⚠️ Rapidly Worsening Sag, Audible Cracking, or Outward Wall Bulging — Evacuate and Call a Structural Engineer

A roofline sag that is visibly worsening over days or weeks, accompanied by audible cracking or popping under load, or associated with outward bulging of exterior walls below the roofline, indicates active structural failure. Do not remain in the affected area. Contact a licensed structural engineer immediately. Do not attempt any shoring, jacking, or repair without engineering guidance.

📍 Quick Summary

  • Ridge dips symmetrically on both slopes: ridge beam failure or support settlement — evaluate immediately
  • Mid-span wave or sag across multiple rafters: rafter overspan, creep, or moisture damage — attic inspection needed
  • Sag on one slope only: rafters rotted, damaged, or overloaded on that side — or truss damage
  • Eave dropping or pulling away: fascia and rafter tail rot, or wall top-plate spreading
  • Wall spread — where the exterior walls bow outward — is the most dangerous roofline cause because it indicates the entire roof is losing its lateral support
  • A sagging roofline above foundation settlement is the full load-path failure: foundation → bearing wall → roof; fix the foundation first

Sag Location Decoder: Where It Is Tells You What Failed

Before entering the attic or calling anyone, identify where the sag is from ground level. Walk the perimeter of the home and observe the roofline from multiple angles in good light. The location narrows the cause significantly.

▼ Ridge Dips — Visible on Both Slopes
Ridge beam failure or support settlement
A symmetrical dip at the ridge that shows on both roof slopes indicates the ridge beam (load-bearing) or its support posts have failed or settled. This is different from a ridge board (non-structural) that has sagged — ridge beam failure means the structural spine of the roof has lost its bearing. The dip is typically deepest at mid-span of the ridge and improves toward the gable ends. Also check for wall spread contributing to ridge drop.
▼ Wavy Mid-Span — Multiple Adjacent Bays
Rafter overspan, creep, or sheathing failure
A wavy or rolling surface across multiple rafter bays — not a single sharp dip — indicates rafters that have deflected mid-span from overspan, accumulated creep deflection over decades, or have been weakened by moisture. Sheathing delamination can also produce surface waviness without rafter failure. Inspect the attic to determine which mechanism is present.
▼ Sag on One Slope Only
Localized rafter damage, moisture, or truss failure
When only one slope sags while the other remains straight, the cause is localized to the rafters or trusses on that slope. Most likely: roof leak causing moisture damage to rafters and sheathing on one side; truss web or chord damage on that slope; or concentrated loading (ice dam, satellite dish, HVAC equipment) on that side. Inspect that slope's attic framing for rot, cracking, or altered members.
▼ Eaves Dropping or Pulling Away
Rafter tail rot, fascia failure, or wall spread
Eave drop at the perimeter — where the roofline meets the exterior wall — can mean rafter tails are rotted, fascia board has pulled away from the structure, or the wall top plates below are spreading outward. Eave drop combined with interior ceiling separation from walls is a strong indicator of wall spread — a serious whole-structure condition requiring immediate evaluation.

