The Florida Building Code sets the minimum structural and waterproofing requirements. It doesn’t guarantee the attention to detail that separates a 15-year-long headache from a 35-year-long investment.
Building code doesn’t account for how complex your roof is. A simple four-sided roof might perform fine with a basic underlayment, but introduce valleys, walls, penetrations, or multiple roof slopes, and you’ve got a system that demands extra care.
A few examples:
A reputable Florida roofing contractor doesn’t settle for minimum standards. Even in budget-sensitive projects, they’ll make small but significant upgrades that enhance durability without ballooning costs. That might mean choosing a thicker underlayment, upgrading attachment foam. Those refinements create a roof you can count on long after the code inspector drives away.
When planning your next condominium roof replacement, don’t just ask, “Does it meet code?” Ask, “Is the roof system we’re considering the best fit for our building?” The difference between the two may not be visible today, or when you’re reading those estimates, but you’ll feel it in ten years when one community is patching leaks while another remains aesthetically, and functionally, flawless.