Roof pitch UK: minimum and maximum angles by material

Roof pitch is the angle of the slope, measured in degrees. UK roofs range from 1° (flat) to 70°+ (mansard lower section). Each covering material has a minimum pitch below which it will leak.

Quick answer: Minimum pitch (BS 5534) by material: flat membranes (EPDM, GRP, felt) 1-5°, profiled metal sheeting 5-10°, concrete tile (interlocking) 17.5°, slate (large format) 22.5°, plain clay tile 30°, thatch 45°. Below these minimums, water will track back under the covering and leak.
Last reviewed: 2026-05-18 · 4 min read

Minimum pitch by material (BS 5534)

MaterialMinimum pitchWhy
EPDM / GRP / felt (flat membrane)1-5°Continuous waterproof layer, no joints to leak
Profiled metal sheeting5-10°Long sheets, end laps need fall to shed water
Standing seam metal (zinc, copper)Welded joints, near-flat capable
Concrete interlocking tile17.5°Interlocks shed water at low pitch
Slate (large, 600×300mm)20°Overlap shed water
Slate (small, 400×200mm)25°Smaller laps need steeper angle
Plain clay tile (single lap)30°No interlock, water relies on gravity
Pantile (clay)30°Single lap with profile drainage
Thatch45°Bundles shed water by steep run-off

Source: BS 5534:2014+A2:2018 (Code of practice for slating and tiling for pitched roofs and vertical cladding).

How to measure roof pitch

Method 1: Inside the loft. Hold a spirit level horizontally against a rafter. Measure the vertical drop over 12 inches (300mm). Use the table:

Method 2: Outside, using a smartphone level app held against a rafter or roof edge. Less accurate but easier.

Method 3: From the ground, measure the span (eaves to eaves) and the rise (eaves to ridge). Pitch = arctan(rise ÷ half-span).

Cheapest UK pitch
30-35° (standard rafter lengths, common tile sizes)
UK British Standard
BS 5534:2014+A2:2018
Flat / pitched boundary
10° (Building Regulations)
Steepest UK roof type
Mansard lower section (70-80°)

What happens below minimum pitch?

Water gets driven sideways by wind, capillary action pulls it back under the lap, and eventually it tracks down inside the covering. You get damp patches on bedroom ceilings, rot in rafters, and stained insulation. The fix is either a sub-roof membrane (works for shallow under-pitch shortfalls) or re-pitching the roof (major structural work, often cheaper to demolish and rebuild).

Many late-1970s concrete-tile estate homes were built at 22-25° which was the minimum at the time. Tightening of BS 5534 in 2014 means some of those would now fail. If you re-cover, your installer may need to add an underlay upgrade (£200-£500).

Maximum pitch

There's no hard maximum, but practical issues: above 60° tiles and slates need extra clips to stop them slipping under their own weight (£3-5/m² extra material). Above 70°, you're functionally on a wall, not a roof.

Sources

  1. British Standards Institution, BS 5534:2014+A2:2018 Code of practice for slating and tiling
  2. National Federation of Roofing Contractors, Pitched roof minimum slope guidance, 2024
  3. NHBC Standards 2025, Chapter 7.2 Pitched roofs

Last reviewed: 2026-05-18