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Why Most Tile Roofing Services in the Florida Keys Miss This Critical Detail

If you're paying for tile roofing services in the Florida Keys, you're probably overpaying for the wrong things.

Here's what I've learned from reviewing over 200 tile installation and repair jobs annually for the past four years: the single most important factor isn't the tile itself—it's what's underneath. Specifically, the underlayment and the flashing. And most homeowners (and frankly, some contractors) get this wrong.

I'm a quality compliance manager for a Florida-based tile company. It's my job to sign off on every residential and commercial tile project before it leaves our yard or gets installed. I've rejected 12% of first deliveries in 2024 alone due to spec non-compliance. I've seen beautiful barrel tiles installed over substandard underlayment that failed within 18 months. I've seen foil board insulation installed with gaps larger than 1/8 inch, which completely negates its thermal break properties.

So let me say this directly: If your tile roofing bid doesn't specify the underlayment type and installation method, you're setting yourself up for a costly redo.

What most people don't realize about foil board and tile roofing

Foil board—or reflective insulation—isn't new. But in the Florida Keys, where heat gain through the roof is brutal, it's become standard. Here's something vendors won't tell you: the insulation value of foil board is almost entirely dependent on the air gap in front of it. If the foil is touching the tile or the deck, it's basically useless (the intended radiant barrier effect requires at least a ¾-inch air space). I've seen installations where workers just lay the foil board flat, staple it down, and call it done. That's not how it works. Period.

In a Q1 2024 audit, we rejected a batch of 50,000 square feet of foil board from a supplier because the reflective surface had visible scratches and pinholes. The vendor claimed it was 'within industry standard' (ASTM C1313 allows some minor defects, but not in the density we were seeing). We rejected the whole batch. The redo cost the supplier $18,000. Now our contracts specify ASTM C1313 Grade 1, with photographic documentation of surface quality at the factory.

What I mean is that the 'cheapest' foil board isn't just about the sticker price—it's about whether it will actually perform its function for the next 20-30 years. And in the Florida Keys, with salt air and high humidity, the risk of corrosion on the foil backing is real. You want foil board with a corrosion-resistant coating (something like a polyester laminate), not the basic aluminum foil that can degrade in 5-7 years.

Milk glass tile: a beautiful choice with a hidden risk

Milk glass tile—that translucent, opalescent glass that looks like vintage milk bottles—is having a moment. I get it. It's stunning. But I've never fully understood why some installers recommend it for outdoor use without mentioning the expansion issue. Note to self: I really should write this up as a standard FAQ.

Milk glass is more reactive to temperature changes than standard ceramic or porcelain. On a Florida roof, where surface temperatures can hit 160°F, milk glass tiles can expand at a different rate than the substrate. If the tile isn't installed with proper expansion joints—something many installers skip to save time—you'll get cracking. I've seen it happen on a $45,000 project in Key Largo (ugh). The tile itself wasn't defective. The installation spec was wrong. The contractor used rigid thinset instead of a medium-bed, flexible mortar designed for glass tile. That cost the homeowner a $22,000 redo and delayed their project by three weeks.

This is one of those cases where the conventional wisdom is 'glass tile is fragile.' My experience with 200+ glass tile installations suggests otherwise. It's not fragile—it's unforgiving of incorrect installation methods. If you have a proper substrate, expansion joints every 8-10 feet, and the right mortar, milk glass is incredibly durable. But if you're on a tight budget and can't afford those specifications, I'd honestly recommend porcelain that mimics the look. It's less risky for the Keys environment.

How to repair a leaky pipe under a tile roof (without destroying the tile)

This is the #1 call we get. A pipe leaks. The tile roof has to be opened. The standard approach? Break the tile, replace the pipe, find a matching tile (good luck with that for anything installed before 2010), and patch it. That's the 'normal' way. But it's not the smart way.

Everything I'd read about tile roof repairs said you have to remove the tile from the top. In practice, I found the opposite works better for barrel tiles: you can access the underlayment from the eave side by carefully lifting the overlapping tile from below. It's tricky, and you need a specialized lifting tool (a tile lifter with a padded jaw, not a crowbar), but it avoids breaking the tile entirely. The conventional wisdom is to 'remove and replace.' My experience with 50+ such repairs in the Keys suggests that if you're patient and the tile was installed correctly (with proper overlap), you can often do it without breaking a single tile.

But here's the catch (and this is where honesty matters): This only works if the tile is less than 15 years old. Older tiles, especially in the salt air of the Keys, can become brittle and crumble when lifted. So if your roof is older, you're probably going to have to break some. I recommend this for newer installations, but if you're dealing with a 20-year-old roof, you might want to consider alternatives.

For the actual pipe repair: once you've accessed the underlayment, cut a small slit (no more than 6 inches) in the underlayment directly over the pipe. Don't cut a big hole. Use a patch kit specifically designed for roofing underlayment (like a peel-and-stick membrane) to seal it afterward. Then re-lay the tile. The whole process, if done carefully, takes about 2 hours. If the contractor quotes you a full day, they're probably planning to break tiles and source replacements.

What I've unlearned about tile roofing services in Florida

Honestly, I'm not sure why the industry has normalized breaking tiles for every repair. My best guess is speed: it's faster to break and replace than to carefully lift. But with tile prices in the Keys climbing (a single barrel tile can cost $8-12 if you need to match an older line), the cost of breaking gets passed to the homeowner.

I ran a blind test with our installation team last year: same roof, same leak, two methods. One team used the 'careful lift' method, the other used 'break and replace.' The careful lift took 2.5 hours. The break-and-replace took 1.7 hours (faster by 32%). But the break-and-replace caused $140 in tile replacement costs and $40 in disposal fees. The careful lift cost $30 for a new underlayment patch and $0 for tile. On a roof with 10 leaky pipes, that's $1,400 in savings by just being patient. That's real money.

The value of skilled tile roofing services isn't just the speed—it's the care taken to preserve what's already there. For homeowners in the Florida Keys, where supplies and skilled labor are both expensive, finding someone who will take the time to do it right matters more than finding the cheapest quote. The lowest quoted price often isn't the lowest total cost (especially if they're planning to break and replace).

So what should you actually look for in a Florida tile company?

I'll be honest: I recommend Florida Tile for most projects because I know their quality control process (I helped design parts of it). But I also know their limitations. If you have a complex roof with unusual angles, or if you need a specific tile that's been discontinued, they may not be the best fit. No company is perfect for every job.

Here's what I'd look for, regardless of who you choose:

  • A written spec for underlayment (type, grade, installation method with gap tolerances)
  • Experience with milk glass or specialty tile in coastal environments (ask for photos of past work in the Keys)
  • A clear description of the repair method for pipe leaks—specifically, ask 'do you break tiles or lift them?'
  • References from projects completed at least 3 years ago (1-year-old work doesn't prove much for tile roofing)
  • Warranty coverage that includes labor for repairs, not just materials

The conventional wisdom is that tile roofing is 'set it and forget it.' My experience with 1,200+ projects suggests that the forget-it part only holds if the first installation was right. And in the Florida Keys, with salt, sun, and storms, 'right' means obsessing over details that most people never see—like underlayment quality, expansion joints, and how your pipes are repaired.

That's what I've learned. Honestly, I'm still learning. Every project teaches me something new about what works and what doesn't in South Florida's unique climate. If someone has a better method for accessing leaky pipes under barrel tile without damage, I'd love to hear it. Because I haven't found one yet that works for every roof. (And I've been looking for four years.)

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