1. Identify What You Are Actually Looking At
Not every stain is the same organism, and treatment changes based on the culprit.
- Black streaks: Gloeocapsa magma, a blue-green algae. Loves humidity and north-facing slopes.
- Green fuzz or carpet: True moss. Holds water like a sponge against your shingles.
- Crusty patches, gray or orange: Lichen, a fungus-algae combo. The toughest to remove.
- Dark spots under trees: Often mildew mixed with organic debris.
- White chalky film: Usually granule loss residue, not biological growth.
Getting the ID right saves money. A lichen job priced as an algae rinse will disappoint every time, because lichen roots into the granule layer and needs a longer dwell and sometimes a second pass.
2. Check the Damage Before You Clean
Cleaning a roof that is already failing is throwing good money after bad. Walk the perimeter with binoculars and look for:
- Curled, cupped, or missing shingles around the moss zones
- Bare spots where granules have washed into gutters
- Soft or spongy decking felt through the shingles (a pro job, not a DIY check)
- Staining on interior ceilings directly below affected slopes
- Moss thicker than a quarter inch, which usually means years of moisture exposure
- Nail pops or raised shingle tabs near ridge and hip lines
- Rust bleed around vents, flashing, or fastener heads
If two or more of those show up together, skip the cleaning call and book a free inspection. Our signs your roof needs replacement breakdown covers the thresholds we use on every Carmel inspection.
5. Protect the Rest of Your Property
Roof cleaners end up in gutters, downspouts, and landscape beds. Before any chemical touches the shingles:
- Pre-wet all plants, shrubs, and grass within 15 feet of the drip line
- Tarp expensive plantings directly below downspouts
- Close windows on the wash side
- Move vehicles and patio furniture
- Rinse landscaping again after the job to dilute any runoff
- Cover koi ponds, rain barrels, and vegetable beds with plastic sheeting
- Disconnect downspout extensions that feed directly into garden beds
9. Red Flags When Hiring a Roof Cleaner
The cleaning trade is lightly regulated, and bad operators cause real damage.
- No insurance certificate offered up front
- Pressure washing sold as the primary method
- No mention of plant protection or runoff plan
- Prices that seem too good, usually under $150 flat
- No written scope describing chemicals, dwell time, and rinse process
- Door-to-door sales after a storm with same-day pricing pressure
- Unmarked trucks, cash-only terms, or no physical business address
Ask for references on Carmel homes and look at before-and-after photos on their own slopes, not stock images.
7. Build a Prevention Routine
Once the roof is clean, keep it that way with a simple annual rhythm.
- Trim branches back at least 10 feet from the roof edge
- Clean gutters twice a year, spring and fall
- Install zinc or copper strips at the ridge
- Verify attic intake and exhaust ventilation is balanced
- Schedule a roof check every 2 to 3 years or after major storms
- Blow leaf debris off valleys and behind chimneys before winter
- Keep firewood, trellises, and climbing vines away from the eave
Clients who follow this rhythm rarely see regrowth before the 7 year mark, and Carmel Roofer schedules most of these tasks on a single fall visit to keep it simple.
10. What to Expect on Cleaning Day
A properly run soft wash visit is quieter and faster than most homeowners expect.
- Crew arrival and walkthrough to confirm problem areas and plant protection
- Pre-rinse of landscaping and surrounding hardscape
- Application of cleaner from the ridge down, working in sections
- Dwell time while the chemistry does the work, usually 15 to 20 minutes
- Low-pressure rinse from top to bottom, followed by gutter flush
- Final walk with the homeowner to confirm results and discuss prevention
Most single-family Carmel homes finish in 2 to 4 hours. Full results appear over 2 to 6 weeks as rain and sun finish lifting the dead growth. Call Carmel Roofer if spots linger past that window and we will reassess the slope.
8. Watch for the Warranty Angle
Most asphalt shingle warranties have language about biological growth. A few things worth knowing:
- Many Owens Corning and Malarkey lines include algae-resistant copper granules with a 10 to 25 year streak warranty
- Neglect that allows moss to damage the mat can void workmanship coverage
- Documentation of professional cleaning helps preserve the warranty
- Replacement shingles on an older roof rarely match algae-resistant blends perfectly
- Class 4 impact-resistant shingles often include the same AR granule technology
- Pressure washing is explicitly excluded by most manufacturers as an approved cleaning method
3. Understand Why It Keeps Coming Back
Algae and moss are symptoms. The conditions are the real problem.
- Overhanging branches dropping shade and debris
- Clogged gutters holding water at the eave line
- Poor attic ventilation keeping the deck damp
- North slopes that never get direct afternoon sun
- Adjacent trees dumping pollen and seed every spring
- Dryer or bath vents discharging moist air near the eave
- Satellite dishes and solar mounts creating debris traps
Clean the roof without fixing the cause and you will be repeating the job in 18 to 24 months. Ventilation is the one most homeowners overlook, and it is worth reading up on roof ventilation problems if your attic runs hot or humid.
4. Follow the Right Removal Method
There is a hierarchy of cleaning techniques, and using the wrong one will cost you shingles.
- Soft wash (preferred): Low-pressure application of a diluted sodium hypochlorite or manufacturer-approved cleaner, dwell time of 15 to 20 minutes, then rinse. Kills algae, moss, and lichen without blasting granules.
- Hand removal for heavy moss: Gentle brushing with a soft-bristle broom, downward stroke only, after the cleaner has killed the growth.
- Zinc or copper strips: Installed near the ridge so rainwater carries ions down the slope. Prevents regrowth for 5 to 10 years.
- Spot treatment: For isolated patches, a pump sprayer with a 50/50 bleach and water mix works if your plants below are protected.
- Second-pass lichen treatment: Stubborn crusty spots often need a follow-up application two to four weeks later once the organism dies back.
What you should never do:
- Pressure wash an asphalt roof. It strips granules in seconds.
- Scrape moss with a metal tool or stiff wire brush.
- Walk hot shingles in July. Soft asphalt scuffs easily.
- Use acidic cleaners not rated for roofing.
- Mix ammonia-based products with bleach. Dangerous fumes, full stop.
- Apply cleaner on a windy day. Overspray lands on siding, cars, and neighbors.
6. Know When to Hire a Pro
Some jobs are worth the DIY attempt on a ranch with a 4/12 pitch. Others belong to an insured crew.
- Any roof steeper than 6/12
- Two-story homes or cut-up rooflines
- Moss covering more than 20 percent of any slope
- Shingles already showing wear, curling, or granule loss
- Chimneys, skylights, or complex flashing around the affected area
- Cedar shake, slate, or tile roofs with specialty cleaning needs
A professional soft wash in Carmel typically runs $0.30 to $0.60 per square foot depending on pitch and access. Compared to a premature replacement, that is cheap insurance. If you are weighing either route, our roof replacement cost guide lays out the numbers we see across Central Indiana.