Sheet-end rust on Yorkshire’s working roofs
The flat farmland of the Vale of York is full of steel-framed buildings, grain stores, livestock sheds and machinery barns, and the industrial estates around the city’s ring road add street after street of coated steel roofing on warehouses and workshop units. Most of those roofs share the same built-in weakness: wherever a sheet was cut to length, the cut left bare steel that the factory coating never protected. Cut edge corrosion starts on exactly those edges.
It announces itself quietly, a rusty line above the gutter, some staining at the overlaps, and then it gets on with spreading under the coating where you cannot see it happening. On a working building that nobody climbs onto from one year to the next, that quiet phase can last a long time.
Why it spreads faster than owners expect
Two things drive it. First, the corrosion undercuts the coating, so the protected face of the sheet progressively becomes unprotected; the defect manufactures its own fresh bare metal as it goes. Second, the edges sit where water concentrates, in the gutter zone and within capillary-tight laps that can hold moisture for weeks. A North Yorkshire winter, long and wet, with freeze-thaw cycles working at any coating that has already lifted, gives the process the better part of eight damp months a year to run.
That is why the gap between a bit of staining and sheet ends that flake apart in your hand is shorter than most building owners assume, often a handful of winters.

The arithmetic of treating it early
While corrosion is confined to the edge zone, treatment is contained: prepare the edges back to sound steel, treat the rust, then seal the ends and laps with a flexible reinforced coating. Compare that with what the late-stage version involves, replacement sheets, access for strip-and-refit, disruption to whatever the building does, possible internal repairs from water that got in, and the case for early action makes itself. A survey at the first sign of staining is the cheapest decision on the whole timeline. Watch for:
- Brown tide lines along the eaves and gutters
- Coating peeling or bubbling at sheet ends
- Rust staining around laps and fixings
- Water marks or drips inside along the eaves
- Edges that look ragged or layered up close
The roofs we will not coat
Roofs like these fall at both ends of a scale, and we are straight about which end yours sits at. Where sheet ends are perforated, where laps have corroded through both sheets, or where condensation has rusted the underside across large areas, the steel is beyond what any treatment can recover. Coating it would be cosmetic and short-lived, so we recommend replacement or over-sheeting instead and put that in the survey report with photographs. The survey exists to find the truth of the roof, not to justify a coating quote, and you get the same honest reading whichever way it falls.

Edge treatment and full roof coating together
On roofs that pass the survey, the edges are usually not the only thing ageing. If the sheet faces are chalky and the fixing washers are perishing, treating the cut edges and coating the entire roof in one programme tends to be the better-value route: one access setup, one clean, one coating system across the whole surface, and the roof reset as a whole rather than patched in stages. For farm buildings in the Vale and units around York alike, that is how a sound but tired steel roof earns a long second life.
Seen rust at the sheet ends on a roof in or around York? Send photographs or book a survey, and we will tell you plainly which route the roof needs.





