How to Stop Metal Roof Sheet Leakage — A Contractor’s Guide
Metal sheet roofing covers the majority of industrial and commercial construction in India — warehouses, factories, site cabins, cold storage, poultry sheds, and agricultural structures. It is cost-effective, quick to install, and structurally sound. But it leaks.
When a metal sheet roof leaks, the consequences compound quickly. Inventory gets damaged. The structural frame below the sheets begins to corrode. Energy costs climb as insulation is compromised. And the contractor who installed or maintained the roof gets a callback.
This guide is for site contractors and building fabricators who need a reliable, field-applicable fix — one that does not require sheet replacement, specialist equipment, or dry-weather conditions to apply.
Can metal sheet roof leakage be fixed permanently?
Yes. In most cases, metal sheet roof leakage can be fixed without replacing the sheet. A polyurethane (PU) sealant or MS polymer sealant applied to joints, screw holes, overlaps, and seams creates a flexible, waterproof bond that lasts 5–10 years under normal conditions.
The exception: if the sheet itself has corroded through or buckled structurally, sealant is not the fix — the sheet needs replacement. For all other failure scenarios, sealant is the right tool.
What causes metal sheet leakage in most buildings?
Most metal sheet roof leaks come from a small set of predictable failure
points — not random sheet failure. Identifying the correct failure point
before applying sealant is what separates a lasting repair from one that fails
in the next monsoon.
- Screw holes and fastener points — The most common single failure point.
Fasteners loosen over time due to vibration and thermal movement, breaking the
seal around the hole and allowing water to track down the screw shaft.
- Joint and overlap gaps — Metal sheets expand and contract with daily
temperature changes. Over time, the overlap between sheets opens up,
especially on long unbroken roof spans with no intermediate fixings.
- Thermal expansion and contraction — Every metal sheet moves with heat and
cold. This daily cycling stresses every joint and seam. On large industrial
roofs, cumulative movement is significant enough to shear original sealant
bonds within 3–5 years.
- Corrosion at cut edges and fastener points — Rust develops first at cut
sheet edges and around fasteners where the zinc coating is broken. Once
corrosion takes hold, the metal-to-metal contact at joints degrades and gaps
form.
- Degraded original sealant or tape — Butyl tape and sealant applied at
installation have a finite lifespan. UV exposure and heat harden them, causing
cracking and lifting. Most original installation seals need reapplication
within 5–7 years.
- Poor original installation — Insufficient overlap width, missing sealant at
ridge joints, or fasteners driven at the wrong angle leave gaps from day one
that worsen progressively with weathering.
Is welding a better fix than sealant for metal roof leaks? What about butyl
tape?
For an installed roof in the field, welding is not the right fix — and butyl
tape is only a temporary one.
┌─────────────────────┬────────────────┬───────────┬─────────────────────┐
│ │ Welding │ Butyl │ Adhesive Sealant │
│ │ │ Tape │ (PU / MS Polymer) │
├─────────────────────┼────────────────┼───────────┼─────────────────────┤
│ Permanence │ High │ Low — 1–3 │ High — 5–10 years │
│ │ (structural) │ years │ │
├─────────────────────┼────────────────┼───────────┼─────────────────────┤
│ Skill required │ Certified │ None │ None │
│ │ welder │ │ │
├─────────────────────┼────────────────┼───────────┼─────────────────────┤
│ Works on installed │ Rarely │ Yes │ Yes │
│ roof │ practical │ │ │
├─────────────────────┼────────────────┼───────────┼─────────────────────┤
│ Bonds to lightly │ No │ Poorly │ Yes │
│ corroded metal │ │ │ │
├─────────────────────┼────────────────┼───────────┼─────────────────────┤
│ Flexibility after │ None │ Low │ High │
│ application │ │ │ │
├─────────────────────┼────────────────┼───────────┼─────────────────────┤
│ Fire risk on site │ High │ None │ None │
├─────────────────────┼────────────────┼───────────┼─────────────────────┤
│ Cost per repair │ High │ Low │ Low–Medium │
│ point │ │ │ │
└─────────────────────┴────────────────┴───────────┴─────────────────────┘
Welding requires a certified operator, heat-safe working conditions, and clear
access to both sides of the joint. On an installed roof — particularly a
corrugated or overlapping sheet system — that access rarely exists. Welding
also creates a rigid joint with no flexibility, meaning the repaired point is
likely to crack again under thermal movement. Welding is the right answer in a
fabrication workshop on a new structure. It is not the right answer on a site
repair.
