Tile Roof Skylight Leak Fixed: Blocked Pan Flashing in Port Moody

A homeowner in Port Moody called us about a leaking skylight on their concrete tile roof. The skylight itself turned out to be fine. The real problem was hidden in the pan flashing right beside it. Here is what we found and how we fixed it.

Concrete roof tiles removed beside a leaking skylight to expose the pan flashing in Port Moody.
We lifted the tiles beside the leaking skylight to reach the pan flashing underneath.

The problem: a skylight that kept leaking

When water shows up around a skylight, the glass and seals usually get the blame. On this Port Moody tile roof, though, the leak was coming from the pan flashing, the metal channel that runs alongside the skylight and carries water down the roof.

What we found: debris damming the pan flashing

We removed a few tiles next to the skylight to see the pan flashing underneath, and the channel was packed with debris.

Debris built up in the skylight pan flashing, damming water on a Port Moody tile roof.
The cause: debris packed into the pan flashing, acting as a dam that pushed water over the containment lip.

Here is the part most homeowners do not realize. That debris acts like a dam. Water running down the roof hits the buildup, backs up, and jumps over the containment lip on the pan flashing, the lip that is meant to keep water out. Once it is over the lip, it runs under the tiles and into the roof.

Leaves and moss collected along the pan flashing channel of a Port Moody tile roof.
Leaves and moss collected down the length of the pan flashing, common on roofs near trees.

This roof had trees nearby and moss on the tiles, which is exactly the recipe for it. Organic debris washes down the slope and settles in the flashing, year after year.

The repair: clear, strain, and re-seal

Once you know what you are looking at, the fix is straightforward:

  • Lift the tiles around the skylight.
  • Clear the channel and strain out the containment lip so water drains the way it should.
  • Re-seal the corners of the pan flashing with caulking, since the corners are the most common spot for water to sneak through.
  • Reset the tiles, leaving the skylight watertight again.
Clearing debris from the pan flashing containment lip beside the skylight on a Port Moody roof.
Clearing the channel and straining out the containment lip so water can drain freely again.
Fresh caulking sealing the pan flashing corners next to the skylight on a Port Moody tile roof.
Sealing the corners of the pan flashing with caulking to lock the water out.
Concrete tiles reinstalled around the repaired skylight on a Port Moody roof under clear skies.
Tiles reset and the skylight watertight again.

How to keep it from happening to you

Pan flashing leaks are almost always a maintenance issue, not a defect. If you have a skylight, chimney, or wall meeting a tile roof, the pan flashing beside it needs to stay clear:

  • Have your pan flashings cleaned regularly, especially with trees overhanging the roof or moss on the tiles.
  • Do not wait for a ceiling stain. By the time you see it inside, water has been getting in for a while.
  • Pair flashing cleaning with a moss treatment if your roof is shaded or damp.

Skylight or roof leak in Port Moody?

If you are seeing water around a skylight, chimney, or roof wall, we can help. We repair concrete tile roofs across Greater Vancouver and serve Port Moody and the surrounding Tri-Cities. Call 778-389-5564 for a free estimate.

Scroll to Top