6 Causes of Roofline Sagging

01
Wall Spread — Most Serious Cause
Wall spread occurs when the exterior load-bearing walls move outward under roof load, removing the lateral support that holds the rafter-to-ridge system in place. As walls bow or spread outward, rafters at the top lose their support angle and sink at the ridge. The roof load is designed to be carried in compression through the rafters to the wall top plates — when the walls spread, this compression path is lost. Wall spread produces a distinctive sagging profile: the ridge drops while both eaves drop or bow outward simultaneously. It is often accompanied by ceiling separation at the wall-to-ceiling joint, gaps at crown molding, and visible outward lean of exterior walls.
Signs: ridge sag visible on both slopes simultaneously; ceiling pulls away from wall on upper floor; crown molding gap at ceiling-wall joint; exterior wall visibly bowing outward; condition worsens in spring or after heavy snow. This requires immediate structural engineering evaluation.
Emergency — Engineer Now
02
Ridge Beam Failure or Support Settlement
A ridge beam — a structural member that actually carries roof load — must be supported at its ends (and sometimes mid-span) by posts or bearing walls. When a ridge beam support post settles, the beam sags at the post location, carrying the attached rafters downward. Ridge beam end support posts sometimes sit on basement floor slabs rather than proper footings; over years, these posts compress the slab and create a point-load depression, and the ridge sags correspondingly. A non-structural ridge board (different from a ridge beam) can also rotate or deflect when rafter thrust is not properly controlled, producing a similar visual result without load-path failure.
Signs: symmetrical ridge dip on both slopes deepest at one location; interior post on the floor below showing compression or soft floor at that location; basement or crawlspace inspection may reveal post bearing on inadequate footing.
Evaluate Promptly
03
Rafter Overspan and Creep Deflection
Rafters sized according to older building standards, or that span greater distances than modern span tables allow, develop mid-span deflection over decades. This is the most common cause of gradual roofline waviness in homes built before 1980. "Creep" — the slow, permanent deformation of wood under sustained load — means that even properly sized rafters deflect incrementally over years when continuously loaded. The sag is typically smooth and uniform, affecting multiple adjacent bays rather than a sharp isolated dip. In most cases the framing is still structurally sound but at the limit of its span; sistering additional rafters is the standard correction.
Signs: gradual, smooth, rolling waviness across multiple rafter bays rather than a sharp dip; older home with visible rafter spans exceeding 12–14 feet; sag has been stable or very slowly worsening over years; attic inspection shows rafters that are straight and sound but visibly deflected midspan.
Common in Older Homes
04
Moisture Damage to Rafters or Sheathing
Roof leaks, inadequate attic ventilation, or bathroom exhaust venting directly into the attic space introduces sustained moisture that rots rafters and delaminates OSB and plywood sheathing. Rotted rafters lose structural capacity while appearing intact from below; delaminated sheathing loses stiffness and creates soft spots or wavy depressions in the roof surface that appear as sag without actual rafter deflection. Attic moisture damage is often concentrated near roof penetrations (chimneys, vent pipes, dormers) where flashing failures occur, or along the ridge and eave where ventilation is inadequate. The roof surface above the damaged area will feel soft or spongy underfoot.
Signs: sag localized to one area or one slope; discoloration or staining on rafters and sheathing in attic; soft spots visible or palpable on roof surface; known roof leak history; bathroom exhaust terminating in attic.
Inspect Attic
05
Truss Damage From Alteration or Impact
Engineered roof trusses are designed as complete systems — every web and chord contributes to the load path. Cutting or notching a truss web "to create attic storage," removing a diagonal brace, or reusing a truss that was damaged during construction all redirect loads to members not designed for them. A truss with a cut web member may still appear to hold the roof for months before deflecting under seasonal snow load. Truss damage can also occur from impact (falling tree branches, storm damage), plate withdrawal at connector plate locations, or cracking at over-stressed joints. Truss repairs require engineered design and cannot be performed without structural guidance.
Signs: sag in trusses visible in attic; cut or notched truss webs (often near pull-down stair openings or HVAC equipment); cracked truss chords; loose or missing metal connector plates; sudden onset sag following storm or impact.
Never Modify Trusses
06
Foundation Settlement Transmitting to Roof
The load path in a home runs continuously from roof to foundation: roof loads transfer through rafters to bearing walls, bearing walls carry loads to the foundation. This path works in reverse as well: when the foundation drops, the bearing wall above it drops, and the rafters bearing on that wall tip downward, producing a corresponding roofline dip. A foundation settlement problem that causes sticking doors and diagonal wall cracks will also, if severe enough, produce a visible depression in the roofline above the settling corner. Roof repair in this situation is entirely secondary to addressing the foundation cause — fixing the framing without fixing the foundation produces re-damage.
Signs: roofline sag location corresponds to a corner of the house with known foundation issues; other settlement symptoms present (floor slope, diagonal cracks, sticking doors) in the same area; sag location aligns with a bearing wall above a known problem area.
Foundation First
⚠ Wall Spread: The Roof Failure That Starts in the Walls
In traditional stick-framed roofs without collar ties, ceiling joists, or ridge beams, the rafter system creates outward thrust on the top plates of exterior walls. This thrust is normally controlled by ceiling joists, collar ties, or knee braces — horizontal members that tie the two sides of the roof together. When these are absent, removed, or inadequate, the roof load steadily pushes the walls outward. Wall spread is insidious because it progresses slowly and each symptom has an innocent-looking alternative explanation — until multiple symptoms align and the pattern becomes clear.
  • Ridge line sags on both slopes simultaneously (rafter tops dropping)
  • Upper-floor ceiling separates from the wall at the junction — gap at crown molding
  • Exterior walls visibly bulge outward when checked with a straightedge
  • Doors and windows on upper floor stick at the top or sides
  • Condition worsens in winter and spring when roof loads are highest

