Homeowners want to know whether rotted wood soffit needs full replacement or can be patched, what ventilation is lost when soffit is damaged, and whether squirrel entry points in the soffit require pest service first. A website that explains the attic ventilation connection earns the inspection. Free mockup, no commitment.
For Soffit & Fascia in KC
Web Design for Soffit and Fascia Repair Companies in Kansas City
Soffit and fascia customers are homeowners with sagging, rotted, or animal-damaged soffit panels, a fascia board that has swelled and split behind the gutter, or a full-perimeter replacement that is part of a roofing or siding project. The central education is what soffit does beyond aesthetics: soffit is the ventilated underside of the roof overhang — vented soffit panels (typically 1" or 2" vent openings every 12") provide the intake air for the attic ventilation system. The IRC requires 1 sq ft of net free ventilation area per 150 sq ft of attic floor area (1:150 ratio, or 1:300 with vapor barrier) — soffit vents supply approximately 50–60% of that ventilation. Damaged or blocked soffit panels that reduce intake airflow cause heat and moisture to build up in the attic, accelerating shingle degradation and potentially voiding the roofing warranty. Material options: wood soffit (original on homes built before 1990) is subject to rot when the paint seal fails — replacement with aluminum (vented coil aluminum wrap, painted to match) or vinyl eliminates the rot cycle. Vinyl soffit panels (Kaycan, CertainTeed, Ply Gem) are the dominant replacement material — they do not rot, are available in vented and non-vented profiles, and come in standard colors that match most existing trim. Fascia: the fascia board runs horizontally along the roof edge behind the gutter — gutter spikes driven directly into the fascia (rather than into rafter tails with hidden hangers) cause the fascia to crack and allow water behind the gutter mount point. Animal entry: squirrels and birds enter through damaged or warped soffit — pest removal first, then repair and seal with aluminum coil stock to prevent re-entry. A soffit and fascia website that explains the attic ventilation role, material options, and the animal entry sequence earns the homeowner whose gutter installer pointed up at the sagging overhang.
What homeowners research before repairing soffit and fascia
- Attic ventilation role — what vented soffit does, what blocked or missing soffit does to attic heat and moisture
- Wood vs. vinyl/aluminum — why wood rots, what replacement materials eliminate the rot cycle
- Fascia rot causes — gutter spike failure, water infiltration behind the gutter mount
- Animal damage — sequence of pest removal before closing entry points, how we seal after repair
- Partial vs. full replacement — when a section is repaired vs. when full-perimeter replacement makes sense
What your soffit and fascia website would include
- Attic ventilation section — what vented soffit provides, IRC ventilation ratios, what damage disrupts
- Material guide — wood vs. vinyl vs. aluminum coil wrap — rot risk, longevity, color matching
- Fascia repair — why gutter spikes cause fascia failure, hidden hanger conversion during repair
- Animal damage sequence — pest removal first, then repair and aluminum seal-out
- Full vs. partial replacement — when matching is possible, when full perimeter is cleaner
- Inspection form with damage type, animal activity, approximate linear footage, material preference
What clients say
“Most of my soffit calls came from people whose gutter company pointed up at the damage — they arrived not knowing what soffit even was or why it mattered. The attic ventilation section on the website changed that completely: customers called already understanding why blocked soffit was a roofing and HVAC problem, not just an appearance problem. The animal damage section also helped — customers who had squirrels stopped expecting me to do the repair without pest removal first, because the website explained the sequence before I had to.”
— C. Whitfield, exterior trim contractor, Lenexa, KS
Simple pricing
A soffit and fascia site with ventilation section, material guide, and inspection form starts at $200. A full site with animal damage sequence, fascia repair section, and before-and-after gallery is $425–$750. One perimeter repair covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.
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