Adding Skylights to a Flat Roof in Toronto: Curb Mounting, Flashing and Leak Risks

Published- May 18, 2026

Adding Skylights to a Flat Roof in Toronto: Curb Mounting, Flashing and Leak Risks

A skylight can transform a dark hallway, stairwell or kitchen into a sun-filled space, but on a low-slope roof the engineering is far less forgiving than on a steep shingle roof. Successful flat roof skylight installation Toronto homeowners can rely on comes down to three things: a properly built insulated curb, watertight flashing tied into the membrane, and detailing that accounts for ponding water, snow load and the freeze-thaw cycles that define our climate. Get any one of those wrong and the bright new opening becomes the single most likely leak point on the entire roof. This guide walks through curb mounting, flashing systems, leak prevention, realistic GTA costs and the code requirements you need to know before cutting a hole in your roof.

Flat roof skylight installation Toronto on a residential low-slope TPO roof with a curb-mounted skylight
A curb-mounted skylight integrated into a residential TPO flat roof in the GTA.

Why Flat Roof Skylight Installation in Toronto Is Different

On a pitched roof, gravity is your friend: water runs off shingles and away from any penetration. On a flat or low-slope roof, water lingers. Even a properly drained membrane holds a thin film after rain, and shaded corners around a skylight can hold standing water for hours. That is why a successful flat roof skylight installation Toronto project never sets the glass flush with the membrane. Instead, the skylight is mounted on a raised curb that lifts the glazing well above the water line.

The curb is a box-shaped frame, typically built from pressure-treated lumber or pre-fabricated metal, that rises a minimum of 150 mm (about 6 inches) above the finished roof surface. This height keeps the watertight seal out of the splash zone and above the maximum expected snow accumulation against the unit. The membrane, whether TPO, EPDM, PVC or modified bitumen, is then carried up and over the curb and terminated under a metal cap. Because the membrane itself becomes the waterproofing layer around the opening, the quality of that flashing is everything.

Toronto’s climate adds three stressors most installers in milder regions never face: heavy wet snow that can sit against the curb for weeks, ice damming where meltwater refreezes at the edge, and roughly 60 to 70 freeze-thaw cycles per winter that work caulk and sealant loose. A flush-mounted or poorly curbed skylight on a GTA flat roof is, in practice, a scheduled leak. Pairing the skylight work with quality residential flat roof installation ensures the curb and membrane are designed as one system rather than patched together later.

Curb-Mounted vs Deck-Mounted Skylights on Low-Slope Roofs

There are two broad mounting approaches, but only one is appropriate for a true flat roof. Deck-mounted (sometimes called self-flashing) skylights are designed for sloped roofs of 14 degrees or more, where an integrated flashing apron sheds water down the shingle field. Drop one onto a low-slope deck and water will pool against the low edge and find its way under the apron. Curb-mounted skylights are purpose-built for flat and low-slope applications: the glazing unit sits on top of a raised curb, completely separated from the roof plane.

For roofs under 2:12 pitch, manufacturers such as VELUX and Wasco void warranties on deck-mounted units unless a site-built curb is added. The table below compares the two systems in the Toronto context.

Factor Curb-Mounted (Flat Roof) Deck-Mounted (Sloped Roof)
Minimum roof pitch 0:12 to 2:12 (low-slope) 2:12 and steeper
Curb height above membrane 150 mm minimum Integrated, no curb
Flashing method Membrane wrapped up curb + metal cap Step / apron flashing
Leak risk on flat roof Low when detailed correctly High / not recommended
Typical GTA installed cost $2,200 to $4,500 per unit Not suited to flat roofs

For the vast majority of Toronto, Mississauga, Markham and Vaughan flat-roof homes and additions, the answer is curb-mounted, every time. If you are weighing fixed glass against a venting unit, our overview of residential skylights breaks down the options by room and roof type.

How the Insulated Curb Is Built and Mounted

The curb is the structural and thermal heart of the installation. A well-built curb does four jobs at once: it raises the glazing above water, provides a solid nailing base for flashing, carries snow and wind loads, and breaks the thermal bridge that would otherwise cause condensation. Here is the sequence a qualified crew follows.

