Indiana Roofing Terms and Glossary
Roofing contracts, inspection reports, insurance claims, and building permit applications each carry a specialized vocabulary that directly affects how projects are scoped, priced, and approved. This glossary covers the core technical, regulatory, and trade terms used across Indiana's residential and commercial roofing sector. Accurate interpretation of these terms is essential for property owners, contractors, adjusters, and inspectors operating under Indiana building codes and OSHA safety standards.
Definition and scope
A roofing glossary in the Indiana context encompasses three overlapping vocabularies: structural and material terminology drawn from industry standards, code and permitting language governed by the Indiana Residential Code and Indiana Building Code, and insurance and claims terminology tied to policy language reviewed under the Indiana Department of Insurance.
The terms below are organized by functional category rather than alphabetically, which reflects how professionals encounter them — by task, not by letter. Definitions align with usage in the International Building Code (IBC) and International Residential Code (IRC) as adopted by Indiana, and with terminology published by the National Roofing Contractors Association (NRCA).
Scope limitations: This glossary addresses terminology applicable within Indiana's jurisdiction. Federal standards (such as OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart Q for roofing safety) apply nationally and are referenced here where relevant but are not interpreted as Indiana-specific rules. Terminology governing commercial roofing in jurisdictions outside Indiana, or specialty agricultural structures exempt from Indiana's residential code, falls outside this page's coverage.
How it works
Roofing terminology functions as a shared operational language between trades, regulators, and property owners. Misunderstanding a single term — such as confusing deck with substrate, or drip edge with fascia — can produce scope disputes, failed inspections, or voided warranties. The glossary below covers 4 functional categories.
1. Structural and assembly terms
- Roof deck: The structural panel — typically OSB (oriented strand board) or plywood — fastened to rafters or trusses. Indiana's residential code requires minimum 15/32-inch panel thickness for most rafter spans.
- Rafter / Truss: Load-bearing framing members. Trusses are prefabricated; rafters are cut on-site.
- Ridge: The apex horizontal line of a sloped roof where two opposing slopes meet.
- Valley: The internal angle formed where two roof planes intersect; a high-drainage-concentration zone requiring specific flashing treatment.
- Eave: The lower edge of a roof that overhangs the exterior wall.
- Soffit: The underside of the eave overhang, typically ventilated.
- Fascia: The vertical board running along the eave line, to which gutters are attached.
2. Material and system terms
- Underlayment: A water-resistant or waterproof layer installed directly over the deck, beneath finish roofing. Types include felt (ASTM D226), synthetic polymer sheet, and self-adhering rubberized asphalt (used in ice-dam-prone zones per IRC Section R905).
- Ice and water shield: A peel-and-stick self-adhering membrane installed at eaves and valleys. Indiana's climate requires this product at a minimum 24-inch coverage from the interior wall line, per IRC R905.2.7.
- Flashing: Sheet metal (typically galvanized steel or aluminum) installed at roof penetrations, walls, and valleys to prevent water infiltration.
- Drip edge: An angled metal strip at eaves and rakes that directs water away from the fascia and into the gutter.
- Hip and ridge cap: Specialized shingles or formed metal pieces covering the roof's ridges and hip lines.
- TPO / EPDM / PVC: Thermoplastic polyolefin, ethylene propylene diene monomer, and polyvinyl chloride — the three dominant membrane systems for Indiana flat roof systems.
3. Code and permitting terms
- Pitch / Slope: Expressed as rise over run (e.g., 4:12 means 4 inches of rise per 12 inches of horizontal run). Minimum slope requirements govern underlayment and material selection under the IRC.
- Re-roof (overlay): Application of a new roofing layer over an existing layer. Indiana jurisdictions typically limit overlays to 1 layer on residential structures before a full tear-off is required.
- Tear-off: Complete removal of existing roofing layers to the deck. Permits are required in most Indiana counties for full replacements; see regulatory context for Indiana roofing for jurisdiction-specific requirements.
- Building permit: The authorization issued by a local building department before roofing work begins. Required thresholds vary by county; Indianapolis (Marion County) enforces permit requirements under the Indianapolis Building Code.
- Certificate of Occupancy / Final Inspection: Post-construction sign-off confirming work meets applicable code.
4. Insurance and claims terms
- ACV (Actual Cash Value): Settlement basis that deducts depreciation from replacement cost. An ACV policy pays less than a replacement-cost policy for the same damage.
- RCV (Replacement Cost Value): Pays the full cost to replace damaged roofing with like materials.
- Depreciation hold-back: The portion of an RCV claim withheld until repairs are completed and receipts submitted.
- Supplement: An additional claim filed when scope of damage discovered during repair exceeds the original adjuster estimate.
Common scenarios
The glossary terms above appear in concentrated form across 3 recurring contexts in Indiana roofing:
- Post-storm insurance claims — adjusters and contractors must agree on whether damage constitutes functional impairment (affecting performance) vs. cosmetic damage; Indiana courts have addressed this distinction in coverage disputes. See Indiana hail and wind damage roofing for related terminology.
- Permit applications — contractors completing Marion, Hamilton, or Allen County permit forms must correctly classify the work as repair, re-roof, or replacement, which determines inspection requirements.
- Warranty claims — manufacturer warranties distinguish between workmanship warranties (contractor liability) and material warranties (manufacturer liability). Understanding Indiana roofing warranties explained prevents scope confusion when defects appear.
Decision boundaries
Terminology accuracy has direct regulatory and financial consequences. The distinction between a "repair" and a "replacement" determines whether an Indiana building permit is required. The distinction between "cosmetic" and "functional" damage determines insurance claim eligibility. The distinction between "deck" and "sheathing" affects whether a contractor's scope of work — and bid — covers structural substrate or only the finish system.
For property owners and contractors navigating roofing projects, the full Indiana Roofing Authority index provides reference coverage across licensing, materials, climate considerations, and compliance topics that build on the foundational vocabulary defined here.
References
- International Residential Code (IRC), Chapter R905 — Roof Coverings
- Indiana Residential Code — Indiana Department of Homeland Security
- OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart Q — Concrete and Masonry Construction / Roofing
- National Roofing Contractors Association (NRCA) — Roofing Manual and Glossary
- Indiana Department of Insurance
- ASTM D226 — Standard Specification for Asphalt-Saturated Organic Felt