What to Look For in the Attic

Attic Inspection Checklist — Safe Observations From Attic Flooring Only
🔎
Check rafter mid-span for visible bow. Sight down the length of individual rafters. A straight rafter is sound. A rafter with a visible downward bow at mid-span has deflected — note whether the bow is smooth (creep) or sharp (overload or crack).
💧
Look for water staining on rafters and sheathing. Dark streaks or black staining indicate leak paths. Probe stained wood with a finger or screwdriver — soft = active rot; firm = historic moisture that has dried.
Inspect any truss members for cutting or notching. Any cut, notched, or partially removed web or chord in an engineered truss is a structural compromise requiring immediate professional evaluation. Do not dismiss small cuts as insignificant.
📍
Check rafter bearing points at top plates. Rafters at their bottom end bear on wall top plates. Look for rafters that have rotated, pulled off the plate, or show crushing at the bearing point. This indicates either rafter thrust or top-plate movement from wall spread.
🏛
Note whether collar ties or ceiling joists are present. In a rafter-framed roof (not trusses), collar ties or ceiling joists connect opposing rafters and prevent outward thrust. If these are absent, missing, or have been cut, wall spread is a potential diagnosis.
🔌
Check ventilation and exhaust discharge. Bathroom fans that terminate in the attic rather than through the roof add significant moisture to the attic air. Black discoloration on framing near exhaust outlets confirms this. Inadequate ridge and soffit ventilation allows moisture to accumulate on all framing surfaces.
⚠️
Never Cut, Notch, or Remove Truss Members
Roof trusses are engineered systems where every web and chord is load-calculated. Removing or cutting a diagonal web member — even a small one — to create attic storage space, route mechanical equipment, or install a pull-down stair disrupts the entire load path. The truss may continue to function under normal loads for years before a heavy snow load or storm exposes the deficit. Any modification to a truss requires a stamped engineering drawing specifying a replacement member arrangement before any cut is made. This is not a code preference — it is a life-safety requirement. If you observe cut truss members in your attic, contact a structural engineer before the next snow season.

Severity Classification

Minor
Slight mid-span waviness, no progression, sound framing in attic. Monitor and document.
Moderate
Visible ridge dip or slope sag, light interior cracking, no wall spread signs. Have specialist evaluate.
Major
Deep dip, multiple interior symptoms, rafter or truss damage in attic, moisture deterioration. Repair needed.
Critical
Wall spread signs, rapid worsening, audible cracking, outward wall bowing. Engineer immediately — leave area.
C.M.
From the Expert
"Wall spread is the roofline problem I worry about most, because by the time it's visible as a roofline dip, the condition has typically been developing for years. Homeowners call me about a sagging ridge and I walk in and check the ceiling-to-wall joint on the upper floor — if there's a gap there that corresponds to the ridge sag, that tells me the walls are spreading and the roof is losing its support. That's a whole different problem than a rafter that's deflected midspan from overspan. The rafter issue is a framing repair. The wall spread issue is a structural stabilization problem that requires engineering before any repair proceeds. The second thing I want homeowners to understand is the foundation-to-roof connection. I've been brought in to look at roofline sag that turned out to have its root cause in the foundation. The foundation settlement dropped the bearing wall, the bearing wall dropped the rafters, the rafters dropped the roofline. No amount of sistering rafters or replacing sheathing addresses that. You have to stabilize the foundation first. The roof is the last symptom of what started at the bottom."
— C.M., Foundation & Structural Specialist · 30+ Years · Construction Consulting

