AZ Coatings

AZ COATINGS — COMMERCIAL ROOFING INSIGHTS

How to Tell If a Commercial Flat Roof Is a Good Candidate for Coating

By Jason Daggy · Founder, AZ Coatings · 7 min read

Most commercial roofs that get replaced didn't need to be. The decision gets made before anyone runs a proper moisture assessment — and property owners pay the price. This is how a legitimate candidacy evaluation actually works, and what it tells you that a surface inspection never can.

1

The Assessment Starts Before You Get on the Roof

A credible roof assessment begins with questions, not ladders. Before setting foot on the membrane, the right specialist gathers context: Is it currently leaking? For how long and how severely? Has there been recent storm, hail, or wind activity? Has it ever been coated before? And critically — who has been doing maintenance?

That last question consistently reveals the most. A building maintenance employee patching leaks with caulk or roofing tar isn't fixing the problem — they're creating new compatibility and adhesion issues that complicate any professional system applied afterward. Industry documentation on coating failures consistently traces premature delamination back to surface contamination from prior amateur repairs that went undetected before application.[1]

Pre-assessment questions that shape everything

Active leaks and duration. Recent storm or hail activity. Previous coatings — type and age. Roof age and system type. Who has been performing maintenance. These answers determine what you're specifically looking for when you walk the surface.


2

Green Lights and Red Flags on the Roof Surface

Seams and HVAC unit surrounds get the most attention in every assessment — they're where single-ply membranes fail first and where amateur repairs concentrate. Beyond those focal points, the picture is built quickly by someone who has walked enough square footage to read the signals fast.

Green lights — strong candidate
  • Roof 15–25 years old, approaching end of lifespan but not past it
  • No active leaking at time of assessment
  • Deck firm underfoot — no soft spots or sag
  • Damage isolated to seams or HVAC penetrations
  • Hail damage present but caught before moisture infiltrated substrate
  • Less than 40% substrate moisture saturation
Red flags — replacement territory
  • Previous coating applied and roof is still leaking
  • Roof well past designed lifespan — 30, 40, 50+ years
  • Spongy or soft underfoot — saturated insulation board
  • Membrane lifting, separating, or missing sections
  • Non-contractor repairs visible across the surface
  • More than 40% substrate saturation on moisture scan

GAF's commercial roofing guidance confirms the same principle: coatings are designed to protect a structurally sound roof — not to fix a failing one. Any damage or aging found during assessment must be repaired and verified dry before any coating is applied. Coating over a wet or compromised substrate seals the problem in rather than out.[2]


3

The 4-Step Moisture Testing Process

Visual assessment and walking the roof gives an experienced specialist a strong initial read. But the definitive determination — restore or replace — comes from moisture data. Here's the exact process AZ Coatings uses on every assessment.

1

Walk the roof — the experienced read

After walking millions of square feet of flat roofing, you can identify wet or saturated areas by feel and visual cues before any equipment is deployed. Soft spots, membrane discoloration, and separation patterns all carry information a scanner confirms but experience identifies first.

Experience-based — no equipment
2

Trim-X / RWS scanner — subsurface moisture mapping

A non-destructive capacitance or nuclear moisture scanner is run across the entire roof in a 2-square-foot grid. This maps subsurface moisture without any cuts — identifying exactly where saturation exists below the membrane before a single core is taken.

Trim-X scanner · RWS moisture scanner · ASTM D7954
3

Core samples — visual substrate inspection

At locations flagged by the scanner, small cores are taken through the membrane to visually inspect the insulation board and cover board underneath. Core sampling confirms what the scanner detected and shows the condition and extent of saturation at each problem area.

Core sampling
4

Probe moisture meter — quantified reading

Once through the membrane via core sample, a probe-style moisture meter gives a quantified reading at the substrate level. Combined with the scanner map and visual core inspection, this produces complete data — not an estimate.

Probe-style moisture meter

Industry best practice guidance for commercial roof coating requires that any legitimate pre-installation inspection include moisture testing, core cuts, and a full adhesion assessment — not just a visual survey. A contractor quoting without those steps is guessing, not assessing.[3]

📐 Why the 2 sq ft grid matters: On a 15,000 sq ft roof, a 2 sq ft grid produces thousands of moisture data points — not a handful of spot checks. The result is a complete moisture map that shows exactly where the problem is, how large it is, and what percentage of the substrate is affected. That percentage drives the restoration vs. replacement decision.

4

What a Neglected Roof Looks and Feels Like

Not every assessment delivers good news. Some roofs have been deferred past any coating system's ability to help them — and the honest answer in those situations is the only responsible one.

