Are skylights a good idea on a McCordsville home?
For most homes, yes, as long as the installation is done right. Skylights brighten interior rooms, cut down on daytime lighting costs, and make small spaces feel larger. In McCordsville, where winters can be gray for weeks, pulling in natural light has a real quality of life benefit. The catch is that a skylight adds a penetration to your roof, and every penetration is a potential leak point. So the decision is less about whether skylights are good and more about whether your roof and your installer are up to the job.
What types of skylights work best in McCordsville?
Three styles cover almost everything we install. Fixed skylights are sealed glass units that do not open, and they are the most leak resistant option because there are no moving parts. Vented skylights open manually or with a motor and help exhaust hot air in summer, which pairs well with proper attic ventilation. Tubular skylights are small reflective tubes that pipe daylight into closets, hallways, or bathrooms without the cost of a full unit. For our climate, we steer most clients toward laminated glass fixed or vented units from manufacturers with strong flashing kits. Plastic dome skylights were common 20 years ago, but they yellow, crack, and leak. If you still have one, it is probably due for replacement.
Does glass type really matter?
It matters more than most homeowners realize. Laminated glass on the interior pane holds together if something strikes it, which is the same safety logic used in car windshields. Tempered glass on the exterior pane handles hail and temperature swings better than standard glass. Low-E coatings cut UV by around 95 percent, which protects flooring and furniture from fading, and they also reduce summer heat gain in rooms that already run warm. Spending a little more on the glass package up front usually pays back in comfort and in the lifespan of the unit.
What does skylight work cost in McCordsville?
Ballpark numbers help here, though every roof is different. A straightforward reflash and reseal on an existing unit usually lands in the 400 to 800 dollar range. Replacing an old skylight with a new fixed glass unit, including flashing kit and labor, typically runs 1,200 to 2,500 dollars. A new cut in on an existing roof is higher because of the framing and drywall work, often 2,500 to 4,500 dollars. Vented and motorized units cost more, and solar powered vented units with rain sensors sit at the top of that range. Roof pitch, height, and interior finish work also swing the final number. If a storm caused the damage, your homeowners insurance claim may cover the repair or replacement, and we can walk you through that process.
Can a leaking skylight be repaired, or does it need replacement?
It depends on what is failing. If the glass seals are intact and the flashing has just pulled loose or the sealant has cracked, we can often reflash, reseal, and have you watertight the same day. If the glass is fogged between panes, the unit itself is done and needs to be swapped out. If the surrounding shingles are brittle and curling, replacing just the skylight and leaving the old roof around it is a short term fix at best. We give you both options with honest pricing and let you decide. One thing we will not do is caulk over a failing flashing assembly and call it fixed. That approach buys you a season or two at best, and the water damage underneath keeps spreading in the meantime.
How long does a skylight actually last?
A quality glass skylight with factory flashing should give you 20 to 25 years of service. The seals around the glass panes are usually the first thing to fail, often showing up as foggy condensation between the panes around year 15 to 20. The flashing itself can last as long as the roof if the install was clean. Plastic domes age much faster, often starting to leak by year 10 to 12. When we inspect older units during a free roof inspection, we always check the glass seals, the flashing laps, and the condition of the shingles butting up to the curb.
Who should I call for skylight work in McCordsville?
Pick a roofer who installs skylights regularly, not a handyman who will caulk around the frame and leave. McCordsville Roofing handles skylight installation, reflashing, full replacement, and removal across McCordsville, and we warranty our workmanship in writing. If you are not sure whether your situation calls for a repair or a replacement, start with a free inspection and we will lay out the options with photos so you can make the call with real information in front of you.
Should I install a skylight during a roof replacement?
If you are already getting a new roof, that is the ideal time to add, replace, or remove a skylight. The deck is exposed, the shingles are off, and a new unit can be flashed in with fresh materials so everything ages together. Adding a skylight to an existing roof is doable, but the cost per unit is higher because we have to cut in carefully without disturbing surrounding shingles that may not match anymore. If your roof is older than 15 years, it is worth pricing a skylight alongside a full replacement rather than on its own. We also use roof replacement as a chance to reposition a skylight if the original location was poor, or to remove one entirely if the homeowner never liked it and wants a clean deck again.
How do I know if my skylight leak is a warranty issue or storm damage?
Warranty coverage on skylights is usually 10 years on glass seals and 20 years on the frame, though flashing and installation workmanship are separate. If your unit is younger than 10 years and fogging up, call the manufacturer first. If wind or hail damaged the glass or flashing, that falls under storm damage and is typically an insurance matter, not a warranty one. We document conditions carefully when we inspect, so you have the photos and notes you need for whichever route applies.
Why do skylights leak, and is it always the skylight's fault?
Most of the time the skylight itself is not the problem. The leak comes from failed flashing, cracked sealant, or shingles that have worn out around the unit. Ice dams in January are another common culprit, backing water up under the shingles and around the skylight head. Condensation is another source that gets blamed on leaks when it is really a ventilation or humidity issue inside the home. If the attic is poorly vented and the bathroom below vents into the attic instead of outside, moist air hits the cold skylight glass and drips down the frame exactly like a leak would. If your ceiling is staining near a skylight, the first step is figuring out whether water is coming through the unit, around the flashing, or from somewhere else on the roof entirely. Our roof leak detection process walks through exactly how we trace the source, because fixing the wrong spot wastes your money.