Ask & We Answer • RV Roof Restoration
RV Roof Facts
RV roofs fail at the details: seams, penetrations, edge rails, and transitions. This page is a technical, plain-English guide to how modern RV roof restoration works — what we do, why we do it, and what to expect.
What makes RV roofing different?
An RV roof isn’t a house roof. It lives on a moving platform, flexes under load, heats and cools aggressively, and is punctured by multiple service penetrations (vents, skylights, A/C, antennas, solar). A durable RV roof solution must handle movement and maintain clean terminations — not just add “more coating.”
Thermal cycling is brutal
RV roof surfaces can swing tens of degrees in a single day. Systems must flex without cracking at seams and flanges.
Penetrations are leak magnets
Most leaks originate at vent bases, skylights, A/C curbs, and edge rails. The detailing strategy matters more than the “field.”
Movement is constant
Vibration, road flex, and chassis twist stress weak points. Reinforcement at transitions reduces future failures.
A quick walkthrough from the people who do the work
Add your video here (YouTube/Vimeo embed). Use it to explain your RV roof system, what makes it different, and how you handle common real-world constraints like vents, A/C units, and solar.
- How we prep RV roofs for adhesion
- How we detail vents, skylights, and A/C curbs
- What “serviceable” waterproofing means over time
Frequently asked questions
Clear answers to the questions we hear most from RV owners. If you have a unique roof configuration, send photos — we’ll confirm scope.
Send 6–10 roof photos (wide shots + close-ups of seams/penetrations) and your RV length. We’ll confirm scope and recommend the right RV roof restoration approach.