Insulation above roof membrane

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Hi all,

We’ve recently moved into an 8 year old house and, as expected with the damp weather and snow, have noticed an issue where our property joins with the semi-detached neighbour.

There seems to be insulation above the felt and below the tiles, and this area has become damp. I’m not sure if this is normal as I assumed there should be a gap.

Could this be a leak, ie a cracked tile, or is the insulation causing issues, meaning the whole area will need to be replaced? The rest of the felt is dry away from this area.

Any help would be much appreciated as we can explore the NHBC warranty if this is a defect. Apologies for the photos, it was tricky to try and describe what the issue is.

Thanks!
 

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Firstly you should forget about NHBC, they won't be interested in this in the slightest.

Anyway, you not normally have insulation above the membrane. I don't really understand what that second photo is showing?
 
It was tricky to try and get a photo under the felt given the lighting and tiny gap, but I was hoping to show the yellow insulation and dampness present on the roofing timbers.
 
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Yes could be, difficult to tell. But then you'd expect a roof with the correctly specified tiles to have little rain getting through to the membrane anyway. Does this only occur in this single area or anywhere else? Is it wet to touch?
 
Only on the north side of the roof, near the dividing wall, where I can feel insulation above the felt.

The rest of the felt for the entire roof is dry, and all of it is of the same “tightness”.

I may ask our usual roofer to have look and see if there’s any clear breakage on the outside.
 
Where catlad is coming from is that when the membrane is pulled taught that leaves no gap between the membrane and the battens for rain to drain through, and when rain sits on a roofing membrane it can soak through.
 
This may better explain the issue:


It seems the builders have installed mineral wool (maybe) above the underlay, and this is possibly creating the damp? I’m just surprised as it is seems this is exactly what should be done.

Again will get a roofer to inspect outside to see if I can see the root cause.
 

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