Most commercial roof failures in Texas begin quietly, during the first sustained stretch of early summer heat.
In San Antonio, June marks a critical turning point for commercial roofing systems. Temperatures rise sharply, storms become more unpredictable, and existing weaknesses in flat roofing systems start to show.
At Norwest Roofing, we see the same pattern in roofs that survived spring storms begin failing under thermal stress, drainage strain, and deferred maintenance issues. Let’s take a look at common causes for failing roofs in early summer in San Antonio.
The Real Cause of Most Commercial Roof Failures
Contrary to popular belief, most commercial roof problems aren’t storm-driven, they’re heat-driven.
The biggest stress factors include: thermal expansion and contraction of roofing membranes, ponding water from clogged or undersized drainage systems, UV degradation accelerating surface breakdown, flashing separation at seams and edges, and HVAC system strain increasing rooftop temperature loads.
By early summer, these issues stop being “minor concerns” and start becoming active leak points.
Why Early Summer Is the Breaking Point
June in Texas is a perfect storm for roofing stress with extreme heat cycles during the day, sudden downpours overwhelming drainage systems, rapid temperature swings weakening seams, and increased HVAC usage trapping heat on rooftops.
For flat and low-slope systems, this combination exposes weaknesses that may have developed quietly for months.
Why Heat is The Silent Roof Killer
Commercial roofing materials expand under heat and contract as temperatures drop at night. Over time, this cycle causes:
- Membrane pulling at seams
- Sealant breakdown
- Fastener loosening
- Surface blistering
Once these stress points develop, leaks often follow during the next rainfall event.
Why Drainage Failures are The Most Overlooked Problem
One of the most common issues in commercial roofing systems is ponding water.
Even small drainage inefficiencies can lead to issues such as standing water that accelerates membrane deterioration, structural load stress on flat roof sections, mold and insulation damage beneath the surface, and premature roof system failure.
In many cases, drainage issues are present for years before becoming visibly destructive.
HVAC Systems Are Making Roof Problems Worse
Modern commercial buildings rely heavily on rooftop HVAC systems, which contribute to issues like increased roof surface temperatures, compromised membrane integrity around penetrations, higher maintenance stress around curb units, and accelerated wear in high-contact zones.
This creates concentrated areas of failure that often go unnoticed until leaks appear inside the building.
Why Most Roof Failures Show Up in Summer
For property managers, most commercial roof failures don’t happen during storms, they appear when Texas heat hits full strength.
Summer conditions expose hidden problems like weak installation points, aging materials, deferred maintenance issues, and hidden storm damage from earlier in the year.
By the time leaks are visible indoors, damage has typically been active for weeks or months.
The Cost of Waiting Too Long
Delaying inspection or maintenance often leads to:
- Interior water damage
- HVAC system inefficiency
- Business interruption
- Higher emergency repair costs
- Shortened roof system lifespan
For commercial property owners, reactive repairs are almost always more expensive than preventative maintenance.
Work Smart With Preventative Commercial Roof Management
A proactive inspection strategy in early summer can help identify any drainage inefficiencies before storms worsen them, heat-related membrane stress points, flashing and seam vulnerabilities, and HVAC-related roof strain areas that need immediate attention. This approach allows facility managers to plan repairs instead of reacting to failures. If you have a commercial roof and are curious where it stands currently in early summer, contact us today for an assessment.
FAQs
Heat causes roofing materials to expand and contract, which weakens seams, flashing, and sealants over time. This leads to leaks, especially when combined with UV exposure and storm stress.
Ponding water refers to standing water that remains on a flat roof for more than 48 hours. It usually indicates drainage problems and can significantly shorten roof lifespan.
At minimum, twice per year, typically in spring and early summer, plus after major storm events.
Common signs include ceiling stains, bubbling or blistering roof surfaces, clogged drains, and visible seam separation.
Yes. Rooftop HVAC systems increase heat load and create penetrations that are common failure points if not properly sealed and maintained.
In most cases, yes. Preventative maintenance reduces emergency repair costs, extends roof lifespan, and minimizes business disruption.