Butyl tape is widely used as a first response because it is cheap and fast. It
works briefly. UV exposure and heat harden butyl tape within 1–3 years,
causing it to lift at the edges and crack through the bead. It also does not
bond reliably to corroded metal surfaces, which is precisely where most leaks
originate.
Adhesive sealant remains flexible after curing, accommodates thermal movement,
bonds to metal including lightly corroded surfaces, and requires no
specialist skill or equipment. For site repair of installed metal sheet
roofing, it is the correct tool.
For a detailed comparison of welding versus adhesive bonding across metal
joining applications, see our guide to metal bonding vs welding.
Does the same sealant work on all types of metal roofing sheets?
The same product category — PU sealant or MS polymer sealant — works across
most metal sheet types. The variation is in formulation choice and surface
preparation, not in whether sealant can be used.
Sheet Type | Recommended Sealant | Key Note |
|---|---|---|
GI (Galvanised Iron) | PU sealant or MS polymer | Most common in India; both formulations bond reliably. |
Corrugated Iron / Steel | PU sealant or MS polymer | Apply bead along the ridge, not the valley — water runs in the valley. |
Tin Sheet | Flexible PU or MS polymer | Higher thermal movement than GI; avoid rigid or fast-set formulations. |
Zinc / Galvalume | Neutral-cure PU or MS polymer | Avoid acid-cure silicone — acid off-gassing reacts with the zinc coating. |
Pre-painted / Colour-coated | MS polymer preferred | Better adhesion to paint surfaces; run a thumb-peel adhesion test before full application. |
Surface preparation varies slightly by substrate. GI and corrugated iron need
rust removed at the failure point before sealant is applied. Pre-painted
sheets need degreasing. The application process is otherwise the same across
all sheet types.
How to apply metal roof sealant on site
- Identify and mark all leak points — Walk the roof after rain or run a hose
test. Mark every screw hole, joint gap, and overlap that shows moisture
ingress. Repairing one point while missing adjacent ones means a callback.
- Clean the surface — Wire brush all marked points to remove loose rust,
dirt, and any old sealant or tape. The sealant bonds to the metal, not to
contamination.
- Degrease where needed — For pre-painted or colour-coated sheets, wipe the
application area with a clean cloth dampened with solvent. Allow to dry before
applying.
- Cut the nozzle at 45° — 6–8mm bead width for joints and overlaps; 4–5mm for
individual screw holes. Cut once and keep the opening consistent across the
job.
- Apply a continuous bead — Work along the full length of the joint in a
single pass. No gaps, no air pockets. Stop and restart cleanly rather than
leaving a thin spot.
- Tool the bead flat — Press firmly with a wet finger or a plastic spatula to
ensure full contact with the metal surface on both sides of the joint. The
bead should be slightly concave, not domed.
- Allow to cure before loading — Surface dry in 30–60 minutes. Rain-resistant
in 2–4 hours. Full cure in 24–48 hours depending on temperature and humidity.
▎ Applying in monsoon or wet conditions: PU sealants are moisture-cure
▎ formulations — humidity accelerates the curing reaction. If the surface is
▎ wet but not actively dripping, application is still viable. Wipe standing
▎ water from the application zone, apply the bead, and tool immediately. Do
▎ not apply in active rain. Check the product datasheet for wet-surface
▎ suitability before proceeding on a saturated surface.