PVC Roofing
Chemical Resistance. Premium Lifespan.
When chemical exposure, grease exhaust, refrigerated interior space, or maximum service life is the priority, PVC is the membrane that delivers. Heat-welded seams, exceptional chemical resistance, and 25–30+ year lifespan make it the premium choice for restaurants, medical facilities, food processing, and cold storage.
What Is PVC Roofing?
The Original Heat-Welded Single-Ply
PVC — polyvinyl chloride — is the original heat-welded thermoplastic single-ply roofing membrane, introduced to the European commercial market in the late 1960s and to North America shortly after. Sika Sarnafil PVC installations from the 1970s remain in service today, making PVC the most field-proven single-ply membrane in the world.
A PVC membrane is reinforced internally with polyester scrim and contains plasticizers that maintain flexibility across a wide temperature range. The thermoplastic chemistry allows seams to be hot-air welded into a fused, monolithic surface. Modern PVC formulations include UV stabilizers, fire retardants, and biocides that extend service life beyond three decades.
For property owners, the practical result is a premium roofing system with documented 40+ year field performance, the broadest chemical resistance available in single-ply, and manufacturer warranties up to 30 years. PVC costs more than TPO upfront — but on the right building, it's the lowest lifecycle cost commercial roof on the market.
Why PVC Is the Premium Choice
Superior Chemical Resistance
PVC is the standout single-ply for chemical exposure. Engineered to resist greases, oils, animal fats, plasticizers, mild acids, and bacterial degradation — the conditions that prematurely destroy TPO and EPDM membranes within a few years on the wrong building.
Heat-Welded Seam Strength
Like TPO, PVC seams are hot-air welded into a fused, monolithic surface. PVC seams have been independently tested at >50 years of accelerated weathering with intact bond strength — no other commercial seam method matches this longevity.
Cold-Temperature Flexibility
PVC remains flexible to -20°F, making it the membrane of choice for refrigerated warehouses, cold-storage facilities, and roofs exposed to extreme freeze-thaw cycling. The membrane won't crack or split under thermal stress.
Premium Lifespan
Properly installed PVC routinely delivers 25–30+ years of service life — outlasting TPO and EPDM in most commercial environments. Sika Sarnafil PVC roofs over 40 years old are still in service in North America today.
Fire Performance
PVC carries a Class A fire rating and is inherently flame-retardant — it self-extinguishes when the ignition source is removed. Critical for restaurants with rooftop grease exhaust, manufacturing, and any insurance-driven Class A specification.
ENERGY STAR Reflectivity
White PVC reflects 80%+ of solar radiation, qualifying for ENERGY STAR and Cool Roof Rating Council certification. Translates directly to lower cooling costs on flat-roof commercial buildings — particularly in our Southern markets.
Wind Uplift Performance
PVC achieves the highest FM Global wind-uplift ratings available in single-ply (FM I-90 to I-195+ depending on attachment). Well-suited for high-wind coastal Louisiana and tornado-prone Arkansas/Kansas applications.
Recover-Friendly
PVC is fully compatible with recover (or 'roof-over') applications — installing new PVC over an existing roof in good structural condition. Recovers cost 20–40% less than full tear-offs and avoid extended business disruption.
PVC System Specs
60-mil is the standard specification for restaurants, medical, and food-processing roofs. 80-mil is recommended for high-traffic and equipment-dense roofs.
PVC vs. TPO
PVC costs more than TPO upfront but outlasts it — particularly in chemical, grease, or cold-storage environments. For standard commercial buildings without specific exposure, TPO is often the better economic choice.
Compare with TPO →How PVC Is Installed
PVC Attachment Methods
PVC is installed by mechanical attachment, full adhesion, or induction welding. We specify the right method based on deck type, wind zone, building height, and project requirements.
Mechanically Attached
Membrane is fastened along the seams with barbed plates and screws driven through insulation into the deck. The most common attachment method for steel decks and the most cost-effective. Heat-welded seams cover the fastener line so the field of the roof stays watertight.
Best For
Steel decks, large flat warehouses, budget-driven specifications
Fully Adhered
PVC is bonded directly to the substrate with low-rise foam or bonding adhesive. Eliminates fastener penetrations across the field and provides the most uniform attachment — the premium method for hospitals, custom architectural roofs, and concrete or wood-deck buildings.
