The short version

  • Wind forces water sideways and uphill — bypassing shingle laps designed only for vertical flow
  • The leak almost always appears on the windward side or at a windward-facing transition
  • Leak location shifts with wind direction — this is diagnostic information, not random behavior
  • Horizontal water trails in the attic, stains near dormers and soffits, and wall-base saturation are the characteristic patterns
  • New shingles won't fix a wind-driven leak — the entry points are at flashing transitions and ventilation gaps, not the shingle field

How Wind Changes Water Behavior

Roof systems are engineered to handle water moving downward under gravity. Shingle laps, flashing overlaps, and drainage details are all oriented around vertical water flow. Wind changes this in four ways that the roof system isn't designed to resist:

  • Horizontal movement — wind drives rain sideways across the roof surface, forcing it into shingle laps from the uphill side rather than over them from above
  • Uplift — wind pressure temporarily lifts shingle edges, creating a gap for water to enter from beneath
  • Negative attic pressure — the pressure differential between windward and leeward sides of the house can pull air — and water — inward through gaps at soffits, ridge vents, and penetrations
  • Siding saturation — sustained wind-driven rain forces water through the siding assembly and past the weather-resistant barrier in ways that occasional vertical rain doesn't

Even a well-built roof can leak under sufficient wind because the design threshold for many details is vertical rain, not lateral intrusion. This is why wind-driven leaks are not evidence that something is fundamentally wrong with the roof — but they do identify specific weak points that need correction.

💡
Key diagnostic principle
If your leak location shifts from storm to storm, it's not random — it's tracking the wind direction. A stain on the north wall in one storm and the west wall in the next means you have gaps on both exposures. Map which storm directions produce leaks at which locations, and you have a precise failure-point map.

Common Wind-Driven Failure Points

Wind-driven leaks concentrate at eight predictable locations. Most homes with this problem have failures at two or three of these simultaneously.

01
Step Flashing — Windward Laps
When wind blows directly into an open step-flashing lap at a wall intersection, water is forced behind the flashing rather than shed over it. Flashing installed correctly for downward flow can still fail under lateral pressure.
🔴 Stains near wall, parallel to roof slope
02
Dormer Cheek Walls
Dormer sidewalls present a vertical surface directly in the wind path. Wind-driven rain saturates the siding and WRB, finding any gap in the drainage layer. Stains appear under the dormer siding or at the ceiling below.
🔴 Stains under dormer siding or dormer ceiling
03
Missing or Mis-Angled Kickout Flashing
Wind amplifies the water volume directed at a wall-roof base. A kickout that handles calm rain adequately can be overwhelmed when wind adds lateral pressure to the already-concentrated roof runoff.
🔴 Wall-base saturation, bubbling paint
04
Ridge Vent Intrusion
Older or unbaffled ridge vents are designed for passive airflow — not for resisting lateral wind pressure. Crosswind events push rain directly into the vent opening, wetting insulation and sheathing at the ridge.
⚠ Wet insulation at ridge, centered leak
05
Soffit Backdrafting
Negative pressure on the leeward side of the house during high winds can draw air — and moisture — through soffit vents inward. Wet insulation near soffits on the sheltered side of the house is the signature.
⚠ Damp insulation at soffits, leeward side
06
WRB Discontinuities
Gaps, tears, or reverse-lapped sections of the weather-resistant barrier behind siding become vulnerable when wind drives sustained rain horizontally. Normal vertical rain drains past the gap; lateral rain enters it directly.
⚠ Wall cavity moisture, no obvious roof source
07
Chimney Counter-Flashing
Wind drives water up the face of the chimney and into the gap between counter-flashing and masonry. Failures that produce no leak in calm rain can produce significant intrusion when wind creates lateral pressure against the chimney face.
⚠ Stains several feet downslope of chimney
08
Shingle Uplift at Rake Edge
The rake edge — the angled edge of the roof at a gable — is directly exposed to wind. Shingles with insufficient nailing or adhesion lift temporarily under gusts, allowing water driven up the slope to enter beneath them.
⚠ Stains near gable end, inside attic edge

Recognizing Wind-Driven Leak Symptoms

  • Leaks only when rain and wind coincide — calm heavy rain produces no leak; wind with lighter rain does
  • Moisture on the windward side — stains concentrate on whichever wall faces the storm
  • Horizontal water trails in the attic — lateral wind-driven entry produces moisture that travels sideways along sheathing, not straight down
  • Wet insulation near soffits or ridge — pressure-driven entry at ventilation points
  • Stains under dormer cheek walls — direct lateral exposure to wind-driven rain
  • Wall-base saturation near roof-to-wall intersections — kickout overwhelmed by combined runoff and wind pressure
  • Masonry walls releasing moisture hours after the storm — absorbed water from wind-saturated masonry faces migrating inward

