Metal Roofing in Washington: Performance, Types, and Considerations
Metal roofing represents one of the most durable and weather-resistant cladding options available in Washington State, where annual precipitation averages exceed 37 inches in western regions and snowpack loads challenge structures in the Cascades and higher elevations. This page covers the classification of metal roofing systems, how they perform under Washington's climate conditions, the regulatory and permitting framework that governs installation, and the decision factors that distinguish metal from competing materials. Professionals, property owners, and researchers navigating the Washington roofing sector will find structured reference material on system types, applicable codes, and performance boundaries.
Definition and scope
Metal roofing encompasses any roofing system where the primary weather-shedding surface is composed of a metallic material — most commonly steel, aluminum, copper, or zinc alloy. Within the roofing sector, metal systems divide into two broad structural categories: structural metal roofing, which spans across supports without a continuous solid deck beneath, and architectural metal roofing, which is installed over a solid substrate such as plywood or OSB sheathing.
Washington's regulatory context for roofing is primarily governed by the Washington State Building Code (Title 51 WAC), which adopts the International Building Code (IBC) and International Residential Code (IRC) with Washington-specific amendments. Metal roofing installations must comply with these codes as adopted and enforced by local jurisdictions — counties and municipalities may apply additional amendments above the state minimum.
The scope of this page is limited to installations within Washington State and subject to Title 51 WAC. It does not address Oregon, Idaho, or federal land installations. Properties under federal jurisdiction (such as national park structures) fall outside the Title 51 WAC enforcement framework and are not covered here.
How it works
Metal roofing systems shed water and resist weather through one or more of the following mechanisms, depending on product type:
- Standing seam panels — Vertical ribs run the length of the panel and are mechanically or snap-locked together. The seam rises above the panel surface, preventing water infiltration at the joint. Standing seam is the dominant structural metal product for both residential and commercial applications in Washington.
- Metal shingles and tiles — Factory-formed panels that replicate the appearance of asphalt shingles, slate, or tile. Installed over a solid deck with concealed or exposed fasteners.
- Corrugated and ribbed panels — Sinusoidal or trapezoidal profile sheets, historically used in agricultural and industrial applications, increasingly specified for commercial and accessory structures.
- Metal shake profiles — Panels that replicate cedar or wood shake aesthetics, often used in western Washington historic or residential contexts where visual compatibility matters.
Material comparison — steel vs. aluminum:
| Property | Galvanized/Galvalume Steel | Aluminum |
|---|---|---|
| Tensile strength | Higher — better for snow load spans | Lower — requires closer fastener spacing |
| Corrosion resistance | Moderate without coating; high with Galvalume® coating | High inherently — preferred in coastal/marine zones |
| Weight | ~1.5–2.5 lbs/sq ft | ~0.7–1.1 lbs/sq ft |
| Thermal expansion | Lower coefficient | Higher coefficient — requires floating clip systems |
| Cost index | Lower base material cost | Higher base material cost |
Steel with AZ55 Galvalume® coating is the most widely specified product in inland Washington. Aluminum is frequently specified within 1 mile of saltwater exposure (Puget Sound shorelines, coastal Pacific County) due to its resistance to chloride-induced corrosion.
All metal roofing systems require thermal movement accommodation. Standing seam systems use floating clips rather than fixed fasteners to allow panels to expand and contract independently — a critical design feature given Washington's seasonal temperature range, which can span from below 0°F in alpine zones to above 100°F in eastern Washington.
Common scenarios
Metal roofing is specified across a wide range of Washington building types and project contexts:
- Western Washington residential replacement — High annual rainfall, moss growth pressure, and the long-term cost of composite shingle replacement drive demand for metal in King, Pierce, Snohomish, and Thurston counties. Metal's Class A fire rating and 40–70 year service life are primary selection factors.
- Eastern Washington agricultural and light commercial — Corrugated and ribbed steel panels dominate pole barn, equipment storage, and winery structures in Yakima, Benton, and Chelan counties, where wide-span structural systems are common.
- High-elevation and snowpack zones — Properties in the Cascades and northeast Washington mountains require compliance with snow load provisions under ASCE 7 (Minimum Design Loads for Buildings and Other Structures), as referenced in the IBC and IRC. Metal's smooth surface profile accelerates snowshedding, which must be accounted for in structural framing below and in site planning (snow guards, clear zones).
- Historic and character districts — Standing seam copper and zinc alloy systems are specified in historic preservation contexts. Local historic overlay districts in cities such as Spokane and Port Townsend may impose design review requirements beyond standard permit approval.
- Green and sustainable roofing in Washington — Metal roofing qualifies for cool roof credits under ASHRAE 90.1-2022 and the Washington State Energy Code (WAC 51-11C) when specified with appropriate solar reflectance index (SRI) values. Recycled content and end-of-life recyclability make metal a frequent choice in LEED-targeted projects.
Decision boundaries
Several structural factors govern whether metal roofing is the appropriate system for a given Washington project.
When metal roofing is technically appropriate:
- Roof pitch of 3:12 or greater for exposed-fastener panels; standing seam is installable at pitches as low as 1:12 with proper detailing
- Structures requiring 40+ year service life without material replacement
- Buildings in high fire hazard severity zones (WFHSZ) as mapped by the Washington State Department of Natural Resources — metal's Class A fire rating meets the most restrictive requirements
- Structures subject to moss and biological growth pressure (predominant in western Washington) — metal does not support moss colonization the way wood or granule-surfaced products do
When metal roofing warrants additional analysis:
- Existing roof deck condition — metal added over failed or delaminating sheathing transfers structural risk; roof deck and sheathing integrity must be confirmed before overlay installation
- Noise performance — uninsulated metal panels over unconditioned spaces produce significant rain and hail impact noise; acoustic insulation layers must be specified where occupant comfort is a requirement
- Compatibility with solar roofing integration in Washington — standing seam systems use clamp-based PV attachment that avoids roof penetrations, but panel gauge and clip spacing must be confirmed with the PV mounting manufacturer
- Ice dam risk — western slope Cascade properties and shaded northern exposures may develop ice dams; metal's conductivity does not eliminate ice dam formation, and eave detailing must follow IRC Section R905.10
Permitting and inspection requirements in Washington follow the jurisdiction-specific adoption of the IRC and IBC. A building permit is required for new metal roof installations and for re-roofing projects that alter the structural assembly. Inspections typically cover deck condition, underlayment (roofing underlayment standards per ASTM D226 or ASTM D1970), flashing at penetrations and wall junctions, and fastener pattern compliance. The Washington Association of Building Officials (WABO) coordinates code interpretation and inspector training across jurisdictions.
For a comprehensive view of how metal roofing fits within the broader Washington roofing sector — including contractor qualification requirements, cost benchmarks, and material alternatives — the Washington Roofing Authority index provides structured navigation across the full reference network.
References
- Washington State Building Code — Title 51 WAC
- Washington State Energy Code — WAC 51-11C
- International Residential Code (IRC) — International Code Council
- International Building Code (IBC) — International Code Council
- ASCE 7: Minimum Design Loads and Associated Criteria for Buildings and Other Structures — American Society of Civil Engineers
- ASHRAE 90.1-2022: Energy Standard for Sites and Buildings Except Low-Rise Residential Buildings
- Washington State Department of Natural Resources — Wildland Fire Hazard Severity Zones
- Washington Association of Building Officials (WABO)
- ASTM D226: Standard Specification for Asphalt-Saturated Organic Felt Used in Roofing and Waterproofing — ASTM International
- ASTM D1970: Standard Specification for Self-Adhering Polymer Modified Bituminous Sheet Materials — ASTM International