A properly applied silicone or acrylic roof coating can add 10–15 years of service life to an aging commercial roof — at 25–40% of full replacement cost. No tear-off, no disruption, no landfill waste.
Commercial roof coatings are fluid-applied membrane systems that restore weathering, sealing, and reflective performance to existing commercial roofs. Rather than removing and replacing the roof membrane — which generates significant landfill waste and installation cost — a coating system is applied directly over the existing substrate after thorough cleaning and preparation.
The three primary coating chemistries are silicone, acrylic, and polyurethane. Silicone is the industry standard for flat commercial roofs with ponding water concerns — it maintains its flexibility and waterproofing performance even when submerged for extended periods, and does not harden or crack with UV exposure. Acrylic coatings are water-based, low-VOC, and highly reflective — excellent for roofs in cooling-dominated climates where Energy Star performance is the primary goal. Polyurethane coatings provide the highest abrasion resistance and are preferred for roofs with frequent foot traffic.
Coatings are measured in gallons per 100 square feet (dry mil thickness). A commercial-grade silicone coating system typically applies at 1.5–2 gallons per 100 sq ft per coat, with two coats applied for a 30–40 mil finished thickness. Seams, flashings, and penetrations receive additional reinforcement fabric embedded in the first coat before the finish coat is applied.
Not every commercial roof is a coating candidate. We perform a thorough inspection including core sampling and moisture scans before recommending a coating system. Roofs with more than 25% wet insulation, extensive delamination, or structural deck compromise require remediation or replacement first.
Coatings deliver outstanding value — but only when the existing roof meets specific candidacy criteria.
Aging But Structurally Sound Membrane If your TPO, EPDM, modified bitumen, or BUR roof is 8–15 years old but passes moisture testing, a coating can double its service life.
Budget Constraints Preventing Full Replacement When capital budget doesn't support a full replacement this cycle, a coating buys 10–15 years at a fraction of the cost — deferring the larger investment without sacrificing protection.
High Energy Bills on Cooling-Dominated Properties White silicone or acrylic coatings can reduce cooling loads 15–25% in Charlotte's warm climate — delivering meaningful utility savings on top of the restoration value.
LEED or Sustainability Certification Goals Coatings eliminate tear-off waste, contribute cool roof credits, and are typically low-VOC — useful for properties pursuing or maintaining green building certifications.
Occupied Buildings Where Disruption Must Be Minimized Coatings are spray- or roller-applied with minimal noise, no heavy equipment, and no structural opening of the roof — ideal for hospitals, schools, and retail.
Black EPDM Looking to Improve Energy Performance Black EPDM roofs can be coated white to convert them into cool roofs — one of the most cost-effective energy upgrades available for commercial buildings.
A coating system is only as good as the substrate preparation beneath it. Here's our rigorous process.
Moisture scans, core samples, and visual inspection confirm the existing membrane is a sound coating candidate. We document findings and provide a written recommendation.
Pressure washing, detergent cleaning, and surface profiling per coating manufacturer's requirements. All blisters, delaminated areas, and failed seams repaired before coating begins.
First coat applied at seams and flashings with embedded polyester fabric reinforcement. This creates a redundant waterproofing layer at the most vulnerable areas.
Two full coats applied to the entire roof surface at specified mil thickness. Final inspection, photographic documentation, and manufacturer warranty registration.
Common questions from Charlotte property owners considering commercial roof coatings.
No. A coating is only appropriate when the existing membrane is structurally sound and the insulation is dry. We require moisture scans and often core samples before recommending a coating system. Roofs with more than 25% wet insulation or significant membrane delamination need remediation or replacement — applying a coating over compromised substrate traps moisture and accelerates failure.
Silicone is generally preferred for flat commercial roofs, especially those with chronic ponding water. It doesn't re-emulsify when wet and maintains flexibility indefinitely. Acrylic is excellent for slopes where water drains quickly — it's lower cost, water-based, and highly reflective. We specify based on roof geometry, drainage patterns, and substrate type.
Most commercial coating systems carry 10–15 year manufacturer warranties when installed at specified thickness by a certified applicator. With a maintenance program that includes annual cleaning and minor touch-up, many coated roofs perform at the upper end of that range.
A commercial silicone coating system typically runs $2.50–$4.50 per square foot installed — compared to $8–$14 per square foot for a TPO replacement. For a 30,000 sq ft roof, that's roughly $75,000–$135,000 for coating vs. $240,000–$420,000 for replacement. The cost case is compelling when the substrate qualifies.
Find out with a free coating candidacy assessment from Peak Roofing's commercial team.
Tell us about your property and we'll determine if coating is the right solution.