Caring for a Clay Tile Roof in Burbank: What the Valley Heat Does to the Layer You Cannot See
The tile on a Burbank roof can outlast you, but the paper underneath it will not, and the Valley heat is the reason. Here is how tile roofs really fail here and what keeps them watertight for decades.
The tile is the armor, not the waterproofing
The single most useful thing to understand about a clay or concrete tile roof is that the tile is not what keeps the water out. The tile is the armor, the part that takes the sun, the wind, and the years, and a good tile can genuinely last for generations. The actual waterproofing is the underlayment beneath the tile, the felt or synthetic membrane laid over the deck before the tile goes down. Water that blows under the tile in a storm, and in a Burbank Santa Ana a surprising amount does, runs across that underlayment and off the roof. When the underlayment is sound, the roof is dry. When it has failed, the roof leaks, no matter how perfect the tile looks from the street.
This is why so many Burbank tile-roof owners are caught off guard. They look up, see a handsome, intact tile roof, and assume it is fine, only to find stains spreading across a ceiling after a winter storm. The tile is doing its job, but the paper it sits on has aged out. Once you understand that the surface and the waterproofing are two different layers with two different lifespans, the whole way you think about a tile roof changes, and so does the way you maintain and eventually re-roof it. It also explains why a tile roof can be repaired and re-roofed without throwing away the tile, by lifting the sound tile, laying fresh underlayment, and resetting the salvaged tile on top.
How the Burbank climate ages a tile roof
Burbank is, in some ways, both kind and cruel to a tile roof. Kind, because tile shrugs off the relentless sun and ultraviolet that destroy asphalt, and because tile's mass and fire resistance suit the foothill setting well. Cruel, because the same months of unbroken Valley heat that the tile ignores are quietly baking the underlayment beneath it. Heat radiates down through the tile and through the air space onto the felt, and decade after dry decade that membrane loses its oils, grows brittle, and finally cracks and crumbles. The underlayment on an old Burbank tile roof often fails not from water but from heat, which is the opposite of what most owners expect, and it is a direct consequence of how hot this part of the Valley runs.
The other Burbank stressor for tile is wind. The Santa Ana events that funnel down out of the canyons lift and shift loose or poorly fastened tile, and once a tile slips out of position it exposes the underlayment to direct weather and leaves a path for water and embers. Broken tile from foot traffic, falling branches, or simple age compounds the problem. None of this is dramatic in a single event, but across the years it adds up, which is why a tile roof needs the occasional honest look even though it gives the impression of being maintenance-free.
- Underlayment baked dry and brittle by years of Valley heat radiating through the tile
- Slipped or shifted tile from Santa Ana wind events
- Cracked or broken tile from foot traffic, branches, and age
- Failed mortar at the ridges and hips
- Dried, split flashing at chimneys, walls, and valleys
What real tile maintenance looks like in Burbank
Maintaining a tile roof is not about doing a lot, it is about doing the right small things and knowing when the underlayment's clock has run out. The right small things include resetting tiles that have slipped before they expose the paper, replacing cracked and broken tiles promptly, re-pointing the ridges and hips as the mortar weathers, and keeping the valleys and the flashing clear and sound. Walking a tile roof is genuinely risky, both for the person and for the brittle tile underfoot, so this is work for someone who knows how to move on tile, not a weekend project.
The bigger judgment is timing the underlayment. There is no single number for how long an underlayment lasts in Burbank, because it depends on the original material, the heat exposure, and the slope, but on a roof of several decades it is reasonable to assume the paper is near the end even if the tile is fine. The honest way to handle this is an inspection that actually assesses the underlayment, not just the tile, so you know whether you are looking at years of life left or a re-roof on the horizon. That lets you plan the lift-and-relay on your own schedule rather than reacting to a leak.
What we steer owners away from is the aggressive maintenance that does more harm than good. High-pressure washing can crack tile and drive water where it should not go, and walking the roof casually breaks tiles and shortens its life. Coatings and quick sealers sold as a way to extend a tile roof rarely address the real issue, which is the underlayment underneath. The genuine answer is measured care of the tile and an honest read on the paper beneath it, which is exactly the kind of straight assessment we give on every Burbank tile roof we look at.
If you own a tile roof in Burbank and want to know whether the tile is fine but the underlayment is near the end, that is exactly what a free inspection answers. We assess the layer that actually keeps you dry, not just the one you can see. Call 213-573-1171.
Give us a call at 213-573-1171 and we will lay out your options.