Mobile and Manufactured Home Roofing in Alabama
Mobile and manufactured home roofing in Alabama operates under a distinct regulatory and structural framework that differs substantially from site-built residential construction. Alabama's manufactured housing stock represents a significant share of the state's housing inventory, and the roofing systems on these structures are governed by federal HUD standards rather than local building codes in most circumstances. This page covers the classification of manufactured home roofing types, the permitting landscape, common failure scenarios in Alabama's climate, and the professional boundaries that define qualified service in this sector.
Definition and scope
A manufactured home, as defined by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), is a factory-built dwelling constructed after June 15, 1976, to the HUD Manufactured Home Construction and Safety Standards (commonly called the HUD Code, codified at 24 CFR Part 3280). Structures built before that date are classified as mobile homes and may not conform to modern HUD standards. Alabama's manufactured housing market includes both categories, and the roofing requirements applicable to each differ at the point of original construction.
The Alabama Manufactured Housing Commission (AMHC) is the state agency responsible for administering manufactured housing regulations, licensing installers, and handling complaints related to construction defects. AMHC operates under Alabama Code Title 24, Chapter 6, which governs manufactured housing installations across the state.
Scope limitations: This page covers roofing for manufactured and mobile homes located within Alabama's jurisdiction. Roofing for site-built residential structures follows a separate framework addressed under Alabama residential roofing standards. Commercial manufactured structures and modular homes — which are built to the International Building Code rather than the HUD Code — are not covered here. Adjacent topics such as Alabama roofing building codes and Alabama roofing contractor licensing cover those respective areas in detail.
How it works
Manufactured home roofs are structurally integrated into the home's chassis system, which means roofing work intersects with the structural envelope rather than sitting above it as an independent assembly. Three primary roof configurations appear across Alabama's manufactured housing stock:
- Flat or low-slope roofs — Found predominantly on older mobile homes and pre-HUD Code units. These typically use rubber membrane (EPDM) or metal panel systems. Low-slope designs are more vulnerable to ponding water in Alabama's high-rainfall regions.
- Bow or barrel roofs — A rounded profile common on 1970s-era mobile homes, typically surfaced with aluminum or steel panels. These require specialized fastening and overlay techniques distinct from conventional shingle installation.
- Pitched roofs (site-installed additions) — Retrofit pitched roofs added over original flat or bow roofs are common in Alabama and are sometimes called "roof-overs." These require the underlying structure to accommodate added load and must comply with installation standards under Alabama's jurisdiction.
The HUD Code sets minimum roof load standards: Zone I (most of Alabama) requires manufactured homes to withstand a roof live load of 20 pounds per square foot (24 CFR §3280.305). Wind exposure is a primary concern — Alabama falls within Wind Zone II and Wind Zone III designations under HUD Code classifications, with southern coastal counties in Wind Zone III requiring roofs built to higher resistance specifications. Detailed wind and storm framing is addressed further in Alabama roof wind and storm resistance.
For practical application and contractor navigation in this sector, the Alabama Roofing Authority index provides access to the broader service landscape across roofing categories.
Common scenarios
Four scenarios account for the majority of manufactured home roofing work in Alabama:
- Storm damage following tornadoes or severe thunderstorms — Alabama averages more than 20 tornadoes per year (NOAA Storm Prediction Center), and manufactured homes are statistically more vulnerable than site-built structures. Roof separation from the chassis is a documented failure mode in high-wind events.
- Roof-over installations — Contractors install a new pitched metal or shingle roof over an existing flat or bow roof. These projects require evaluation of the existing structure's load capacity and must be permitted in Alabama's regulated counties.
- Membrane deterioration — EPDM and TPO membranes on flat-roofed units typically require replacement within 15–20 years. Alabama's UV exposure and temperature cycling accelerate membrane degradation.
- Fastener pull-out and panel separation on metal roofs — Thermal expansion on aluminum-paneled roofs causes fastener holes to elongate over time, leading to water infiltration at seams. This is among the most common failure modes in Alabama's climate, alongside issues catalogued in Alabama roofing common failure modes.
Decision boundaries
Whether a given roofing project on a manufactured home requires a permit depends on the county and the nature of the work. The AMHC regulates installer licensing for new installations and significant alterations. Cosmetic repairs — such as patching a membrane or replacing individual metal panels — typically fall outside permit requirements, while roof-over projects that alter the structural load path require AMHC-licensed contractor involvement and, in some jurisdictions, a local building permit.
The regulatory landscape governing these distinctions is detailed in regulatory context for Alabama roofing, which covers the interaction between state agencies, HUD federal oversight, and local jurisdictional authority.
Contractors working on manufactured home roofing in Alabama must hold an AMHC installer license if performing work classified as installation or alteration under Title 24, Chapter 6. Standard general contractor licensing issued by the Alabama Licensing Board for General Contractors does not automatically authorize HUD Code manufactured housing work — these are parallel licensing tracks.
Safety framing for manufactured home roofing follows OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart R (Steel Erection) for metal panel systems and 29 CFR 1926 Subpart L for scaffold use during roof-over construction (OSHA). Fall protection requirements apply at roof heights above 6 feet on residential structures, including manufactured homes.
References
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development — Manufactured Housing
- 24 CFR Part 3280 — Manufactured Home Construction and Safety Standards (eCFR)
- Alabama Manufactured Housing Commission (AMHC)
- Alabama Code Title 24, Chapter 6 — Manufactured Housing
- NOAA Storm Prediction Center — Tornado Climatology
- OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart R — Steel Erection
- Alabama Licensing Board for General Contractors