Subscribe

MATERIALS · July 4, 2026

Metal Roofing Types: Panels, Profiles, and Metals Compared

Metal roofing types by fastener family, panel profile, and metal. Standing seam vs corrugated, R-panel, 5V, gauges, and how to choose in order.

Metal roofing types sort along three axes: the fastener family (hidden-fastener standing seam vs exposed-fastener panels), the panel profile (the shape of the rib or corrugation), and the metal itself (steel, aluminum, copper, or zinc). Pick the fastener family first, then the profile, then the metal. This guide names every common metal roof panel and profile, gives the typical gauge for each, and shows which pairing fits a house, a barn, or a commercial building.

This page is the overview hub. For pricing, see metal roof cost. For a single-profile deep dive, see corrugated metal roofing and standing seam cost.

What are the two main types of metal roofing?

Metal roofing splits into two fastener families: hidden-fastener systems (standing seam) and exposed-fastener panels (corrugated, R-panel, ribbed, and similar). In standing seam, clips or the panel edge hold the roof down and no screw pierces the flat of the panel. In exposed-fastener systems, screws run straight through the panel face into the deck or purlin, with a neoprene washer sealing each hole.

This one distinction drives cost, lifespan, and where each system belongs. Hidden-fastener standing seam typically lasts 40 to 70 years and carries wind ratings of 140 to 180 mph because nothing penetrates the water plane. Exposed-fastener panels cost far less and install faster, but the rubber washers under the screws are the wear point: they dry out and back out over a 20 to 40 year life, so the roof needs a fastener check every decade or so.

Fastener family How it holds down Typical life Relative cost Best for
Hidden fastener (standing seam) Clips or seam, no face penetration 40 to 70+ years Highest Homes, high wind, architectural
Exposed fastener (corrugated, R-panel, ribbed) Screws through panel face 20 to 40 years Lowest Barns, shops, budget, agricultural

Standing seam metal roof panel types

Standing seam panels run vertically from ridge to eave with raised seams that lock together over hidden clips. The three common seam types are snap-lock, mechanical-seam, and nail-strip (fastener-flange). They differ in how the seam closes and how much water head they resist, which sets the minimum roof slope each can handle.

  • Snap-lock: panel edges snap together by hand over a clip. No seaming tool needed. Common on residential roofs at 3:12 pitch and steeper.
  • Mechanical seam: a powered or hand seamer folds the seam 90 or 180 degrees. The tightest, most weathertight seam, used on low slopes down to 1:12 or 2:12 and on commercial work.
  • Nail-strip (fastener flange): a hidden flange along the panel edge is nailed to the deck, then the next panel snaps over it. Cheaper to install than clipped systems, common on residential.

Seam heights run 1 inch to 1.75 inches, and rib spacing is usually 12 to 19 inches. Standing seam is normally rolled in 24 gauge steel or heavier, or in aluminum, because the flat pan shows oil-canning at thinner gauges. Named residential trade profiles include 1.75-inch mechanical-seam and the common 1-inch snap-lock; these are the panels behind most quotes on standing seam metal roof cost.

Exposed-fastener panel types and profile names

Exposed-fastener panels are screwed through the face and named by their rib shape. The four you will see quoted most are corrugated, R-panel (PBR), ribbed (Max-Rib and similar), and 5V-crimp. Each has a standard coverage width and gauge range, which is what a supplier means when they list a profile by name.

Profile name Rib shape Typical gauge Common use
7/8″ Corrugated Rounded wave 26 to 29 Agricultural, rustic residential, accent
R-panel / PBR Trapezoidal high rib 26 Commercial, metal buildings, pole barns
Ribbed (Max-Rib, Tuff-Rib) Low trapezoidal rib 26 to 29 Residential, light commercial, sheds
5V-Crimp Flat with V-crimps 26 to 29 Historic and coastal residential
7.2 / Mega-Rib Deep symmetrical rib 22 to 24 Long spans, industrial walls and roofs

Corrugated is the oldest profile and reads rustic; R-panel (also called PBR) is the workhorse of metal buildings; 5V-crimp is the classic Florida and coastal look. Gauge matters more than profile for dent resistance: 26 gauge is stiffer than 29 gauge, and lower numbers mean thicker steel. The corrugated metal roofing guide covers install detail and best uses for that profile specifically.