Best For
Concrete decks, wood decks, premium specifications, complex geometry
Induction-Welded
Insulation plates are mechanically fastened first. PVC is then laid over and electromagnetically welded to the plates from above with an induction tool. No membrane penetrations, no field adhesives — fast, clean, and high-performance.
Best For
High-wind zones, hospital recovers, when puncture risk must be minimized
Where PVC Is Specified
Building Types & Applications
PVC is specified when the building has a specific exposure that disqualifies cheaper membranes — and when the owner intends to hold the property long enough to recover the upfront premium through lower maintenance and longer life.
Restaurants & Food Service
Kitchen exhaust vents discharge airborne grease and animal fats onto rooftops. PVC's chemical resistance makes it the only single-ply membrane warranted to handle restaurant grease exposure long-term — TPO and EPDM degrade rapidly under these conditions.
Food Processing & Packaging
Food production facilities, meat packing, dairy plants, and beverage bottlers all face elevated chemical and biological exposure. PVC handles cleaning chemicals, process fumes, and frequent washdown — and meets USDA and FDA-relevant facility standards.
Medical & Healthcare
Hospitals, surgery centers, and outpatient medical facilities use cleaning agents and exhaust environments that degrade standard membranes. PVC's chemical resistance, plus the cold-application installation (no torch fumes), make it the specified choice for healthcare.
Cold Storage & Refrigeration
Refrigerated warehouses, freezer facilities, and ice plants subject the roof to constant thermal cycling. PVC maintains flexibility down to -20°F where TPO and EPDM stiffen and crack. The premium choice for any cold-chain operation.
Chemical & Industrial
Manufacturing plants with chemical exposure — solvents, acids, plasticizers, industrial fumes — need a membrane engineered to resist them. PVC has the longest documented track record in chemical environments.
Multi-Tenant Commercial
Mixed-use buildings with restaurants on the first floor and offices above present the worst-case for membrane selection: grease exhaust on the roof and a 20-year hold-period expectation. PVC handles both.
High-Traffic Roofs
Roofs that see heavy maintenance traffic — ongoing HVAC service, equipment moves, frequent inspections — benefit from PVC's puncture resistance and easy weld-on patch repair.
Coastal & High-Wind
Gulf Coast and tornado-region commercial buildings benefit from PVC's superior wind-uplift performance. FM I-120, I-150, and I-195+ ratings are achievable with appropriate attachment specifications.
System Comparison
PVC vs. TPO vs. EPDM
Each single-ply membrane has its place. Here's how PVC compares on the factors that drive commercial decisions.
| Factor | PVC | TPO | EPDM |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chemical Resistance | Excellent | Good | Limited |
| Cold Flexibility | To -20°F | Stiffens below 10°F | Excellent in cold |
| Seam Method | Heat-welded | Heat-welded | Adhesive / tape |
| Reflectivity | High (white) | High (white) | Low (black) |
| Lifespan | 25–30+ yrs | 20–30 yrs | 20–30 yrs |
| Warranty | 20–30 yr available | 15–20 yr standard | 10–20 yr standard |
| Cost | Premium | Mid-range | Mid-range |
| Best For | Grease, chemical, cold | Most commercial | Cold-climate ballasted |
Cost Factors
What Determines PVC Pricing
PVC commercial installations sit in the higher tier of single-ply systems — above TPO, below commercial metal. The premium over TPO buys you longer service life, longer warranty, and chemical resistance — the math works on the right building.
The actual price for your building depends on ten variables. We provide a written estimate after a free on-site assessment with no commitment.
Request a Written Estimate10 Variables That Drive Project Cost
- 01Roof size (square footage)
- 02Existing roof — full tear-off vs. recover
- 03Deck type (steel, concrete, wood, gypsum)
- 04Insulation specification (R-value, layers, taper)
- 05Membrane thickness (50, 60, or 80 mil)
- 06Attachment method (mechanical, adhered, induction)
- 07Penetration density and roof complexity
- 08Wind uplift rating required (FM I-90 to I-195+)
- 09Warranty term selected (20-, 25-, or 30-year)
- 10Building access and operational staging requirements
Long-Term Care
PVC Maintenance & Repair
PVC is one of the most maintainable commercial membranes — repairs are simply welded patches that fuse to the existing membrane. Bi-annual maintenance keeps a PVC roof performing for its full 25–30+ year service life.
