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Attic Ventilation and Skylight Repair for Oregon Homes

A lot of roof problems on the Oregon coast and in the valleys never start at the shingles. They start in the attic, where trapped moisture quietly rots decking from the inside, and they start at the skylight, where a bad flashing detail lets wind-driven rain find its way in. Pacific Peaks Roofing is a family-owned, locally owned crew based in Florence, and we treat your roof as one connected system: the covering on top, the airflow underneath, and every penetration in between. When the attic breathes the way it should and your skylights are flashed correctly, the whole roof lasts longer and stays drier through our wet coastal winters.

Oregon CCB #254443 Family owned in Florence Roofing, gutters, siding, windows & exterior Coastal-grade stainless detailing

Why attic ventilation matters so much in Oregon

Oregon gives a roof two very different problems, and good attic ventilation answers both. In our long, damp winters, warm moist air rises from your living space and your bathrooms into a cold attic. With nowhere to go, that moisture condenses on the underside of the roof deck and on the framing, the same way fog beads up on a cold window. Drip by drip, that wets the wood, feeds mold, and slowly rots the decking and rafters from the inside out, where you cannot see it until the damage is real. In summer, the opposite happens: a poorly vented attic turns into an oven, and that trapped heat bakes the shingles from below and ages them before their time.

A properly vented attic keeps a steady flow of outside air moving through the space, so warm wet air and summer heat are carried out before they can do damage. It protects the part of the roof you paid the most for and can see the least. On the coast and in shaded valley neighborhoods especially, where moisture is the constant enemy, ventilation is not an upgrade or an add-on. It is part of a roof that is built to last here.

Signs you may have a venting problem

Attic ventilation problems usually announce themselves long before the ceiling stains show up. If you notice any of these, it is worth a look:

  • A musty or moldy smell that comes from the attic or upstairs rooms, especially after a stretch of wet weather.
  • Visible condensation, dark water staining, or actual frost on the underside of the roof deck or on the nails poking through it in winter.
  • Black mold or mildew growth on the rafters, the decking, or the insulation.
  • Shingles that look aged, curled, or worn out years before they should, a sign the attic is cooking them from below.
  • Insulation that feels damp, looks matted, or has lost its loft, which kills its R-value and your comfort.
  • Rooms upstairs that run hot and stuffy in summer and feel clammy in winter no matter what the thermostat says.
Frost or beaded water on the underside of your roof deck in winter is a clear warning sign. That is your living space's moisture condensing in a cold attic, and over time it rots the wood your roof is nailed to. If you spot it, get it looked at before it turns into a decking replacement.

How we balance intake and exhaust and tie it into the roof

Good attic ventilation is not about cutting in more vents. It is about balance. Air has to come in low and leave high for the attic to actually breathe, so we design intake and exhaust to work together rather than fight each other. Intake usually comes in at the eaves through soffit or edge vents, and exhaust leaves near the peak through ridge or roof vents. If the two are not matched, you can end up pulling conditioned air out of the house, or pulling rain and outside air in through the wrong opening, which makes things worse instead of better.

  1. We assess what is actually there. We look in the attic and on the roof to see your current intake, exhaust, insulation, and any signs of existing moisture damage, then measure the attic so the venting is sized to the space.
  2. We design for balance. Intake at the eaves is matched to exhaust at the ridge so air moves in one steady direction, low to high, the whole length of the attic.
  3. We integrate it with the roof system. Vents are flashed and sealed as part of the roof, not punched in afterward, so every new opening sheds water instead of inviting it in. On the coast we use corrosion-resistant components that hold up to salt air.
  4. We confirm the air path is clear. Insulation baffles at the eaves keep the intake from getting buried, so the airflow you paid for keeps working long after we leave.

Because Pacific Peaks manages the whole job and oversees every crew on your roof, the venting is detailed to our standards by the same company responsible for keeping your roof watertight. Our own written 10-year workmanship warranty covers the installation.

Skylight installation, replacement, and leak-proofing

Skylights bring real daylight into a home, and a well-installed one will go decades without trouble. But here is the truth most homeowners never hear: when a skylight leaks, the glass is almost never the problem. The leak is in the flashing, the layered metal and waterproofing that ties the skylight into the surrounding roof. Flashing is everything. A skylight is just a hole in your roof until it is flashed correctly, and a rushed or sloppy flashing job will let water in no matter how good the unit is.