Standing seam vs corrugated: which type should you pick?

Standing seam suits a house or any roof where a 40-plus year life and clean look justify the price; corrugated and other exposed-fastener panels suit barns, shops, and budget projects where the lower price and faster install win. The core trade is longevity and weathertightness against upfront cost. Standing seam usually runs at least double the installed price of an exposed-fastener panel of the same metal.

Factor Standing seam Corrugated / exposed fastener
Fasteners Hidden Exposed through face
Typical gauge 22 to 24 26 to 29
Lifespan 40 to 70+ years 20 to 40 years
Maintenance Minimal Refasten washers over time
Relative installed cost Highest Lowest, often 50%+ less
Look Modern, architectural Rustic to industrial

For the same house-versus-house pricing math, see metal vs asphalt shingle roof, and for commercial systems including insulated metal panels, see commercial metal roofing.

Metal roof styles beyond panels: shingles, tile, and slate

Beyond vertical panels, metal also comes as stamped products that mimic other roofs: metal shingles, metal tile, metal shake, and metal slate. These are interlocking pieces or modular panels pressed to look like asphalt, clay tile, wood shake, or slate, giving the durability of metal with a traditional profile. They install like a shingle field rather than long panels, so they handle complex rooflines with many valleys and dormers better than long-run standing seam.

  • Metal shingles: stamped steel or aluminum in a shingle look, often stone-coated. Good for cut-up roofs.
  • Metal tile: profiled to mimic Spanish or barrel clay tile at a fraction of the weight.
  • Metal shake: textured to read as split wood shake, non-combustible.
  • Metal slate: flat stamped panels imitating natural slate without the structural load.

Stone-coated steel is the most common of these in the U.S. residential market. It carries the wind and fire performance of metal while matching neighborhood aesthetics that a bare panel roof would not.

Which metal? Steel, aluminum, copper, and zinc compared

The metal is the third choice, independent of profile. Galvalume-coated steel is the default for cost and strength, aluminum resists coastal salt corrosion, and copper and zinc are premium architectural metals that develop a patina and last a century or more. The same standing seam or corrugated profile can be rolled in any of these, so metal and profile are separate decisions.

Metal Relative cost Lifespan Standout trait
Galvalume steel Low to moderate 40 to 60 years Strength per dollar, most common
Aluminum Moderate 50+ years Will not rust, best near saltwater
Copper High 100+ years Patinas, architectural accents
Zinc High 80 to 100 years Self-healing patina, low expansion

Steel dominates because it costs the least and holds up in most climates. Aluminum earns its premium within a few miles of the coast, where galvanized steel edges can rust. Copper and zinc are usually reserved for accents, historic work, or high-end custom homes rather than whole roofs.

How to choose a metal roofing type in order

Choose in three steps: fastener family, then profile, then metal. This order works because the fastener family sets the budget and lifespan band, the profile sets the look and slope range, and the metal fine-tunes for climate and appearance. Working the other direction leads to a profile that does not fit the slope or a metal that blows the budget.

  1. Fastener family: pick hidden-fastener standing seam for a long-life house roof, or an exposed-fastener panel for budget, barns, or outbuildings.
  2. Profile and slope: confirm the profile suits your pitch. Snap-lock and most exposed panels want 3:12 or steeper; mechanical-seam standing seam handles down to 1:12.
  3. Metal and climate: default to galvalume steel, switch to aluminum near the coast, and consider copper or zinc only for accents or premium work.

Once the type is set, get itemized numbers before you sign. The metal roof cost guide breaks down per-square pricing by type and region so you can sanity-check a quote against the profile and metal you chose here.

Reviewed by The Roofing Brief Team. Last reviewed July 2026.