First, the opening is cut and the roof structure is reinforced. Rafters or joists cut during the opening must be doubled and headered so the curb transfers load back into the framing. The curb is then framed, usually from 2×6 or 2×8 lumber for residential work, sized so its inside dimensions match the skylight’s required rough opening. On commercial decks the curb may be a pre-fabricated insulated metal unit. The curb is fastened down through the deck into the reinforced framing, then the exterior face is sheathed and the interior is insulated to limit heat loss and condensation, which ties directly into overall attic insulation performance.

Only after the curb is solid and square does membrane work begin. The roofing membrane is cut, dressed up the four faces of the curb, and mechanically fastened near the top edge. On TPO and PVC roofs this lap is then heat-welded; on EPDM it is bonded with seam adhesive and covered with cover tape; on modified bitumen it is torch- or adhesive-applied. A pre-formed corner or field-fabricated boot seals each corner, which is statistically where most curb leaks begin. Finally a metal counter-flashing cap is set over the membrane termination and the skylight is bedded in sealant and screwed to the top of the curb.

Flat roofing technician heat-welding TPO membrane up the side of a skylight curb on a Toronto low-slope roof
A technician heat-welds the membrane up the curb face to create a continuous watertight seal.

Flashing the Skylight Into the Membrane

Flashing is where craftsmanship separates a 25-year skylight from a two-year headache. The goal is a single continuous waterproof envelope: the field membrane flows up the curb, the corners are sealed, and the metal cap protects the top termination from UV and physical damage. There is no exposed caulk doing the primary waterproofing job; sealant is a backup, never the main defence.

Each membrane type has its own flashing discipline. The summary below reflects the materials and methods most common on GTA flat roofs in 2026.

Membrane Flashing Method at Curb Seam Technique Typical Service Life
TPO Membrane welded up curb, T-joint patches at corners Hot-air welded 20 to 30 years
PVC Membrane welded up curb, pre-moulded corners Hot-air welded 25 to 30 years
EPDM Uncured flashing wrapped up curb, cover tape Adhesive bonded 20 to 25 years
Modified Bitumen Cant strip + membrane plies turned up curb Torch / cold-applied 15 to 20 years

Two details matter more than anything else. The first is the cant strip or rounded transition at the base of the curb: a sharp 90-degree inside corner stresses the membrane and cracks over time, while a 45-degree cant or rounded fillet lets the membrane turn the corner without strain. The second is the height of the membrane termination, which must sit above the snow line and be capped by metal so UV never degrades the exposed edge. On larger or commercial projects, these same principles scale up; our commercial skylights work applies the identical envelope logic to bigger curbs and unit skylights.

The Real Leak Risks and How They Are Prevented

Almost every flat-roof skylight leak traces back to one of a handful of failure points. Knowing them helps you ask the right questions and spot a rushed installation before it costs you a ceiling. Ponding water is the leading culprit: if the area around the skylight does not drain, water finds the smallest pinhole in a seam. Proper slope toward drains, or tapered insulation built up around the curb, keeps water moving.

Corner seams are the second major risk because they involve compound folds in the membrane. A skilled crew uses pre-formed corners or carefully welded patches rather than relying on sealant to bridge a gap. Condensation is a third, quieter failure: a poorly insulated curb lets warm interior air hit cold glass and framing, dripping moisture that homeowners often mistake for a roof leak. The table below maps the common risks to their prevention.

Leak Risk Root Cause Prevention
Ponding water No slope around curb Tapered insulation, drainage toward roof drains
Corner seam failure Hand-folded membrane, sealant-dependent Pre-moulded or welded corners
Curb too low Glazing within splash/snow zone 150 mm minimum curb height
Condensation Thermal bridge at curb, single glazing Insulated curb, double or triple glazing
UV-degraded termination Exposed membrane edge Metal counter-flashing cap

If you already have a leaking skylight, do not wait for the next storm to make it worse. Our emergency roof repair team can dry-in the opening and diagnose whether the problem is the flashing, the curb or the glazing seal. You can see examples of completed curb and flashing work in our project gallery.

Close-up of metal counter-flashing cap and welded membrane termination at the top of a flat roof skylight curb
The metal cap protects the membrane termination from UV and physical damage at the curb edge.

