Autumn is the single best time of year to look at your roof. The logic is straightforward: wet and windy weather finds every weakness in a roof, and problems that were sitting dormant through summer will start showing themselves the moment the rain arrives. A small, easily fixed issue in October becomes a much larger, more expensive one if it’s left through a Birmingham winter. Getting on top of it now — or at least knowing what you’re dealing with — is almost always cheaper than dealing with an active leak in January.

You don’t need to get up on the roof yourself. A lot of what matters can be seen from the ground or from inside the loft. Here’s what to look for.

What to check from the ground

Stand back from your property and look at the roof from a few different angles. You’re looking for:

What to check from inside the loft

A loft inspection is one of the most useful things a homeowner can do before winter, and it doesn’t require any specialist knowledge. Take a torch and look for:

Gutters and downpipes

Blocked gutters are one of the most common and most underestimated causes of winter damp in UK homes. The path from a blocked gutter to a wet internal wall is direct and well-established: leaves and debris accumulate through autumn, the gutter fills with standing water, that water backs up under the edge of the roof covering or overflows at the junction with the fascia, and slowly saturates the top of the wall below.

After heavy autumn leaf fall, check that your gutters are clear and that water flows freely to the downpipes. Look for joints that have separated — a common sign is a green algae stain on the wall directly below a joint. Downpipes should be flushed through; a blocked downpipe will back up the entire run above it.

This is one of the most cost-effective things you can do to protect a property over winter. If you’re not comfortable clearing gutters yourself, it’s a straightforward job that can usually be combined with a general roof inspection.

Chimneys

Chimneys are particularly vulnerable to winter weather because they’re fully exposed and because they use mortar jointing that is subject to freeze-thaw cycling. When water gets into hairline cracks in chimney pointing and then freezes, it expands and widens those cracks. Over several winters, what started as a minor pointing issue becomes significant water ingress through the stack.

The most common chimney problems I see across Birmingham and Worcestershire are: failed pointing between the brickwork courses; cracked or deteriorated flaunching (the sloped mortar cap around chimney pots); and failing lead flashings where the chimney meets the roof slope. All of these allow water into the chimney breast, which typically appears as a damp patch on an internal chimney breast wall, often not directly below the chimney itself.

If your chimney hasn’t been looked at in the last five to ten years, it’s worth having it checked. See our chimney and leadwork service page for more detail on what’s involved.

Flat roofs specifically

If your property has a flat-roofed extension, garage or bay window roof, give it some specific attention before winter. The main things to check on a flat roof are:

Flat roofs with poor drainage are the most vulnerable in heavy rain. A small problem identified now is far more straightforward and less expensive to fix than water damage to the room below.

What to do if you find a problem

The most important piece of advice here is simple: don’t ignore it. Roofing problems do not improve over winter — they get worse, often significantly, once the temperature drops and the rain intensifies. A ridge tile that’s slightly loose in October may come down completely in a November storm. A small felt split that’s letting in a drip may be letting in a steady flow by February.

You don’t need to make any decisions immediately — but knowing what you’re dealing with before winter arrives puts you in a much better position. I offer free roof surveys across Birmingham, the West Midlands and Worcestershire. A survey takes around 30–45 minutes and I’ll give you a straightforward, written assessment of what I find and what, if anything, needs doing. There’s no obligation and no pressure to proceed.

If you’d like to arrange a pre-winter inspection, get in touch here or call me on 07580 085 430.