Homeowners want to know whether the rotting fascia behind their gutter is caused by a missing drip edge, what drip edge actually does at the roof edge, and whether a roofer who didn't install drip edge voided the shingle warranty. A website that explains drip edge installation earns the call from the homeowner whose new roof is already showing water damage at the eave. Free mockup, no commitment.

For Drip Edge Installation in KC

Web Design for Drip Edge Installation Companies in Kansas City

Drip edge installation customers are KC homeowners who discover rotting fascia or soffit damage on a roof that is less than ten years old — damage that indicates water is entering at the eave rather than running cleanly off the shingle edge and into the gutter; homeowners who had a roof replaced and were told by a home inspector or subsequent roofer that no drip edge was installed — a code violation under the International Residential Code and a condition that voids many shingle manufacturer warranties; or homeowners who see water staining on the fascia face, paint peeling at the eave line, or who notice that the shingle edge is curling upward at the eave — a sign that the first shingle course has no rigid support below it and has deformed from the unsupported overhang. The central education is drip edge function at the roof edge, water entry behind fascia from missing drip edge, and KC ice dam interaction with drip edge — three things that determine whether a homeowner understands why this small metal strip is the code requirement that protects the entire eave assembly from the first year forward. Drip edge function: drip edge is an L-shaped metal strip — typically one-and-a-half-inch to two-inch leg on the roof deck and a three-inch leg hanging over the fascia face — installed at the eave and rake edges of the roof before underlayment and shingles go on; at the eave, drip edge sits below the underlayment and directs water that reaches the shingle edge away from the fascia and into the gutter; without drip edge, water running off the shingle edge follows the underside of the shingle by capillary action and contacts the fascia and roof deck edge at the drip point — repeated wet-and-dry cycles drive moisture into the end grain of the fascia and the roof deck edge; the IRC requires drip edge at all eave and rake edges as of the 2012 code cycle — any KC re-roof permitted after 2012 was required to have it installed. Water entry behind fascia: when drip edge is missing at the eave, the gap between the bottom course of shingles and the fascia allows wind-driven rain to enter the space between the roof deck edge and the back of the gutter; KC prevailing storm direction from the south and southwest delivers high-velocity rain at low angles — the rain enters the eave gap, contacts the exposed fascia top and the roof deck edge, and sits in the enclosed space against wood surfaces; the fascia softens from repeated water exposure even without gutter overflow — missing drip edge is a separate rot mechanism from gutter clog overflow; homes in Mission Hills, Prairie Village, and other KC suburbs with mature tree canopy see both mechanisms simultaneously — clogged gutters overflow and missing drip edge allows wind-driven entry — and the fascia rots from both sides. KC ice dam interaction: at the eave, the drip edge is the last line of defense when ice dam meltwater backs up under the shingles toward the eave edge; water that backs up behind a KC ice dam and reaches the roof deck edge exits over the drip edge and into the gutter or off the fascia face — rather than running behind the fascia through the gap; a properly installed ice-and-water shield membrane at the eave — recommended for KC Climate Zone 4A at minimum three feet from eave edge or to a point 24 inches inside the exterior wall — laps over the top of the drip edge and creates a waterproof assembly at the most vulnerable section of the roof; when drip edge is missing, the ice-and-water shield cannot lap over it correctly and the membrane edge terminates at the roof deck edge without positive drainage direction — the assembly fails at exactly the location KC ice dam events test most aggressively. A drip edge installation website that explains the drip edge function at the eave, wind-driven water entry behind the fascia when drip edge is absent, and the KC ice dam protection failure mode earns the homeowner whose three-year-old re-roof is already showing rot at the eave.

What homeowners research before drip edge installation

  • Drip edge function — L-shaped eave strip, directs water away from fascia, capillary action failure without it
  • IRC code requirement — required at eave and rake since 2012 code cycle, re-roofs after 2012 required it, warranty implications
  • Water entry behind fascia — wind-driven rain entry at eave gap, rot mechanism separate from gutter overflow
  • Ice dam interaction — drip edge as terminus for ice-and-water shield lap, assembly failure without it
  • Aluminum vs. steel — gauge comparison, KC freeze-thaw cycling, galvanic corrosion at aluminum flashing-to-steel gutter contact

What your drip edge installation website would include

  • Function section — L-shape geometry, eave vs. rake installation, how capillary action causes fascia contact without it
  • Code section — IRC 2012 eave and rake requirement, KC permit implication, warranty voidance on major shingle brands
  • Wind-driven entry section — KC storm direction, eave gap water contact, rot mechanism distinct from gutter overflow
  • Ice dam section — ice-and-water shield lap requirement, 24-inch interior wall standard, assembly failure without drip edge terminus
  • Material section — aluminum vs. galvalume vs. steel, KC freeze-thaw response, gauge selection for residential vs. commercial
  • Quote form with roof age, re-roof history, fascia condition, gutter type, ice dam history, permit pulled

What clients say

“The warranty section is what gets the call on new roof re-inspections. KC homeowners who had a roof replaced two or three years ago and are starting to see fascia rot or shingle curl at the eave don't know why — they think the roofer used bad shingles. After the section went up explaining that missing drip edge is a code violation on any KC permitted re-roof since 2012 and that most major shingle warranties require it, customers started calling for the drip edge inspection specifically. Half of them had roofs three to five years old with no drip edge at the eave. The ice dam section also mattered — KC homeowners who had ice dam damage understood immediately why the eave membrane failed when I explained it couldn't lap over a drip edge that wasn't there.”

— P. Reinholt, roofing and eave flashing, Overland Park, KS

Simple pricing

A drip edge installation site with eave function section, code requirement guide, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with ice dam interaction, wind-driven entry mechanism, and material comparison is $425–$750. One drip edge installation job covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.

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