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Seal Strip

The adhesive line on asphalt shingles that bonds each shingle to the one below it — a critical component for wind resistance and one of the primary indicators used to determine storm-related damage in roof insurance claims.

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What a Seal Strip Is

A seal strip is a factory-applied adhesive strip located on asphalt shingles that bonds each shingle to the one beneath it after installation.

Once activated by heat from the sun, it creates a seal that holds shingles in place against wind forces.

It is one of the most important components for preventing wind uplift.


How Seal Strips Work

After installation:

  • Sunlight softens the adhesive strip
  • Shingles bond to the course below
  • A sealed, interlocked surface is created

This bond:

  • Prevents wind from getting under shingles
  • Reduces movement and vibration
  • Helps maintain the integrity of the roof system

If the seal is broken, the shingle becomes vulnerable.


Why Seal Strips Matter

Wind Resistance

  • Primary defense against shingle lift and blow-off

Water Protection

  • Helps prevent wind-driven rain from entering beneath shingles

System Performance

  • Keeps shingles functioning as a continuous system

Without proper sealing, the roof cannot perform as designed.


Seal Strip Failure

Seal strips can fail due to:

  • High winds breaking the adhesive bond
  • Age-related deterioration
  • Improper installation
  • Cold weather preventing proper sealing

When failure occurs:

  • Shingles lift easily
  • Edges flutter during wind
  • Damage spreads across the roof

Once a seal strip is broken, it does not reliably re-seal.


Seal Strips and Wind Damage

Broken seal strips are one of the strongest indicators of wind damage.

Typical signs include:

  • Shingles that lift with little resistance
  • Creased or bent shingle tabs
  • Localized areas of unsealed shingles

Wind damage sequence:

  • Wind lifts the shingle edge
  • Seal strip bond breaks
  • Shingle creases or weakens

This is functional damage — not cosmetic.


Seal Strips in Insurance Claims

Seal strip failure is often the deciding factor in wind damage claims:

Causation Disputes

  • Insurance may argue failure is due to age or wear
  • Contractors argue storm-related wind damage

Functional Damage Argument

  • Broken seal = reduced wind resistance
  • Roof no longer meets performance standards

Repair vs Replacement

  • Widespread seal failure often supports full replacement

This is one of the most common battlegrounds in roof insurance claims.


How Seal Strips Are Tested

Adjusters and inspectors use a lift test to evaluate seal strip condition:

  • Shingles are gently lifted by hand
  • Resistance indicates proper sealing
  • Easy lift indicates bond failure

Consistent failure across multiple areas supports wind damage.


Common Questions

Can seal strips be repaired?

No — once broken, replacement is typically required.

Is seal strip failure always covered?

No — coverage depends on whether failure is caused by wind or wear and tear.

Can shingles reseal after lifting?

Rarely — especially on older roofs.

Does cold weather affect seal strips?

Yes — low temperatures can prevent proper bonding after installation.


How Claim Advocacy Helps

  • Lift testing documentation — proving seal failure
  • Damage pattern analysis — linking failure to storm events
  • Functional damage explanation — countering cosmetic arguments
  • Estimate review — ensuring proper scope
  • Supplement preparation — supporting full replacement when justified

The seal strip is one of the most critical — and most frequently disputed — components of an asphalt shingle roof. When it fails, the roof loses its ability to resist wind and water intrusion. Determining whether that failure was caused by a storm or by age is often the deciding factor in whether an insurance claim is approved or denied.

📞 (719) 210-8699
📧 gerald@winik.io

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