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Commercial Roofing Guide

Commercial Roof Inspection Checklist

A real inspection checks specific, checkable items — not a vague "walked the roof, looks fine." Use this list before hiring anyone, or to see what a Crownline inspection actually covers.

For building owners & property managersA real checklist, not a walkthroughUpdated 2026
Roofing professional inspecting a roof

Why this matters

A commercial roof inspection is only useful if it's specific. "The roof looked fine" isn't an inspection report — a real one checks named components, notes their condition individually, and photographs anything questionable. Use this checklist to evaluate a bid you've received, brief your own maintenance staff, or know what to expect from a Crownline inspection.

Drainage & water management

  • All roof drains and scuppers clear of debris, leaves, and sediment buildup
  • Gutters and downspouts intact, properly pitched, and draining away from the building
  • No areas of standing water (ponding) remaining more than 48 hours after rainfall
  • Overflow drains/scuppers present and unobstructed where required
  • Roof slope and drainage crickets functioning as designed around equipment curbs

Membrane & surface condition

  • No visible blistering, bubbling, or delamination of the membrane surface
  • No cracking, splitting, or brittleness in the membrane, especially at seams
  • Granule loss checked on cap sheets (modified bitumen) or coated systems
  • No visible punctures, tears, or foot-traffic damage across the field of the roof
  • Seams (heat-welded, adhered, or torched depending on system) intact with no separation
  • Overall membrane color/UV condition consistent with expected age and system type

Flashing & penetrations

  • Base flashing at parapet walls secure and properly adhered/sealed
  • Counter-flashing and coping caps intact with no gaps or rust-through
  • Pipe boots and penetration seals free of cracking and properly sealed
  • HVAC curb flashing intact, with no gaps between the curb and the membrane
  • Expansion joint covers intact and properly sealed
  • Skylight and roof-hatch flashing and seals in good condition

Rooftop equipment & structural items

  • HVAC units and rooftop equipment properly curbed, not resting directly on the membrane
  • Satellite, antenna, or solar racking mounts checked for proper flashing and structural attachment
  • Walk pads or protective mats present in high-traffic maintenance paths
  • Guardrails, ladders, and roof-access points in safe, code-compliant condition
  • No signs of interior ceiling staining or moisture that would indicate an active leak

Documentation

  • Dated photographs of every item noted as damaged, worn, or questionable
  • Written report identifying specific locations by roof zone, not a general summary
  • Comparison against the manufacturer's warranty maintenance requirements, if applicable
  • Clear recommendation: monitor, repair, or replace — with reasoning, not just a verdict

Recommended next step

Use this checklist to compare inspection reports you receive, or have Crownline run a full documented inspection against every item here, with photos and a written scope you can act on or file for insurance and warranty purposes.

This checklist is general guidance, not a substitute for a manufacturer's specific warranty inspection requirements or a structural engineer's assessment. Confirm any warranty-required inspection items with your roofing manufacturer's documentation.
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