Problem: Warm Attic Air Is Melting Your Snow Unevenly
The single biggest cause of ice dams has nothing to do with your shingles. It is heat escaping into your attic from the living space below. When the center of your roof hits 35 degrees and the eaves stay at 20, snow melts up top, runs down, and freezes solid at the edge. You will notice this pattern if icicles only form on certain sections of your house, usually over bedrooms or bathrooms.
A quick way to confirm the issue is to look at your roof the morning after a light snow. If you see bare patches over the main living areas while the garage and eaves still hold a clean layer of snow, warm air is your culprit. Homes with cathedral ceilings, skylights, and finished bonus rooms over garages are especially prone to this because the insulation cavity is narrow and often poorly sealed.
Solution: Seal Attic Bypasses and Add Insulation
Before you touch the roof itself, fix the attic. On most Converse homes built before 2000, we find R-values between R-19 and R-30, well short of the R-49 recommended for our climate zone. Here is the order of operations that actually works:
- Air seal every bypass: recessed lights, bath fans, plumbing stacks, attic hatches, and the top plates of interior walls.
- Bring insulation up to R-49, using blown in cellulose or fiberglass across the entire attic floor.
- Verify that bath and kitchen fans vent all the way outside, not just into the attic.
This one step prevents more ice dams than any other single fix. It also cuts your heating bill, which is a nice bonus. Most Converse Roofing customers see a noticeable drop in upstairs drafts within a week of the work being done.
Solution: Treat the Garage Ceiling as a Priority Air-Seal Zone
The fix is to treat the bonus room assembly as its own project rather than lumping it in with the main attic. That means air sealing the floor cavity over the garage, insulating the knee walls and sloped ceiling to the extent the framing allows, and confirming any can lights or duct penetrations in that ceiling are sealed and rated. Where the sloped ceiling has no room for enough insulation, rigid foam added during a future roof project may be the only durable answer. We map these zones during an attic inspection and tell you plainly which ones the existing framing can fix and which ones need a roofing level solution.
Problem: The Bonus Room Over the Garage Dams Every Year
A finished room above the garage is one of the most reliable ice dam spots in Converse, and homeowners often treat it as a mystery. The reason is structural. The room is heated, but the garage below is not, and the floor cavity, the knee walls, and the sloped ceiling are usually under insulated and poorly sealed compared to the main attic. Warm air from the living space leaks into those cavities, warms the roof deck above the garage, and melts snow that refreezes at the cold eave.
Solution: Balance Intake and Exhaust Ventilation
A properly ventilated attic moves air continuously from the soffits up through the ridge. The rule of thumb is one square foot of net free vent area for every 300 square feet of attic floor, split evenly between intake and exhaust. If you are already considering a roof replacement, that is the ideal time to correct ventilation since the ridge and soffits are both accessible. We document existing ventilation on every free inspection and tell you exactly what is missing.
Watch out for the common mistake of mixing exhaust types. A ridge vent combined with powered gable fans or box vents short circuits the airflow, pulling air from the nearest opening instead of drawing it all the way up from the soffits. Pick one exhaust strategy and commit to it.
Problem: Your Eaves Have No Ice and Water Shield
Older roofs in Converse often rely on 15-pound felt right out to the edge. Felt is fine for shedding rain, but it cannot stop water that is being pushed backward under shingles by a dam. Once that happens, water runs down the decking, soaks the top plate, stains your ceilings, and eventually feeds mold in the wall cavity.
Solution: Use Safe Melt Methods and Call for Help Early
If you must act before a professional arrives, a roof rake with a telescoping handle lets you pull snow off the bottom four feet from the ground, which removes the fuel for new ice without anyone leaving the driveway. Calcium chloride pucks designed for roof use are safer than rock salt on metal and asphalt. For anything beyond that, let Converse Roofing handle the steam removal, which melts the dam without damaging the roof surface.
Problem: Your Attic Has No Real Ventilation Path
Even a well insulated attic needs to stay close to outside temperature. Without balanced intake and exhaust, warm moist air sits against the roof deck and creates the melt freeze cycle. Many older Converse homes have a ridge vent but no soffit intake, or soffit vents that were painted shut decades ago.
Solution: Install Self-Adhering Ice and Water Membrane
Modern code in our region requires a self adhering ice barrier that extends at least 24 inches past the interior wall line, which usually means 3 to 6 feet up from the eave. On steep pitches or complex rooflines, we extend it further, and we always run it up valleys and around penetrations. This membrane seals around nail shanks and gives you a waterproof second line of defense when a dam forms. If you spot ceiling stains after a freeze, call for roof repair before the next thaw makes it worse.
Solution: Get a Winter Interior and Exterior Inspection
We inspect from inside the attic first, tracing the water path back to its entry point. Then we confirm from outside what needs to happen, whether that is a targeted repair, flashing work, or planning a replacement for spring. Homeowners insurance sometimes covers interior damage from ice dams even when roof damage itself is excluded, so keep photos and get help with your insurance claim documentation early.
Solution: Clean Gutters Before the First Freeze
Before Thanksgiving, make sure your gutters and downspouts are clear. A flashlight test works: if you can shine a light down the downspout and see it exit at the bottom, you are good. Three habits pay off every winter:
- Clean twice a year, once in spring and once after leaves drop.
- Check that downspouts discharge at least 4 feet away from the foundation.
- Walk the perimeter after a heavy snow and knock icicles off before they grow.
Problem: You Are Tempted to Chip the Ice Off Yourself
Every January we get calls from homeowners who climbed a ladder with a hammer or a hatchet and cracked shingles trying to free a downspout. Rock salt in a sock is another folk remedy that sounds harmless but stains shingles, corrodes aluminum gutters, and kills the shrubs below when it drips off.
Problem: Gutters Packed With Leaves and Ice
Clogged gutters do not cause ice dams by themselves, but they make everything worse. When gutters freeze solid with debris packed ice, meltwater backs up onto the roof edge, refreezes, and adds weight that can pull gutters right off the fascia.
Problem: You Already See Water Stains Inside
If you are looking at brown rings on a ceiling or damp drywall near an exterior wall, the dam has already done its work. Waiting until spring is a mistake because trapped moisture keeps feeding mold and rotting decking under the shingles.