Maintenance Programs
Bi-annual inspections, written reports, and warranty-compliant documentation for every PVC roof we install or service.
Learn more →
PVC Repair
Welded patch repairs, flashing replacement, and seam restoration on PVC membrane systems of any age or manufacturer.
Learn more →
Soft-Wash Cleaning
Restore the white reflective surface and remove biological growth without high-pressure damage to seams or membrane.
Learn more →
Representative Project
35,000 sq ft Multi-Tenant Retail with Restaurant Anchor — PVC Replacement
Building Type
Multi-tenant retail
Square Footage
35,000 sq ft
System Specified
60-mil fully adhered PVC
Warranty
25-year NDL
Aging EPDM roof with multiple grease-related membrane failures around restaurant exhaust vents. EPDM had visibly degraded — chemical attack from years of grease exposure had softened the membrane near vent terminations. Specified 60-mil fully adhered PVC for superior chemical resistance and uniform attachment over the existing concrete deck. Phased work allowed all tenants to remain open. 25-year NDL warranty registered; maintenance program established for bi-annual grease vent inspection.
FAQ
PVC Roofing FAQ
- PVC costs roughly 15–25% more than TPO per square foot installed. The premium pays for superior chemical resistance, longer service life (25–30+ years vs. 20–30 for TPO), longer manufacturer warranties (often 30 years vs. 20), and field performance in conditions where TPO would fail prematurely. For the right building — restaurants, medical, food processing, cold storage — PVC is the lower lifecycle cost despite the higher upfront price.
- PVC is the right specification when your roof has any of: rooftop grease or oil exhaust (kitchens, restaurants, food prep), exposure to chemicals or solvents (medical, manufacturing, food processing), refrigerated/freezer interior space (cold storage), or sustained submerged-water conditions (poor drainage, ponding-prone roofs). For standard offices, retail, warehouses, and schools without those exposures, TPO is typically the better economic choice. We assess each building before specifying.
- Properly installed and maintained commercial PVC routinely delivers 25–30+ years. Sika Sarnafil and IB Roof Systems both have documented PVC installations in service over 40 years with intact membranes. Service life depends on membrane thickness, attachment method, climate exposure, and bi-annual maintenance. Brown's Roofing offers maintenance programs that keep PVC roofs performing through their full warranty period.
- Yes. PVC carries UL Class A fire ratings, FM Global wind-uplift approvals (up to I-195+), International Building Code (IBC) compliance, and ENERGY STAR / Cool Roof Rating Council certification. PVC meets or exceeds the specifications of nearly all commercial insurance carriers and code requirements in our service markets across LA, AR, KS, AL, MS, TX, and FL.
- Often yes — PVC recovers (or 'roof-overs') are a standard installation method when the existing roof is structurally sound and the insulation is dry. We perform a moisture scan first to confirm. If insulation is wet in localized areas, those sections must be cut out and replaced before recover. If insulation is widely saturated, full tear-off is required. Recovers typically save 20–40% versus tear-off replacement.
- PVC and EPDM are very different products. EPDM is a thermoset rubber with adhesive or tape seams; it's black, doesn't reflect heat, and offers no chemical resistance. PVC is a thermoplastic with welded seams, white reflective surface, and excellent chemical resistance. EPDM still has applications in cold climates, but in most Southern commercial markets PVC or TPO has displaced it. PVC outperforms EPDM in lifespan, seam strength, fire rating, and chemical environments.
- Standard PVC warranties cover material defects for 20–30 years. 'No Dollar Limit' (NDL) warranties — available when installed by a manufacturer-certified contractor like Brown's Roofing — cover both material and labor for repairs, with no cap on manufacturer exposure. NDL warranties typically require documented bi-annual maintenance to remain valid. We complete the warranty registration paperwork as part of every PVC installation.
PVC Roofing in Your Market
Commercial Roofing
Is PVC Right for Your Building?
We'll assess your building's exposure conditions and recommend the right membrane — whether that's PVC, TPO, or another system.
