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TPO and EPDM Commercial Roofing

Commercial buildings – and many residential additions, garage roofs, and low-slope porch roofs – use single-ply membrane systems instead of asphalt shingles. The two dominant products are TPO (thermoplastic polyolefin) and EPDM (ethylene propylene diene monomer, a synthetic rubber). This guide compares them, explains when each makes sense, and covers what’s involved in installation and warranty.

Why single-ply membrane on low-slope roofs

Asphalt shingles require minimum 2/12 pitch to shed water effectively. Below that, water can pool and find its way under the shingles. For roofs in the 1/4:12 to 2:12 range (most commercial buildings, many residential additions and porches), shingles aren’t an option.

Single-ply membrane systems use a continuous sheet of synthetic material covering the entire roof. The seams are heat-welded (TPO) or seam-taped (EPDM) into watertight joints. Because there are no shingles to lift in wind or accumulate water in low spots, single-ply works on essentially flat roofs.

The two products dominate this market: TPO and EPDM.

TPO (thermoplastic polyolefin)

TPO is a white reflective single-ply membrane introduced commercially in the early 1990s. It’s now the dominant choice for new commercial flat roofs in the US.

Specs:

  • Color: typically white (reflective); gray and tan also available
  • Thickness: 45, 60, or 80 mil – thicker grades have longer life and warranty
  • Lifespan: 20-30 years
  • Cost: $5-$10 per sq ft installed
  • Installation: heat-welded seams (hot air gun creates a continuous bond)
  • Reflectance: high (white surface reduces summer cooling load – meaningful for commercial cooling costs)

Pros:

  • Reflective surface reduces cooling costs
  • White appearance can qualify for ENERGY STAR roofing
  • Heat-welded seams are very strong and watertight
  • Good chemical resistance

Cons:

  • White surface shows dirt easily
  • Some debate about long-term UV degradation (newer formulations are improved)
  • Specialized installation equipment (heat gun) and training required

EPDM (synthetic rubber)

EPDM is a black synthetic rubber membrane that’s been on commercial roofs since the 1970s. It’s older technology than TPO but has a long track record.

Specs:

  • Color: typically black (occasionally white-coated)
  • Thickness: 45, 60, or 90 mil
  • Lifespan: 20-40 years (proven in field installs from the 1980s still performing today)
  • Cost: $4-$8 per sq ft installed
  • Installation: seam-taped or seam-adhesive (no heat welding)
  • Reflectance: low (black surface absorbs heat)

Pros:

  • Long field-proven track record
  • Easy to repair (patch with EPDM and seam tape)
  • Slightly lower cost than TPO
  • Flexible across temperature ranges (handles IL freeze-thaw well)

Cons:

  • Black surface increases summer cooling load
  • Seam adhesion can fail over time if installation wasn’t perfect (especially older installs)
  • Doesn’t qualify for ENERGY STAR reflective roof credit

TPO vs EPDM – which to choose

For new commercial flat roof installations in Illinois, TPO is usually the right choice:

  • Heat-welded seams are more reliable long-term than EPDM seam tape
  • White reflective surface reduces cooling costs (meaningful on commercial buildings)
  • Energy code credit and potential rebates for reflective roofing
  • Cleaner appearance for buildings where the roof is visible

EPDM still makes sense for:

  • Replacing an existing EPDM roof (compatibility, easier transition)
  • Buildings with very specific chemical exposure concerns (some chemicals attack TPO)
  • Budget-constrained projects where small cost savings matter
  • Lower-profile installs where aesthetics aren’t a concern

Residential applications

Most Trill Roofing work is residential asphalt shingle, but TPO and EPDM come up in specific residential scenarios:

  • Low-slope porch roofs – when a porch addition has slope below 2/12, single-ply is the correct material
  • Garage roofs with very low slope
  • Flat-roofed additions – common on contemporary architecture
  • Bay window or dormer flat tops – where the structure has a small flat section

For these applications we use EPDM more often than TPO – the small scale makes the heat-welding equipment investment less worthwhile, and EPDM’s seam tape works fine on small areas.

Installation considerations

Both TPO and EPDM require:

  • Clean, sound roof deck (replace any soft or rotted sheathing first)
  • Underlayment or insulation board (varies by spec)
  • Proper edge metal (drip edge equivalent for low-slope roofs)
  • Penetration flashing (pipes, vents, drains) – typically pre-fabricated boots
  • Roof drains or scuppers for genuinely flat roofs (water has to go somewhere)

Most failures we see on existing low-slope roofs come from inadequate drainage (water pools and finds seam weaknesses), failed penetration flashing, or installation in cold weather (TPO seams can fail to weld properly below 40°F).

Schedule an evaluation

For commercial buildings or low-slope residential sections, schedule a Trill Roofing free inspection at /free-inspection/. We assess the existing roof condition, identify drainage issues, and recommend the appropriate single-ply system for the application.

Get a free roof inspection from Trill Roofing

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Common Questions

Quick answers to the questions Trill hears most on this topic.

TPO or EPDM for a commercial flat roof in Illinois?

What thickness should the membrane be?

How does drainage work on a flat commercial roof?