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Polyurea is a different story. This is a high-performance coating system originally developed for industrial uses – imagine a spray-on bed liner, but for your roof. It forms a tough, rubberized layer that bonds extremely well to your roof and won’t crack. Polyurea has incredible tensile strength and flexibility, far beyond standard coatings — tensile strength typically exceeds 3,000 PSI compared to 200–400 PSI for acrylic elastomeric products — so it tolerates expansion, contraction, and impact. It basically leaves you with a tough but flexible RV roof surface, like a single-piece rubber membrane. The coating has excellent adhesion to almost any roof surface: it sticks to your existing RV rubber roof (EPDM membrane), fiberglass roof, or even a painted metal roof without needing to remove the old material. Once cured, it’s seamless and waterproof, sealing every joint and penetration. Polyurea also bonds to all kinds of building materials – from concrete structures to mobile home roofs or spray foam insulation – so an RV roof is an easy job for it. Earlier spray systems sometimes required a separate UV topcoat for UV protection, but today’s polyurea formulas are all-in-one; in short, polyurea gives you a monolithic rubberized skin on top of your old one that permanently stops leaks and water infiltration.
Costs are estimates based on typical 30-ft Class A/C motorhomes and travel trailers. Actual pricing varies by applicator, region, and roof condition. Contact an ArmorThane-certified applicator for a free estimate.
EPDM is the most common RV roof material a black or white rubber membrane used on most travel trailers and Class C motorhomes. Polyurea bonds to EPDM after proper cleaning and mechanical abrasion to remove oxidation and chalking. A primer coat is typically applied to ensure a chemical bond. The result is a polyurea skin that bonds over the existing rubber membrane, sealing all seams and penetrations permanently.
TPO is a white single-ply membrane used on many newer Class A motorhomes and fifth wheels. Like EPDM, it requires surface preparation — cleaning, light sanding, and primer application — before polyurea is applied. The low surface energy of TPO means preparation is critical; when done correctly, the polyurea-to-TPO bond is extremely durable.
Fiberglass roofs are common on high-end coaches and some Class B vans. They’re rigid and resist impact well on their own, but over time UV oxidation, delamination, and gelcoat cracking can develop. Polyurea applied over fiberglass provides an additional protective layer that stops UV degradation, flex cracking, and adds impact resistance. Prep typically involves sanding, cleaning, and in some cases a tie-coat primer.
Metal roofs (aluminum or steel) are found on older Class A coaches and some commercial RVs. These require degreasing, rust removal (if applicable), and mechanical abrasion before polyurea application. Polyurea adheres excellently to bare or primed aluminum and provides excellent corrosion and impact resistance. The seamless coat eliminates the leak points at rivets and seams that are common failure points on metal roofs.
ArmorThane’s polyurea chemistry is engineered for extreme durability. A properly applied polyurea roof coating system can realistically achieve a service life of 20+ years — not as a marketing claim, but as a reflection of the material’s inherent properties: high tensile strength, exceptional elongation, UV-stable topcoat chemistry, and a seamless membrane that eliminates the seams and lap joints where traditional coatings fail first.
Warranty terms for polyurea RV roof applications vary depending on the certified applicator performing the work. Each ArmorThane-certified applicator sets their own service warranties based on their experience, market, and application standards. When you contact an ArmorThane applicator for an estimate, ask specifically about:
Some competitors in the RV roof coating market advertise “lifetime warranties.” It’s worth understanding what that actually means: warranties are contractual obligations of a business, not proof of chemistry. A lifetime warranty from a company that ceases operations provides zero protection. ArmorThane’s position is straightforward: our polyurea systems are engineered for 20+ year performance based on documented chemistry — and we back that claim with certified applicators, an established supply chain, and nearly 30 years in the industry.
RV roof coatings and sealants serve different purposes. Sealants (like Dicor lap sealant) are designed to seal specific seams, joints, and penetrations around vents and air conditioners. Coatings like ArmorThane’s polyurea system are applied over the entire roof surface to provide a seamless, protective membrane that covers the whole roof — including all the seams underneath. Think of it as the difference between patching individual holes versus applying a full waterproof skin.
No — polyurea is a two-component spray system that requires professional-grade plural component spray equipment, proper safety gear, and trained application technique. The material cures in seconds, which means it cannot be applied with a brush or roller. ArmorThane certifies professional applicators who have completed training on equipment operation, surface preparation, and product application. Attempting DIY polyurea application with improper equipment will result in a defective coat. This is one of the key tradeoffs vs. acrylic coatings: polyurea requires professional installation, but delivers a far superior result that lasts decades.
Yes. ArmorThane polyurea adheres to EPDM rubber, TPO membrane, fiberglass, aluminum, and most other RV roof substrates when properly prepared. Surface preparation is critical: the substrate must be clean, dry, and properly primed to ensure a strong chemical bond. Each substrate type has slightly different prep requirements — EPDM requires mechanical abrasion and primer; TPO and fiberglass need a compatible tie-coat primer. A certified applicator will assess your specific roof and prepare it accordingly.
A typical RV roof coating application takes 1–2 days from start to finish. Day one typically involves thorough cleaning, any necessary repairs, and primer application. Day two is the polyurea spray application. Polyurea cures very quickly — the roof is generally tack-free within minutes and can be walked on within hours. The total timeline can vary based on roof size, condition, complexity (number of vents and penetrations), and weather conditions.
This depends on your specific RV manufacturer and the warranty terms. Most factory RV roof warranties expire within 1–3 years and primarily cover manufacturing defects, not wear from UV exposure or weather. If your factory roof warranty is still active, consult your dealer or manufacturer before applying any aftermarket coating. For RVs out of the factory warranty period — which is the case for most RV owners considering a roof coating — there are no warranty concerns from the manufacturer’s side. Always disclose any previous repairs or modifications to your certified applicator so the coating system is tailored appropriately.
No. A polyurea roof coating applied at typical thicknesses (60–80 mils, or approximately 1/16 of an inch) adds only a few pounds to a standard 30-foot roof. This is entirely negligible relative to the RV’s total weight rating. By contrast, replacing an EPDM roof witha new membrane typically adds 50–100+ pounds. Polyurea’s high strength-to-weight ratio is one of its key advantages: you get maximum protection with minimal added weight.
Dicor and Kool Seal are acrylic elastomeric coatings — water-based, brush or roller applied, and suitable for DIY application. They’re a lower-cost, maintenance-focused product typically reapplied every 3–5 years. ArmorThane polyurea is a fundamentally different product: spray-applied, chemically cured, with tensile strength 10–20x higher, elongation rates far superior, and an expected service life measured in decades rather than years. The tradeoff is cost ($500–$1,000 per recoat for Dicor vs. $3,500– $7,000 one-time for polyurea) — but when you factor in 20 years of recoating expenses plus the labor and disruption, the total cost of ownership often favors polyurea.
Connect with an ArmorThane-certified polyurea applicator in your area for a free, no-obligation estimate.
ArmorThane has built a strong reputation over the past 30 years for producing high-quality, durable protective coatings.
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