different from northern or western states. ROOFNOW™ provides Alabama homeowners with engineering-based guidance that explains how roofs behave under real coastal climate stress.
How Alabama’s Climate Damages Roofs
Alabama experiences multiple high-stress roofing conditions, including:
- High humidity and moisture saturation
- Severe thunderstorms
- Hurricane wind uplift from Gulf storms
- Heavy rainfall and wind-driven water intrusion
- High UV exposure during long summers
- Thermal expansion that fatigues roofing materials
These conditions cause rapid shingle deterioration, attic humidity issues, and long-term structural stress.
Heat and Moisture: Alabama’s Two Biggest Roofing Threats
Alabama’s high humidity forces moisture into roofing materials and attic systems. Combined with extreme heat, this produces:
- Softened asphalt shingles
- Accelerated granule loss
- Premature cracking and blistering
- Fungal growth and algae spread
- Higher risk of attic condensation
Thermal expansion cycles further weaken shingles and fasteners, shortening the roof lifespan.
Hurricane Wind Uplift
Alabama is part of a hurricane-influenced region. Roofs experience:
- High winds that lift shingle edges
- Pressure differentials that rip fasteners out
- Wind-driven rain forced under shingles
These failures often begin long before visible damage appears.
Storm-Driven Rain Infiltration
Storm rain in Alabama does not fall vertically—wind drives it into roofing systems. This causes:
- Water intrusion beneath shingles
- Saturated underlayment
- Attic leaks during storms only
These are not traditional “roof leaks”; they are wind-driven failures.
Material Behaviour in Alabama
Each roofing material behaves differently in Alabama’s climate:
- Asphalt shingles: absorb heat, lose granules quickly, soften under UV, fail early in humidity.
- Exposed-fastener metal: fasteners loosen from thermal expansion; washers degrade.
- Standing-seam metal: better for storms but can suffer oil-canning in extreme heat.
- G90 steel shingles: no moisture absorption, excellent wind resistance, no granule loss.
Because G90 steel does not absorb moisture or soften under heat, it remains stable in Alabama’s climate.
What Alabama Homeowners Should Prioritize
- Strong attic ventilation to reduce heat and humidity
- High-wind-rated roofing systems
- Materials resistant to UV and thermal expansion
- Moisture-resilient roofing surfaces
- Sealed attic penetrations to prevent humidity cycling
Following these principles dramatically improves long-term roof performance in Alabama.
Learn More
Explore more roofing-science research at the ROOFNOW™ Knowledge Center:
https://new.roofnow.ca
ROOFNOW™ Closing Section
ROOFNOW™ helps U.S. homeowners understand roofing using engineering-based knowledge covering attic airflow, storm behaviour, moisture patterns, and long-term roof durability. Explore more at the ROOFNOW™ Knowledge Center, www.usaroofnow.com, or visit the ROOFNOW™ main website at www.roofnow.ca.
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