Roof Valley Repair
Roof valley repair addresses one of the most water-vulnerable zones on any pitched roof — the V-shaped channel formed where two roof planes meet and shed water toward the eaves. This page covers the definition of roof valley systems, how open and closed valley configurations function, the most common failure scenarios, and the decision boundaries that separate a targeted repair from a broader replacement. Understanding valley anatomy is directly relevant to roof leak detection and informs the scope of any damage assessment.
Definition and scope
A roof valley is the angular depression created at the intersection of two sloping roof surfaces. Because all water running down either adjacent plane converges into this channel, valleys carry a disproportionate volume of runoff relative to their surface area. The International Building Code (IBC), maintained by the International Code Council (ICC), governs valley flashing requirements under its roofing provisions, and the International Residential Code (IRC) Section R905 specifies minimum material standards for valley construction in single-family dwellings.
Valley systems fall into three classified types:
- Open valleys — Metal flashing (typically aluminum, galvanized steel, or copper) is exposed along the valley centerline, and roofing material is cut back on both sides. Water runs visibly along the metal surface.
- Closed-cut valleys — Shingles from one plane run continuously across the valley, and shingles from the intersecting plane are cut parallel to the centerline, with no exposed metal.
- Woven valleys — Shingles from both planes are alternately interlaced across the centerline, completely concealing any underlayment or flashing beneath.
The IRC mandates a minimum 36-inch-wide underlayment strip centered in the valley beneath all valley types (IRC R905.2.8). Open valley metal must be at least 24 inches wide and lapped a minimum of 6 inches at any seam.
How it works
In a functioning valley, water is directed from the roof plane surfaces into the valley channel and down to the gutters or eave drip edge without infiltrating the roof deck. In open valley configurations, the exposed metal acts as the primary waterproofing surface; the cut edge of the roofing material sits at least 3 inches from the centerline to prevent capillary wicking. In closed-cut and woven configurations, the roofing material itself forms the water-shedding surface, with a self-adhering modified bitumen underlayment — commonly called ice-and-water shield — providing secondary protection beneath.
Failure occurs when the flashing corrodes, lifts, or is improperly lapped; when roofing material is cut too close to the centerline; when debris accumulates and forces water back under the shingle edge (a phenomenon called water damming); or when the valley underlayment deteriorates before the field shingles above it. Ice dam formation, addressed in detail on the ice dam damage repair page, is particularly destructive in valleys because meltwater is channeled precisely into the zone most susceptible to upwicking beneath cold shingles.
The slope of the intersecting planes matters: roofs with pitches below 4:12 carry water more slowly and are more prone to valley backflow. The IRC adjusts underlayment requirements accordingly, requiring double underlayment layers on low-slope applications.
Common scenarios
Valley failures present in predictable patterns depending on valley type, material age, and regional climate:
- Flashing corrosion in open valleys — Galvanized steel flashing typically has a functional lifespan of 20–30 years under normal conditions before zinc coating fails; aluminum is lighter but susceptible to fastener-driven galvanic corrosion when in contact with copper gutters.
- Granule accumulation and debris damming — Asphalt shingle granules dislodge over time and collect at the valley base, restricting flow. Organic debris such as pine needles compounds this and accelerates moisture retention.
- Shingle encroachment on closed-cut valleys — When shingles are not cut with sufficient clearance from the centerline, capillary action draws water laterally under the shingle tabs and through nail penetrations in the deck.
- Storm-driven rain intrusion — High-velocity horizontal rain can force water upslope against the cut shingle edge. This scenario overlaps directly with storm damage roof repair and often requires the same permitting workflow.
- Ice dam backflow — In IECC Climate Zones 5 through 8, ice dam formation in valleys causes meltwater to pond above the dam line and penetrate through shingle laps.
Each failure mode requires a different repair method: flashing replacement for corrosion, cleaning and re-cutting for granule damming, and full re-valley with ice-and-water shield for ice dam damage.
Decision boundaries
Determining whether a valley needs a targeted repair, a full re-valley, or signals a broader replacement is a structural judgment that intersects with permit requirements and roof repair vs replacement thresholds.
Targeted repair is appropriate when:
- Corrosion or lifting is isolated to a single 4-foot or shorter section of open valley flashing
- The underlying roof deck shows no signs of rot, delamination, or soft spots
- Adjacent field shingles are within manufacturer-rated service life and pass a granule adhesion check
Full re-valley is warranted when:
- Flashing failure extends more than 8 feet along the valley centerline
- The self-adhering underlayment beneath a closed-cut valley has cracked or delaminated
- Multiple repair events have occurred in the same valley within a 5-year span
Replacement-level concern is indicated when:
- Deck sheathing at the valley is soft, delaminated, or shows visible rot — overlapping with roof decking repair scope
- The valley failure is symptomatic of whole-roof aging (granule loss exceeding 30% across field shingles, multiple simultaneous leak points)
Permit requirements for valley work vary by jurisdiction. Most jurisdictions require a building permit when roofing work exceeds a defined material area or when structural members are exposed — consult the roof repair permits reference for a structured breakdown of trigger thresholds. Safety compliance during valley repair falls under OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart R (OSHA), which governs fall protection on residential and commercial roofing work, including minimum guardrail, safety net, and personal fall arrest system specifications.
References
- International Code Council — International Residential Code (IRC)
- International Code Council — International Building Code (IBC)
- OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart R — Stairways and Ladders / Fall Protection in Construction
- U.S. Department of Energy — IECC Climate Zone Map