Soft Washing Roofs: How It Works and When to Use It

Soft washing is a low-pressure cleaning method used on roofing surfaces where high-pressure water application would cause material damage or void manufacturer warranties. The method relies on chemical treatment rather than mechanical force to eliminate biological growth, staining, and debris accumulation. Understanding how soft washing works, what conditions warrant its use, and where its limitations lie is essential for property owners, facility managers, and roofing service professionals navigating maintenance decisions.

Definition and scope

Soft washing is defined by two primary characteristics: operating pressure and chemical application. Water delivery occurs at or below 500 PSI — compared to standard pressure washing systems that typically operate between 1,500 and 3,000 PSI — combined with a dwell-time chemical solution applied before rinsing. The chemical component most commonly involves sodium hypochlorite (bleach) at dilutions ranging from 1% to 3% concentration, often combined with a surfactant to improve adherence to sloped surfaces.

The scope of soft washing as a roofing service covers asphalt shingles, clay and concrete tile, wood shake, metal panels, and low-slope membrane roofing. The Asphalt Roofing Manufacturers Association (ARMA) has issued technical guidance recommending low-pressure chemical cleaning for asphalt shingle surfaces, specifically cautioning against pressure washing, which can accelerate granule loss and shorten shingle service life.

Soft washing is distinct from power washing (heated water under high pressure) and steam cleaning (vapor-based). These three methods occupy different positions in the service landscape:

Method Pressure Range Primary Mechanism
Soft Washing ≤500 PSI Chemical dwell + rinse
Pressure Washing 1,500–3,000 PSI Mechanical force
Power Washing 1,500–3,000 PSI + heat Mechanical force + thermal

How it works

The soft wash process follows a structured sequence applied by trained technicians operating under the safety frameworks outlined in OSHA 29 CFR 1910.1200 (Hazard Communication Standard), which governs worker exposure to chemical agents including sodium hypochlorite solutions used in the process.

  1. Pre-inspection — Surface assessment identifies roofing material type, visible biological load (algae, moss, lichen, mold), and structural vulnerabilities that would affect chemical compatibility or technician access.
  2. Surface preparation — Adjacent landscaping, gutters, and downspouts are protected or pre-wetted to limit runoff exposure to plant material and drainage systems.
  3. Chemical application — A low-pressure sprayer (typically a 12-volt pump system rather than a gas-powered pressure washer) applies the sodium hypochlorite solution with surfactant. Dwell time ranges from 10 to 30 minutes depending on biological load severity.
  4. Neutralization and rinse — A low-pressure rinse removes chemical residue. In some protocols, a neutralizing agent is applied before rinsing to reduce environmental impact of runoff.
  5. Post-treatment inspection — Technicians confirm biological kill and verify no surface damage has occurred.

Gloeocapsa magma — the cyanobacterium responsible for the dark streaking common on asphalt shingles in humid climates — is effectively killed by sodium hypochlorite at appropriate concentrations. Physical removal of lichen requires a longer dwell period or repeat treatments because lichen root structures (rhizines) penetrate roofing materials more deeply than algae biofilms.

Common scenarios

Soft washing is the indicated method across four primary roofing scenarios encountered by service professionals listed in resources such as the National Roof Cleaning Authority directory:

Flat and low-slope commercial roofing — TPO, EPDM, and modified bitumen membranes — also falls within soft washing scope, though membrane compatibility with sodium hypochlorite must be verified against manufacturer specifications before treatment.

Decision boundaries

Soft washing is not appropriate for every roofing condition, and its selection over alternative methods depends on material type, contamination category, and applicable warranty provisions.

ARMA's technical bulletin on cleaning asphalt shingles explicitly identifies pressure washing as a warranty-voiding action for shingles from member manufacturers. Where a valid manufacturer warranty is in effect, soft washing is typically the only cleaning method that preserves warranty coverage — a structural consideration that shapes contractor selection for residential projects.

Environmental discharge is a regulatory boundary that varies by jurisdiction. Sodium hypochlorite runoff is regulated under the Clean Water Act (33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq.) at the point of municipal stormwater entry. State environmental agencies in Oregon, Washington, and Florida, among others, impose additional runoff management requirements on exterior cleaning contractors. Operators must verify local municipal separate storm sewer system (MS4) permit conditions before chemical application — a compliance function documented through the EPA's NPDES stormwater program.

Permitting for roof cleaning itself is not universally required, but contractor licensing requirements apply in states where exterior cleaning is defined within the scope of general contracting or specialty contractor licensing. Florida, for instance, requires licensed contractor oversight for commercial roof maintenance under Florida Statutes Chapter 489. Property owners and facilities managers sourcing services through platforms like the National Roof Cleaning Authority listings should verify that prospective contractors hold applicable state licenses and carry liability insurance covering chemical application work.

Soft washing is contraindicated where roofing materials show active structural failure — missing shingles, cracked tiles, open seams — because chemical penetration through compromised surfaces can accelerate substrate deterioration and create interior moisture pathways.

References

📜 2 regulatory citations referenced  ·  ✅ Citations verified Feb 25, 2026  ·  View update log