How to Waterproof a Commercial Roof in Florida
Published March 2026 · Ocean Group Construction
Waterproofing a commercial roof isn't a single product — it's a system of integrated components that work together to keep water out of your building. In Florida, where annual rainfall exceeds 50 inches and hurricane-force rain events can dump 6+ inches in hours, every element of that system matters. Here's how it works.
The Roof Waterproofing System (Top to Bottom)
1. Primary Membrane
The membrane is the primary waterproofing layer — the surface you see when you look at the roof. On commercial flat roofs in Florida, the three dominant membrane types are:
- TPO (Thermoplastic Polyolefin) — most popular for new construction. Heat-welded seams, reflective white surface, 20-30 year warranty available.
- PVC (Polyvinyl Chloride) — chemically resistant, excellent for kitchens, restaurants, and chemical processing facilities. Heat-welded seams.
- Modified Bitumen — multi-ply system with built-in redundancy. Torch-applied or self-adhered. The "belt and suspenders" option.
2. Flashing System
Flashing details are where the membrane meets walls, curbs, edges, penetrations, and equipment. These transitions are the most critical waterproofing details on any roof. Flashing must be:
- Compatible with the field membrane material
- Mechanically secured AND sealed at termination points
- Tall enough to resist wind-driven rain (minimum 8" above roof surface in Florida)
- Inspected and maintained annually
3. Insulation
Roof insulation serves dual purposes: thermal performance and providing a stable substrate for the membrane. In Florida, polyisocyanurate (polyiso) is the standard commercial roof insulation. It provides the highest R-value per inch (R-5.7) and contributes to the overall wind uplift resistance of the assembly.
4. Vapor Retarder
In Florida's humid climate, moisture can drive upward through the roof deck into the insulation assembly from below. A vapor retarder installed between the deck and insulation prevents this. Not every climate needs one — Florida absolutely does.
5. Drainage
A waterproof membrane that holds standing water is doing half its job. Proper drainage design — interior roof drains, scuppers, tapered insulation for positive slope, and overflow drains — ensures water leaves the roof surface within 48 hours of any rain event. In Florida, we design for 6" per hour rainfall intensity at minimum.
The Coating Alternative
For existing roofs that are structurally sound but need waterproofing renewal, a fluid-applied coating system can restore waterproof integrity without tear-off. Silicone coatings are the gold standard for Florida because they resist ponding water, maintain UV reflectivity, and cost 50-75% less than full replacement. See our silicone coating guide for details.
Why Florida Demands More
Standard waterproofing details that work in Ohio or Arizona are insufficient in Florida. The combination of:
- Horizontal wind-driven rain at 100+ mph
- UV index among the highest in the continental US
- Extreme thermal cycling (170°F roof surface to 75°F overnight)
- Salt air corrosion within 15 miles of the coast
- High water table pushing moisture through slabs from below
...means every detail has to be designed and installed for conditions that most of the country never experiences. That's why you need a contractor who builds for Florida — not one applying Midwest details in a tropical climate.
Ocean Group Construction designs, installs, and maintains commercial roof waterproofing systems across Florida. We build for what Florida actually delivers.