Costs, Timelines and Code Requirements in the GTA

Pricing depends on glazing type, unit size, curb construction and whether your existing membrane needs patching or full replacement around the opening. A single fixed curb-mounted skylight on an existing flat roof typically runs $2,200 to $4,500 installed in the Toronto area, while a venting or electric unit with rain sensors and motorised opening pushes higher. Adding a brand-new opening that requires structural reframing adds labour and a building permit. The breakdown below reflects 2026 GTA pricing.

Item Typical GTA Cost (2026) Notes
Fixed curb-mounted skylight, installed $2,200 to $3,500 Existing opening, double-glazed
Venting / electric skylight, installed $3,500 to $6,000 Motor, rain sensor, controls
New opening with structural reframing +$1,200 to $2,800 Headers, permit, drywall return
Curb construction and flashing only $900 to $1,800 Per unit, membrane-dependent
Building permit (City of Toronto) $200 to $500 Required for new structural openings

Most single-skylight projects take one to two days once materials are on site, weather permitting. Code-wise, work in Ontario follows the Ontario Building Code: glazing in skylights must be safety glazing (tempered or laminated), the curb and any cut framing must maintain the structural capacity of the roof, and a permit is required whenever you alter the structure to create a new opening. Replacing a unit in an existing curb usually does not require a permit, but the membrane tie-in must still be done to manufacturer specification to keep the roof warranty intact. Because the skylight and the roof share one waterproofing system, it is almost always cheaper and safer to coordinate skylight work with any planned commercial flat roof installation or residential re-roof rather than cutting into a finished membrane later.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you install a skylight on a completely flat roof?

Yes. A proper flat roof skylight installation Toronto project uses a curb-mounted skylight that raises the glazing at least 150 mm above the membrane, keeping the seal out of the splash and snow zone. A truly flush-mounted unit is not recommended on low-slope roofs because standing water will eventually find its way under the flashing.

Why do flat roof skylights leak more than sloped ones?

Water lingers on low-slope roofs instead of running off, so any weakness in the corner seams or flashing becomes a leak. The fix is a raised insulated curb, pre-formed or welded corners, proper drainage around the unit, and a metal counter-flashing cap protecting the membrane termination from UV.

How much does flat roof skylight installation cost in Toronto?

A fixed curb-mounted unit typically costs $2,200 to $3,500 installed on an existing flat roof, while venting or electric models run $3,500 to $6,000. Cutting a brand-new opening that needs structural reframing and a permit adds $1,200 to $2,800. Get an exact figure by booking an on-site assessment for your flat roof skylight installation Toronto project.

Do I need a building permit to add a skylight?

In Ontario you need a building permit whenever you create a new opening that alters the roof structure, because rafters or joists must be reframed with headers. Replacing a skylight in an existing curb usually does not require a permit, but the membrane tie-in must follow manufacturer specification to keep your warranty valid.

What membrane works best around a flat roof skylight?

TPO and PVC are popular because their seams are hot-air welded into a continuous waterproof bond up the curb, while EPDM uses adhesive flashing and cover tape and modified bitumen uses turned-up plies over a cant strip. All four can perform for decades when the curb is correctly built and the corners are properly detailed. We will recommend the right system if you request a free flat roof quote.

Will a skylight cause condensation on my flat roof?

It can if the curb is a thermal bridge or the glazing is single-pane. Insulating the curb, using double or triple glazing, and ensuring good attic ventilation and insulation prevents warm interior air from condensing on cold framing, which homeowners often mistake for a roof leak.

Schedule Your Flat Roof Skylight Installation Toronto Consultation Today

A skylight should add years of natural light, not years of leak chasing. The difference is a contractor who treats the curb, the flashing and the membrane as one engineered system designed for our snow loads and freeze-thaw cycles. Flat Roofs Toronto builds insulated curbs, welds and bonds watertight flashing, and details every corner so your skylight stays dry through decades of GTA weather.

Call us today at (647) 333-3528 or request a free flat roof quote to get started.

Flat Roofs Toronto has been serving Toronto, Mississauga, Markham, Vaughan and the GTA with expert flat roofing and skylight installation built to last.