Water is coming in right now. Here is what to do.
An active roof leak is one of the most urgent home emergencies a homeowner faces. Every minute it continues, water spreads further into your structure. A professional tarp stops it at the source.
A leak showing inside means the breach in your roof happened some time ago.
By the time water appears on a ceiling or wall, it has already traveled through multiple layers of your roof system. The visible drip or stain is the end of the water's path, not the beginning. The source is somewhere above, and until that source is sealed, the leak will continue with every rainfall.
Patching from inside does not work. Applying sealant to a ceiling or interior wall addresses the symptom, not the cause. The only way to stop an active leak is to seal the entry point on the exterior of the roof. A professionally installed tarp does exactly that, immediately and reliably.
Active leaks are also among the most difficult to source without getting on the roof. Water can enter at one location and travel along rafters or sheathing before dripping somewhere entirely different. A Seeker assesses the roof directly to identify the actual breach and ensure the tarp covers it completely.
An active leak does not stay in one place.
Water follows the path of least resistance through your structure. Here is what is happening during and after a rain event with an active leak.
Steps to limit interior damage right now
These steps will not stop the leak, but they can significantly reduce the interior damage that occurs between now and when your tarp is installed.
Leak caused by a covered event? Tarping is almost always reimbursable. But timing matters.
If your roof leak was caused by a covered event such as a storm, wind, hail, or a fallen tree, your homeowner's insurance will typically cover both the resulting damage and the cost of emergency tarping as a reasonable mitigation measure.
The critical factor is acting promptly. Most policies include a "duty to mitigate" clause, which requires you to take reasonable steps to prevent further damage after a covered loss. If you do not tarp an active leak and water damage continues to accumulate, your insurer may deny coverage for the additional damage, arguing it was preventable.
We provide complete before-and-after documentation on every job. For active leak situations, this means photos of the interior damage, the roof breach, and the completed tarp, giving your adjuster a clear record of the event, the mitigation action taken, and when it was performed.
How Get a Tarp responds to an active leak
From request to sealed roof, four steps with no surprises.
Questions about active roof leaks
Water is in. Let us seal it out.
Every hour an active leak continues, the damage grows. Get a professional tarp on the source, your documentation in hand, and your claim on solid footing.
Free quote, no commitment, no upsell, documentation included