We install, replace, and re-flash skylights as part of the roof system. If your skylight is leaking, we diagnose where the water is actually getting in before we touch anything. Often the fix is reflashing an otherwise sound skylight rather than replacing the whole unit, and we will tell you honestly which one you need. If the skylight itself is failing, fogged between the panes, cracked, or simply worn out, we replace it and flash the new one properly. When we reroof a home, integrating the skylight flashing into the new roof is part of the job, not an afterthought.

  • Diagnosing skylight leaks and finding the true source, which is usually the flashing, not the glass.
  • Reflashing existing skylights that are still in good shape so you are not paying to replace a unit that works.
  • Full skylight replacement when the unit is fogged, cracked, or failed, flashed correctly into the roof.
  • Adding or relocating skylights during a roof replacement so the daylight and the watertight detailing are designed together.

A coastal note: wind-driven rain finds a weak skylight fast

On the Oregon coast, from Newport down to Coos Bay, rain rarely falls straight down. Strong coastal gusts drive it sideways and even upward, so it pushes against and under flashing in ways a gentle inland rain never does. A skylight that would stay dry in a calmer climate can leak the first time a real coastal storm hits it, because wind-driven rain seeks out every gap, lap, and shortcut in the flashing. The same goes for valley homes from Albany to Roseburg, where heavy winter rain and deep shade keep everything wet for months.

That is why we flash skylights and roof penetrations for the weather we actually get here, not for an easier climate somewhere else. Coastal expertise is not a slogan for us. It is detailing the laps, the headwall, and the sidewall so wind-driven rain has nowhere to go but back off the roof, and using corrosion-resistant components that survive salt air. It is the difference between a skylight that holds for decades and one that calls you every winter.

Frequently asked questions

Will better attic ventilation help my moss problem?

It helps the root cause. Moss and the moisture that feeds it thrive on roofs that stay damp, and a poorly vented attic keeps the whole roof structure wetter for longer. Better airflow dries things out and makes the roof a less friendly home for moss and rot. Ventilation works alongside the cleaning and treatment we do on the surface, not instead of it, but fixing the airflow attacks the dampness that lets moss take hold in the first place.

Can you just reflash my skylight instead of replacing it?

Often, yes. If the skylight itself is still sound and the leak is coming from the flashing, which it usually is, reflashing solves the problem without the cost of a new unit. We diagnose where the water is actually getting in first, then tell you honestly whether a reflash will do it or whether the skylight has genuinely failed and needs replacing. You get a straight answer and a written estimate either way.

Do skylights always leak eventually?

No. A skylight that is installed and flashed correctly can go decades without a single drip. The reason skylights have a leaky reputation is that so many are flashed poorly, and on the coast, wind-driven rain finds those weak spots fast. The unit is rarely the issue. The flashing is. Done right, with the laps and headwall detailed for our weather, a skylight is no more of a leak risk than the rest of the roof.

Do you add or improve venting during a roof replacement?

Yes, and it is the ideal time to do it. When the roof is already off, we can assess the attic, correct an unbalanced or undersized venting setup, and integrate the new intake and exhaust into the new roof so it is all flashed as one system. Folding ventilation into a reroof is far cleaner and more cost-effective than cutting it in later, and it means your new roof starts life breathing the way it should.

Talk to a Florence roofer about your attic and skylights

If your attic smells musty, your upstairs rooms run hot and clammy, or a skylight has started leaking, let us take a look before small problems turn into rotted decking. Pacific Peaks Roofing is family-owned and based right here in Florence, licensed, bonded, and insured under Oregon CCB #254443. You get one accountable contractor who manages the whole job, a straight diagnosis, an itemized written estimate, and our 10-year written workmanship warranty on the installation. Call us at 541-690-8089 or email pacificpeaksroofing@gmail.com to set up a look.

We offer roofing financing through Acorn Finance, so bigger attic, venting, or skylight work can be a monthly payment instead of one large check. You can check your rate in a couple of minutes without affecting your credit score. Financing is subject to credit approval, and Pacific Peaks does not make lending decisions or set rates. See our Financing page for details.

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