Signs the Leak Is NOT Wind-Driven Rain

Rule these out before diagnosing as wind-driven
Leaks in calm, vertical rainfall: Flashing or shingle failure — not wind-related
Cold mornings without rain: Attic condensation — not a roof leak
Only during freeze-thaw cycles: Ice dam — thermal problem, not wind
Below vent pipe regardless of wind: Boot failure — not wind-driven
Same location in every storm direction: Fixed penetration failure, not windward exposure
Snowmelt produces same stain: Ice dam or condensation — not wind entry

Diagnosing a Wind-Driven Leak — 9 Steps

Wind-Driven Rain Leak Diagnostic

Wind direction is your most important diagnostic tool — use it in every step

1
Confirm Wind
Confirm leak only occurs when wind and rain coincide
Track whether you get any moisture during calm heavy rain. If calm rain produces no leak but wind with lighter rain does, wind-driven entry is confirmed. If calm rain also leaks, you likely have both a standard flashing failure and a wind-driven vulnerability.
Leak only with wind, not calm rain: Wind-driven entry confirmed — continue
Leak in all rain: Standard flashing or shingle failure — see the flashing guide
2
Wind Map
Log wind direction for every leak event
Over several storms, record which direction the wind is blowing when the leak appears. Note whether the stain location changes with wind direction. This is the most powerful diagnostic information you can gather — it maps the failure directly to the windward exposure.
Leak always on same side as wind: Windward exposure failure — focus inspection on that elevation
Leak location shifts with wind direction: Multiple exposure failures — inspect all affected sides
3
Attic
Inspect attic for horizontal moisture trails
Wind-driven entry produces moisture that travels laterally along sheathing and rafters — unlike vertical rain leaks that drip straight down. Look for staining that runs sideways along the underside of the sheathing toward the windward eave.
Horizontal moisture trails toward windward eave: Confirms wind-driven entry pattern
Vertical drip pattern from a fixed point: Standard penetration leak — check that location specifically
4
Step Flashing
Evaluate step flashing orientation on windward walls
Check whether step flashing open laps face the prevailing wind direction. A lap that faces away from wind sheds water in calm conditions but allows entry when wind pushes water from the opposite direction. This is particularly common at walls that run parallel to the wind direction.
Open laps face prevailing storm direction: Step flashing is the primary entry point
5
Dormers
Inspect dormer cheek walls on windward side
Dormer sidewalls directly face wind-driven rain without the protection of a roof slope. Look for any gap in siding at the dormer-to-roof transition, failed caulk at corner trim, or staining at the base of the cheek wall inside the attic.
Staining at dormer cheek wall base in attic: Lateral intrusion through dormer siding or transition
6
Ridge Vent
Inspect ridge vent design and condition
From inside the attic at the ridge, look for daylight or daylight-colored light on both sides of the ridge. Then check for moisture staining at the ridge sheathing. Unbaffled ridge vents installed more than 15 years ago commonly admit wind-blown rain.
Wet insulation or staining at ridge peak: Ridge vent intrusion — upgrade to baffled design
Ridge sheathing dry: Ridge vent functioning — look elsewhere
7
Soffits
Check soffits for negative-pressure moisture intrusion
Inspect insulation at the eave bays near soffit vents — particularly on the leeward side (sheltered from wind). Wet insulation here indicates air is being pulled through the soffit vents by negative pressure rather than entering at the roof surface.
Wet insulation at leeward soffits: Backdraft entry — soffit baffles or vent cover corrections needed
8
Siding & WRB
Inspect windward siding for WRB gaps
Check windward walls for siding gaps, missing caulk at trim joints, or areas where the weather-resistant barrier behind the siding may have gaps or reverse laps. Sustained wind-driven rain finds even small discontinuities that vertical rain would drain past harmlessly.
Wall cavity moisture with no obvious roof source: WRB breach — professional siding inspection needed
9
Rake Edge
Inspect gable rake edges on windward side
Look at the angled edge of the roof at the gable end facing the prevailing wind. Check whether rake shingles are fully adhered and whether rake edge metal is present and correctly installed. Also check that gable-end vents have louvers that close under wind pressure.
Staining at inside edge of attic near gable: Rake edge uplift or gable vent intrusion

