Metal Versus Asphalt on Energy
To understand metal's energy advantage, it helps a Brownstown homeowner to compare it directly to asphalt. Here is how they differ on energy.
Dark Asphalt Absorbs Heat
Dark asphalt shingles, common on many homes, tend to absorb the sun's heat, getting hot in the sun and radiating that heat into the attic and home. This absorption increases heat gain through the roof, raising the cooling load. The dark, heat absorbing surface of typical asphalt is part of why such roofs contribute to a hotter attic and home in summer. Asphalt soaks up heat.
Metal Reflects Heat
Metal, by contrast, reflects much of the sun's radiant heat rather than absorbing it, staying cooler in the sun and transferring less heat into the home. This reflective quality is the opposite of dark asphalt's absorption, which is why metal roofs tend to be more energy efficient for cooling. The reflective metal surface addresses heat gain at the source. Metal bounces heat away.
The Difference in Practice
In practice, this means a reflective metal roof can keep a home cooler and reduce cooling demand compared to a dark asphalt roof, especially in hot, sunny weather. The difference in how the two materials handle solar heat translates into a real energy difference. For cooling efficiency, metal generally has the advantage over dark asphalt. The materials perform differently in the heat. Metal cools better.
Finishes Widen the Gap
Reflective and cool roof finishes on metal can widen the energy gap further, boosting metal's reflectivity beyond its natural level. While asphalt is available in some reflective options too, metal's combination of natural reflectivity and cool roof finishes gives it a strong energy position. The finish enhances metal's inherent advantage. Reflective finishes strengthen metal's edge. They boost the difference.
The Energy Verdict
On energy efficiency for cooling, metal generally outperforms dark asphalt, reflecting heat where asphalt absorbs it, which can mean a cooler home and lower cooling demand. Combined with metal's other advantages in longevity and durability, the energy benefit adds to metal's overall case. For cooling efficiency, metal has the clear edge over dark asphalt. The verdict favors metal on energy. It is a real advantage.
Metal vs Asphalt on Energy, in Short
Dark asphalt absorbs solar heat while metal reflects it, so a reflective metal roof keeps a home cooler and reduces cooling demand compared to dark asphalt, with cool roof finishes widening the gap. Metal generally has the energy edge for cooling.
One point worth making clear for Brownstown homeowners is that a metal roof's energy efficiency is a genuine benefit but one that deserves honest framing, since the actual savings depend heavily on the specifics of each home. The mechanism itself is straightforward and real, metal reflects a meaningful share of the sun's radiant heat rather than absorbing it the way dark asphalt does, so less heat enters the attic and home through the roof, which eases the load on the air conditioning during hot weather and can reduce cooling energy use. Cool roof and reflective finishes boost this effect further, and lighter colors reflect more heat than darker ones. What varies, and varies a lot, is how much this translates into dollar savings on a given home, because that depends on the climate and length of the cooling season, the roof's finish and color, the quality of the attic insulation and ventilation, the home's design and orientation, and the homeowner's cooling habits. A home in a hot, sunny climate with a long air conditioning season stands to benefit considerably more than one in a mild climate, and a home with poor attic insulation has more room for the roof's reflectivity to help than one already well insulated. So the honest way to describe the benefit is that a reflective metal roof can help reduce cooling costs and improve summer comfort, with the amount differing from home to home, rather than promising a specific savings figure. For a homeowner, the encouraging part is that this benefit, whatever its size for their particular home, continues year after year over the metal roof's long lifespan, far longer than an asphalt roof would last, so even modest annual savings accumulate over decades.
One point worth making clear for Brownstown homeowners is that a metal roof's energy efficiency is a genuine benefit but one that deserves honest framing, since the actual savings depend heavily on the specifics of each home. The mechanism itself is straightforward and real, metal reflects a meaningful share of the sun's radiant heat rather than absorbing it the way dark asphalt does, so less heat enters the attic and home through the roof, which eases the load on the air conditioning during hot weather and can reduce cooling energy use. Cool roof and reflective finishes boost this effect further, and lighter colors reflect more heat than darker ones. What varies, and varies a lot, is how much this translates into dollar savings on a given home, because that depends on the climate and length of the cooling season, the roof's finish and color, the quality of the attic insulation and ventilation, the home's design and orientation, and the homeowner's cooling habits. A home in a hot, sunny climate with a long air conditioning season stands to benefit considerably more than one in a mild climate, and a home with poor attic insulation has more room for the roof's reflectivity to help than one already well insulated. So the honest way to describe the benefit is that a reflective metal roof can help reduce cooling costs and improve summer comfort, with the amount differing from home to home, rather than promising a specific savings figure. For a homeowner, the encouraging part is that this benefit, whatever its size for their particular home, continues year after year over the metal roof's long lifespan, far longer than an asphalt roof would last, so even modest annual savings accumulate over decades.
One point worth making clear for Brownstown homeowners is that a metal roof's energy efficiency is a genuine benefit but one that deserves honest framing, since the actual savings depend heavily on the specifics of each home. The mechanism itself is straightforward and real, metal reflects a meaningful share of the sun's radiant heat rather than absorbing it the way dark asphalt does, so less heat enters the attic and home through the roof, which eases the load on the air conditioning during hot weather and can reduce cooling energy use. Cool roof and reflective finishes boost this effect further, and lighter colors reflect more heat than darker ones. What varies, and varies a lot, is how much this translates into dollar savings on a given home, because that depends on the climate and length of the cooling season, the roof's finish and color, the quality of the attic insulation and ventilation, the home's design and orientation, and the homeowner's cooling habits. A home in a hot, sunny climate with a long air conditioning season stands to benefit considerably more than one in a mild climate, and a home with poor attic insulation has more room for the roof's reflectivity to help than one already well insulated. So the honest way to describe the benefit is that a reflective metal roof can help reduce cooling costs and improve summer comfort, with the amount differing from home to home, rather than promising a specific savings figure. For a homeowner, the encouraging part is that this benefit, whatever its size for their particular home, continues year after year over the metal roof's long lifespan, far longer than an asphalt roof would last, so even modest annual savings accumulate over decades.
Choose the Energy-Smart Roof
Brownstown Metal Roofing installs reflective, energy efficient metal roofing that outperforms dark asphalt on cooling across Brownstown and Jackson County. Call (765) 676-3491 for a free consultation on a metal roof that reflects heat and can help keep your home cooler than asphalt.