What You Can Safely Do vs. When to Call

✓ Homeowner-Accessible
  • Photograph roofline from ground level from multiple angles
  • Identify sag location: ridge, mid-span, one slope, or eave
  • Safe attic inspection (from established walking paths, not between rafters)
  • Check for wall spread signs: ceiling-wall gaps, crown molding separation, upper-floor door sticking
  • Look for cut or notched truss members in attic
  • Note and photograph water staining on attic framing
  • Check whether sag location corresponds to any known foundation issue area
✗ Structural Professional Required
  • Any wall spread signs — structural engineer immediately
  • Audible cracking or sag that is visibly worsening
  • Any cut, notched, or damaged truss members
  • Rafter sistering or reinforcement
  • Ridge beam repair, replacement, or support correction
  • Installing collar ties, ceiling joists, or wall bracing
  • Any repair that requires walking on a structurally questionable roof surface

Frequently Asked Questions

My roof has had a slight sag for 20 years and hasn't changed. Is it still worth evaluating?
A stable, unchanged sag over 20 years has reached equilibrium — the framing has deflected and settled into a position it's comfortable holding. The structural risk from a historic, stable sag is generally lower than from a developing one. However, there are still good reasons for an evaluation: the framing is 20 years older and should be checked for moisture accumulation and early decay that hasn't yet progressed to visible sag change; any change in roof loading (adding a layer of shingles, ice dam formation, attic storage) could push already-deflected framing further; and if you're planning to sell, a prospective buyer's inspector will flag visible roof sag and the absence of any professional evaluation on record. A one-time structural engineer assessment documents the condition and gives you a baseline — useful both for your own peace of mind and for disclosure purposes if you sell.
There's a dip in my roof right where the HVAC was installed. Could the installation have caused it?
Yes — HVAC installation in attic spaces is a common cause of localized roof sag for several reasons. Concentrated weight from equipment (air handlers, condensate units) placed directly on framing rather than on proper support blocking applies point loads that rafters or trusses weren't designed to handle. More commonly, the installation required cutting one or more truss webs to route ductwork, which redirects load to adjacent members. The sag may not appear immediately — the truss holds under normal load but deflects under the added equipment weight or during heavy snow seasons. Open the attic access and inspect the framing in the dip area specifically for: cut or notched members, equipment resting on rafters rather than on engineered support blocking, and any signs of the sag originating at the equipment location and radiating outward.
What is the difference between a ridge board and a ridge beam, and why does it matter?
A ridge board is a non-structural element used as a nailing surface where opposing rafters meet at the peak. In a standard rafter roof, the horizontal forces from the roof load are carried by the ceiling joists (which tie the rafter feet together) or collar ties — not by the ridge board. The ridge board just holds the rafters at the same elevation while the real structural work happens at the rafter feet. A ridge beam is a structural element that actually carries vertical load from the rafters — typically used in cathedral ceilings or open-plan spaces where ceiling joists can't be used as ties. It must be sized as a beam, supported at its ends by posts or walls capable of carrying its load, and its connections are structural. The distinction matters because: ridge board sag usually indicates a collar tie or ceiling joist problem (the horizontal ties are failing or missing) and may be correctable by adding structural ties. Ridge beam sag indicates the beam or its supports have failed, which is a more serious structural condition requiring engineering. When in doubt about which type you have, a structural engineer or experienced framing contractor can identify it in the attic.

Key Takeaways

  • Sag location is the primary diagnostic: ridge dip on both slopes = ridge beam or wall spread; mid-span wave = rafter creep or overspan; one slope only = localized damage; eave drop = rafter tail rot or wall spread.
  • Wall spread — outward bowing of exterior walls — is the most serious cause and produces ridge sag as a secondary symptom. Signs: ceiling-wall gap on upper floor, crown molding separation, outward wall lean. Requires structural engineering, not just roof repair.
  • Never cut, notch, or modify truss members. Any alteration to an engineered truss disrupts the whole-system load path and requires stamped engineering before proceeding.
  • Foundation settlement can transmit all the way to a visible roofline sag by dropping the bearing wall that supports the rafters. Fix the foundation before fixing the roof framing.
  • A stable sag that has been unchanged for years is generally lower risk than a developing one. The key question is always: is it getting worse?