The Two Metal Roof Types Explained
Before comparing them, it helps a Spencer homeowner to understand what each metal roof type actually is. Here is the basic explanation.
Standing Seam
Standing seam metal roofing consists of vertical panels that lock together at raised seams running up the roof, with the fasteners and clips concealed beneath those seams rather than penetrating the panel face. This hidden fastener design gives standing seam its clean appearance and its excellent resistance to leaks, since there are no exposed penetrations. It is the premium type of metal roofing, favored for both looks and performance.
Exposed-Fastener Panels
Exposed fastener metal roofing, sometimes called screw down or through fastened, consists of panels, often corrugated or ribbed, that are screwed down directly through their face into the structure, with the screws and their rubber washers visible on the surface. This straightforward design is less expensive and simpler to install, which makes it popular for budget projects, agricultural buildings, and outbuildings. The visible fasteners are its defining feature.
The Core Difference
The fundamental difference is the fasteners, hidden in standing seam, exposed in screw down panels, and this single distinction drives most of the differences in cost, leak resistance, longevity, and appearance between the two. Understanding it is the key to the whole comparison. Everything else follows from whether the fasteners penetrate the panel face or are concealed beneath the seams. It is the heart of the matter.
Both Are Metal
It is worth noting that both types share metal roofing's general benefits, durability, long life relative to asphalt, fire resistance, and energy efficiency, since both are metal. The comparison is about the differences between two good roofing types, not about one being metal and the other not. Each is a legitimate metal roof, suited to different situations. The choice is between two valid options.
The Two Types, in Short
Standing seam hides its fasteners under interlocking vertical seams for a clean look and leak resistance, while exposed fastener panels are screwed down through the face for lower cost. The hidden versus exposed fastener difference drives the comparison.
One point worth underlining for Spencer homeowners is that the choice between standing seam and exposed fastener is rarely about one type being good and the other bad, since both are legitimate metal roofs that share metal's core virtues of durability, long life relative to asphalt, fire resistance, and energy efficiency. The choice is really about matching the type to the building and to what you want from the roof. Standing seam is the premium option, and it earns that status through genuine advantages, its concealed fasteners give it a sleek, architectural appearance and, more importantly, eliminate the face penetrations that are a common eventual leak point, which in turn tends to give it longer life and lower maintenance. Those benefits make it the natural choice for a primary residence where appearance matters and where a homeowner wants the most worry free, longest lasting roof and is willing to pay a premium for it. Exposed fastener roofing, on the other hand, is the practical, affordable option, and it is the sensible choice for a great many situations, outbuildings, barns, garages, agricultural structures, and budget conscious projects, where its lower cost is a real advantage, its utilitarian appearance is entirely appropriate, and the periodic fastener maintenance it requires is a reasonable trade for the savings. The honest way to choose, then, is to be clear about the building and your goals and budget, get real quotes for both on your actual roof, and weigh the premium of standing seam against what it buys you for your particular situation.
One point worth underlining for Spencer homeowners is that the choice between standing seam and exposed fastener is rarely about one type being good and the other bad, since both are legitimate metal roofs that share metal's core virtues of durability, long life relative to asphalt, fire resistance, and energy efficiency. The choice is really about matching the type to the building and to what you want from the roof. Standing seam is the premium option, and it earns that status through genuine advantages, its concealed fasteners give it a sleek, architectural appearance and, more importantly, eliminate the face penetrations that are a common eventual leak point, which in turn tends to give it longer life and lower maintenance. Those benefits make it the natural choice for a primary residence where appearance matters and where a homeowner wants the most worry free, longest lasting roof and is willing to pay a premium for it. Exposed fastener roofing, on the other hand, is the practical, affordable option, and it is the sensible choice for a great many situations, outbuildings, barns, garages, agricultural structures, and budget conscious projects, where its lower cost is a real advantage, its utilitarian appearance is entirely appropriate, and the periodic fastener maintenance it requires is a reasonable trade for the savings. The honest way to choose, then, is to be clear about the building and your goals and budget, get real quotes for both on your actual roof, and weigh the premium of standing seam against what it buys you for your particular situation.
One point worth underlining for Spencer homeowners is that the choice between standing seam and exposed fastener is rarely about one type being good and the other bad, since both are legitimate metal roofs that share metal's core virtues of durability, long life relative to asphalt, fire resistance, and energy efficiency. The choice is really about matching the type to the building and to what you want from the roof. Standing seam is the premium option, and it earns that status through genuine advantages, its concealed fasteners give it a sleek, architectural appearance and, more importantly, eliminate the face penetrations that are a common eventual leak point, which in turn tends to give it longer life and lower maintenance. Those benefits make it the natural choice for a primary residence where appearance matters and where a homeowner wants the most worry free, longest lasting roof and is willing to pay a premium for it. Exposed fastener roofing, on the other hand, is the practical, affordable option, and it is the sensible choice for a great many situations, outbuildings, barns, garages, agricultural structures, and budget conscious projects, where its lower cost is a real advantage, its utilitarian appearance is entirely appropriate, and the periodic fastener maintenance it requires is a reasonable trade for the savings. The honest way to choose, then, is to be clear about the building and your goals and budget, get real quotes for both on your actual roof, and weigh the premium of standing seam against what it buys you for your particular situation.
See Both Options
Spencer Metal Roofing installs both standing seam and exposed fastener metal roofing across Spencer and Owen County and will show you the options for your home. Call (765) 676-3491 for a free consultation and an honest recommendation on which type fits your situation and budget.