A roof that's been neglected looks like — you feel it as a sponge under your feet. There's dips in it. There's roof deck that's missing. There's holes. They're hoping for good news, but the truth is it's past the point of doing any sort of coating on it.

Jason Daggy — Founder, AZ Coatings

This morning, Jason walked away from a job where the old 2x6 tongue-and-groove roof deck was so deteriorated it was unsafe to walk on. Everything was soaked. No coating system was going to address what was underneath. The only responsible path was a full tear-off — and that's what the client was told.

A coating applied over a structurally compromised or over-saturated substrate doesn't save the roof. It seals existing moisture in, accelerates the deterioration from below, and adds the cost of a failed coating on top of the eventual — and now more expensive — replacement. As Parsons Roofing's field documentation confirms, moisture sealed beneath a coating blisters upward through the system over time, creating widespread failure that's often worse than the original condition.[4]


5

The Biggest Mistake That Turns a Restorable Roof Into a Replacement

Going with the cheapest quote from the guy who is not going to give them a restoration system — just paint their roof — thinking that it's actually going to do something.

Jason Daggy — Founder, AZ Coatings

A restorable roof that receives a paint-grade silicone application — low volume, no real surface prep, no system design — doesn't get restored. It gets a cosmetic treatment that delays visible leaking for 18 to 36 months while the underlying moisture situation continues to worsen underneath the new coat. When the coating fails, the roof is now 18–36 months older, more saturated, and the restoration window that was open before may have closed.

What to demand from any roofing proposal before signing

Specified application rate in gallons per square. Dry mil thickness at completion. Detailed surface preparation protocol. If a contractor cannot answer all three with specific numbers, you are looking at a paint application — not a restoration system. The distinction is the difference between 2 years of performance and 20.

RiverLand Roofing's documented analysis of commercial coating failures traces the majority of premature system failures directly to inadequate preparation and under-specified application — with coating-over-wet-substrate being the single most common avoidable error that leads to early adhesion failure and warranty voidance.[5]

The most surprising thing most people say when they see polyurea properly applied? How strong it is — and the fact that it's completely seamless. No laps, no welds, no joints for water to find over time. For a facility manager who has watched conventional coatings fail in those exact spots, that tends to land.


Frequently Asked Questions

How do you tell if a commercial flat roof is a good candidate for coating?

A strong candidate is generally 15–25 years old and approaching — but not past — the end of its service life, with no active leaking at the time of assessment, a deck that's firm underfoot, and damage isolated to seams or HVAC penetrations rather than spread across the field. The deciding factor is moisture: less than roughly 40% substrate saturation, confirmed by a moisture scan rather than a visual guess.

What disqualifies a flat roof from being coated?

Replacement territory includes a roof still leaking after a previous coating, a system decades past its designed lifespan, insulation that feels spongy or soft underfoot, a membrane lifting, separating, or missing in sections, widespread amateur repairs, or more than 40% substrate saturation on a moisture scan. Coating over those conditions seals the problem in instead of fixing it.

What does a commercial roof moisture assessment involve?

AZ Coatings uses a four-step process: an experienced walk of the roof, a non-destructive Trim-X / RWS moisture scan across a 2-square-foot grid, core samples to visually inspect the insulation and cover board, and a probe moisture meter for a quantified substrate reading. Together those produce a complete moisture map — not an estimate from a surface look.

What is the 40% rule for roof coating candidacy?

If more than about 40% of the substrate beneath the membrane is moisture-saturated, restoration stops making structural and economic sense and full tear-off is the honest recommendation. Below that threshold, the saturated areas can be removed and rebuilt and the rest of the roof coated — making it a restoration candidate.

Can you coat a wet or actively leaking commercial roof?

No. Applying a coating over a wet or compromised substrate seals existing moisture in, blisters upward through the system over time, and accelerates deterioration from below — adding the cost of a failed coating on top of an eventual, more expensive replacement. Any damage has to be repaired and the substrate verified dry before coating.

What's the biggest mistake property owners make when coating a roof?

Choosing the cheapest quote from someone who simply paints the roof — low volume, no real surface prep, no system design — and expecting it to perform like a restoration. Before signing, demand the specified application rate in gallons per square, the dry mil thickness at completion, and the surface-prep protocol. If a contractor can't answer all three with specific numbers, it's a paint job, not a system.

About the Author

Jason Daggy

Founder of AZ Coatings and SPFA-certified polyurea specialist. Has assessed and restored commercial flat roofs across Michigan and the Southeast. Read full bio →

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