When homeowners see water coming into the house, the first thought is usually, “Great. The roof is leaking.”
Maybe. But honestly? A lot of the time, it’s not.
At HRTI Exterior Company, we get plenty of calls about “roof leaks” that turn out to be water sneaking in around a window, door, siding transition, or exterior opening. The roof gets blamed because it’s convenient. The gutters, meanwhile, are sitting there packed with leaves, pine needles, roofing grit, and whatever else nature decided to throw in there.
A real roof leak usually comes from something like damaged shingles, bad flashing, cracked pipe boots, skylight issues, or aging roofing materials.
But when water shows up around windows, doors, or exterior walls, the problem is often drainage. Your home’s exterior is supposed to move water away from the structure. Roof, gutters, siding, flashing, windows, doors, fascia, soffit, and trim all have jobs to do.
When one part stops doing its job, water starts freelancing.
Gutters are supposed to collect rainwater and send it safely through the downspouts. When they’re clogged, water has nowhere to go.
So it may:
That water spot near your window? It may not be coming from the roof above it. It may be coming from gutters that are basically yelling for help.
Windows and Doors Are Easy TargetsWindows and doors are natural weak spots in any exterior wall. They rely on proper flashing, trim, sealants, and drainage to stay dry.
Under normal conditions, they do fine. But when clogged gutters dump water down the side of the house, those areas get hit with more water than they were designed to handle.
That can lead to moisture around:
So yes, the water is inside. No, that does not automatically mean your roof is the villain.
And by “fun,” we mean annoying.
In winter, snow and ice can create the same kind of problem. Ice buildup in gutters, frozen downspouts, snow packed along roof edges, or ice dams can stop water from draining properly.
When snow melts and refreezes, water can back up and move under shingles, behind fascia, or into exterior wall areas. It may look like a roof leak, but the real issue may be ice, drainage, ventilation, insulation, or a combination of all of the above.
Because apparently water likes puzzles.
These questions help narrow down whether the issue is roofing, gutters, flashing, siding, windows, doors, or winter ice buildup.
Outside, check for:
Inside, look for:
These clues can help point to the real cause before everyone starts yelling “new roof.”
Keeping gutters clean is not glamorous, but it works. Regular gutter cleaning and exterior maintenance can help prevent water from sneaking into places it has no business being.
Helpful steps include:
Small drainage problems can turn into expensive repairs if they’re ignored long enough.
If water is coming into your home, don’t guess. And maybe don’t immediately accuse the roof.
HRTI Exterior Company looks at the full exterior system, including roofing, gutters, downspouts, siding, flashing, fascia, soffit, windows, doors, trim, and drainage. That way, we can help identify where the water is really coming from and recommend the right fix.
Think you may have a roof leak? It could be your gutters, windows, doors, or exterior drainage.
Call HRTI today at 303-984-6159 or email info@hrti.com to schedule your free exterior inspection.
How do I know if it’s a roof leak or a gutter problem?
If water is showing up around windows, doors, exterior walls, fascia, soffit, or siding, clogged or overflowing gutters may be the cause. Ceiling stains can still be a roof issue, but location matters.
Can clogged gutters really cause water to come in around windows?
Yes. When gutters overflow, water can run down the exterior and hit window trim, door trim, siding seams, and flashing areas. Eventually, it can find a way inside.
Why does it only happen during heavy rain?
Because light rain may not overwhelm the system. Heavy rain can fill clogged gutters quickly, causing water to spill over, back up, or run into vulnerable areas.
Why does this happen in winter?
Snow, ice, frozen gutters, and ice dams can block drainage. When melting snow has nowhere to go, it can back up into roof edges, fascia, soffit, siding, windows, or doors.
Will I need a new roof?
Not always. Many “roof leaks” are actually gutter, flashing, siding, window, door, or ice-related issues. A proper inspection is the best way to know.
Not every leak is a roof leak.
Sometimes the roof is innocent, the gutters are guilty, and the water is just being dramatic.
If you’re seeing water around a window, door, or exterior wall, HRTI Exterior Company can inspect the exterior, identify the likely source, and help you fix the real problem.
Call 303-984-6159 or email info@hrti.com to schedule your free exterior inspection.