Severity and Damage Risk

Low
Minor drips in extreme wind events only. No sheathing softening. Single identifiable entry point.
→ Address before next storm season
Moderate
Recurring leaks in storms from the same direction. Damp insulation or early sheathing staining. Multiple entry points likely.
→ Repair within weeks
High
Water entering walls, soffits, or multiple roof planes. Swollen or softened sheathing. Mold odor. Wall cavity saturation.
→ Immediate action required
T.A.
From the field
"Wind-driven leaks are the ones that frustrate homeowners the most because they seem unpredictable — 'it only leaks in certain storms.' That unpredictability is actually information. I always start by asking which direction the wind was blowing, and nine times out of ten I can point to the entry area before I've even been to the roof. The wind is a diagnostic tool. Once you understand that the leak follows the wind vector, you stop chasing the stain and start looking at the exposure."
T.A. — CHFM · NFPA CFI-1 · CLSS-HC

What You Can Do vs. When to Call a Professional

✓ Homeowner-appropriate
  • Log leak events with wind direction — this is your most valuable diagnostic data
  • Ground-level inspection of windward flashing, siding gaps, and kick-out presence
  • Attic inspection for horizontal moisture trails and ridge/soffit moisture
  • Identify which of the 8 failure modes match your symptoms
  • Check gable-end vent louvers on windward side close properly
  • Apply temporary caulk to obvious siding gaps to isolate whether that's an entry point
✗ Call a professional
  • Any flashing reconstruction — step, counter, or kickout
  • Ridge vent replacement with baffled wind-resistant design
  • Dormer cheek wall repair requiring siding removal
  • Wall cavity moisture suspected — needs endoscope or siding removal
  • Sheathing feels soft or shows delamination
  • Multiple entry points from different exposures — needs systematic plan

Common Questions

Will replacing the shingles fix my wind-driven leak?
Almost certainly not. Wind-driven leaks almost never enter through the open shingle field — they enter at transitions, vents, and flashing details that wind pressure overcomes. New shingles over the same flashing details will produce the same leak in the next storm. The fix requires addressing the specific failure point identified through the diagnostic above, which in most cases means flashing reconstruction, ridge vent replacement, or WRB repair — not roofing replacement.
My leak moves around between storms. Is something structurally wrong?
No — it means you have vulnerabilities on multiple exposures. When the storm comes from the northwest you see one stain; from the southwest you see another. This is consistent behavior following the wind vector, not random failure. It does mean you likely have more than one entry point to address, but each one follows the same diagnostic approach: identify the windward exposure, look at the flashing and ventilation details on that face, and find the specific gap.
Does wind speed matter, or is it just wind direction?
Both. Direction tells you which exposure is vulnerable; speed determines the pressure threshold at which a marginal detail fails. A gap that handles 20 mph winds fine but leaks at 40 mph is a marginal detail — it's not performing correctly, but the failure threshold tells you something about the size of the gap or the degree of compromise. A detail with a very low wind threshold (leaks at 15 mph) typically indicates a missing component entirely, like a missing kickout or completely failed collar, rather than a marginal overlap.
Can I test for wind-driven entry without waiting for a storm?
Professionals use directional spray testing — a controlled hose test with a nozzle that simulates wind-driven rain from a specific angle. For homeowners, a hose test from a ladder (when safe) on the suspected windward wall surface can replicate some of the effect, though not the pressure differential of real wind. Start at the bottom of the wall and work up, watching inside the attic for moisture. If you find a location where spraying produces interior moisture, that's your entry area. This method works best for wall and siding vulnerabilities rather than rooftop flashing failures.
Are wind-driven leaks covered by homeowner's insurance?
It depends on whether the damage is classified as storm damage (covered) versus maintenance failure (not covered). A sudden one-time wind event that damages properly installed flashing is typically covered. A long-standing marginal detail that finally fails under wind — particularly if there's evidence of prior leaks — may be classified as deferred maintenance. Document storm events, wind speeds from local weather records, and the specific nature of each leak event. If a major storm triggered the first leak, that's a stronger insurance case than a recurring issue that worsened in a particular storm.

Bottom Line

  • Wind-driven leaks are predictable — the entry point is always on the windward side or at a windward-facing transition
  • Log wind direction every time you get a leak — this is your most powerful diagnostic tool
  • Horizontal moisture trails in the attic confirm wind-driven entry; vertical drip patterns point to penetration failures
  • The eight failure points (step flashing, dormers, kickout, ridge vent, soffits, WRB, chimney, rake edge) are where to look — not the shingle field
  • New shingles won't fix a wind-driven leak — the entry is at transitions and ventilation gaps that wind pressure overcomes
  • Multiple entry points from different exposures are common — each needs its own repair