Seasonal Roof Care Tips for Year-Round Protection

Kansas City weather is hard on roofs. Here's a season-by-season checklist to keep yours leak-free, insurance-friendly, and ready for whatever the sky throws at it.

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Kansas City puts a roof through every kind of stress over twelve months: hail in spring, heat in summer, ice dams in winter, and wind year-round. The homeowners whose roofs make it 25+ years aren’t lucky — they’re just doing a few things every season. Here’s the short list.

Spring: inspect after every storm

Spring is hail season. Walk around the house after any storm with stones bigger than a quarter and look for:

  • Granules in gutters and downspouts (a sign shingles are wearing)
  • Dented or cracked shingles, especially on south- and west-facing slopes
  • Bent flashing around chimneys, vents, and skylights

If you see damage, document it with photos before filing an insurance claim — most KC carriers require date-stamped images for fast approval.

Summer: vent the attic, not your wallet

A poorly ventilated attic in a Kansas City summer hits 140°F and bakes the underside of your shingles. That cooks 5–10 years off the roof’s life. Check that ridge and soffit vents are clear, and listen for an attic fan that should be running but isn’t.

Fall: clear the gutters, twice

Fall maintenance is mostly about water management. Clean gutters in early November once the maples drop, then again in mid-December once the oaks finish. Clogged gutters are the number-one cause of fascia rot and ice-dam formation.

Winter: watch for ice dams

If you see icicles bigger than a hand’s length hanging from the eaves, you have an ice dam forming — meaning attic heat is melting snow that refreezes at the cold edge of the roof. Long-term fix: more attic insulation. Short-term: clear snow from the lower 3 feet of the roof with a roof rake from the ground.

Year-round: keep the trees back

Branches within 6 feet of the roof scrape shingles in wind, drop debris that holds moisture, and give squirrels a highway to your soffits. Trim them back every 18–24 months.

When to call a pro

You should call a roofer for an inspection when: the roof is past 15 years old, after any major hail or wind event, when you see daylight from inside the attic, or before you list the home. Most reputable KC roofers do this for free.

Want a no-pressure roof checkup? Schedule a free inspection and we’ll tell you exactly what your roof needs — and what it doesn’t.