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Glossary · Exterior

What is Soffit and Fascia?

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Definition

Soffit and fascia are the two pieces of exterior trim that finish off the roof eave. Soffit is the horizontal panel underneath the roof overhang (the part you see when you look up at the underside of the eave). Fascia is the vertical board running along the front edge of the eave that the gutter attaches to. Together they hide the rafter tails, keep weather and pests out of the attic, and (when the soffit is vented) provide the air intake half of the attic ventilation loop that pairs with the ridge vent at the peak.

Three-dimensional oblique architectural diagram of a residential roof eave showing the vertical fascia board on the front edge and the horizontal vented soffit panel on the underside, both highlighted in cyan, with a gutter mounted to the fascia and shingles above

A residential eave. The cyan vertical board on the front edge is the fascia; the cyan horizontal panel underneath the overhang is the soffit. The gutter mounts to the fascia and the soffit holds the perforated vent panels that pull air into the attic.

What is the difference between soffit and fascia?

They are two different boards in the same assembly, oriented differently and doing different jobs.

SoffitFascia
OrientationHorizontal, parallel to the groundVertical, perpendicular to the ground
PositionUnderside of the roof eave overhangFront face of the eave, just below the shingles
Visible fromLooking up at the eave from the groundLooking at the front of the house
Primary jobHide rafter tails, host attic intake ventsMount point for the gutter; seal the roof edge
MaterialAluminum or vinyl panels with perforationsWood, aluminum-wrapped wood, or PVC board
Failure modePests entering through gaps, paint peelingWood rot from gutter overflow, ice dam damage

Quick mental check: stand in front of the house. Look up at the eave. The flat panel on the underside is the soffit. The vertical board at the edge (where the gutter attaches) is the fascia.

What are two common problems with soffits and fascia?

Most failures come from one of two sources.

  • Wood rot from gutter overflow. If the gutters clog and water spills over the back edge instead of running down the downspouts, the water saturates the fascia board and the back edge of the soffit. Within a few seasons the wood softens; within a few years the fascia has to be replaced. This is by far the most common eave failure mode in our region.
  • Pest entry through gaps. Squirrels, raccoons, bats, and birds learn to push through small soffit gaps to nest in the attic. Once they are in, they tear up insulation, gnaw wiring, and create air leaks. The fix is closing the entry point with proper soffit panels and rated vent screens, but the damage often persists.

Both are preventable with two simple maintenance steps: keep the gutters clean, and inspect the soffit annually for gaps. Both are dramatically reduced when the original install includes proper venting strategy and aluminum-wrapped fascia instead of bare wood.

How much does soffit and fascia replacement cost?

In Virginia and Maryland, a full soffit and fascia replacement on a typical single-story 2,000 square foot home (about 150 linear feet of eave) usually runs in this range:

ScopeMaterialTypical Installed Cost
Aluminum wrap over existing woodAluminum trim coil$8 to $12 per linear foot
Full replacement, aluminum panels and aluminum-wrapped fasciaAluminum soffit + aluminum-clad fascia$15 to $22 per linear foot
Full replacement, PVC soffit and PVC fascia (premium)Vinyl / PVC composite$18 to $28 per linear foot
Whole-house typical (150 linear feet of eave)Aluminum or vinyl mid-tier$2,500 to $4,500 total

Add about 30 percent for two-story homes (the extra ladder time and safety setup adds labor), and add about 20 percent if any of the underlying wood has to be replaced because of existing rot or pest damage.

What is the difference between trim and fascia and soffit?

“Trim” is the broad word for any decorative or functional finish board on the outside of the house. Fascia and soffit are two specific pieces of exterior trim. Other exterior trim pieces include window casing, door casing, frieze board (the horizontal piece where the siding meets the soffit), rake board (the trim on the gable end of the roof), and corner boards (the vertical pieces at the outside corners of the house).

So fascia and soffit are types of trim, but not all trim is fascia or soffit.

How do soffit vents work with ridge vents?

The soffit and the ridge work as a pair to ventilate the attic. Cold dry air enters through the perforated soffit panels at the eaves; hot moist air rises up through the attic and exits at the ridge vent on the peak. The continuous airflow loop runs by natural convection without any mechanical assistance, keeping the attic temperature and humidity close to outside conditions. Code (IRC R806) requires this balance.

If the soffit vents are blocked (clogged with paint, blocked by insulation pushed too far out, or simply not installed in the original soffit panels) the ridge vent has no intake and cannot draw air. This is the single most common reason a homeowner with a ridge vent still complains about a hot attic in summer. The fix is to verify intake air at the soffit, not to replace the ridge vent.

What DreamHome installs

DreamHome installs aluminum vented soffit panels and aluminum-wrapped fascia on most projects, both color-matched to the house trim. The soffit panels include the manufacturer-spec intake vent perforations across the full length of the eave, so the attic ventilation intake side of the soffit-to-ridge loop is preserved. For premium upgrades, we install PVC composite soffit and PVC fascia (no rot, no paint, longest service life).

Every fascia install includes proper drip edge integration at the roof edge so water cannot wick behind the gutter and rot the fascia, and proper continuous vent slot detailing so the attic intake stays open. We document the linear footage of vented soffit on the work order so the ventilation math is verifiable.

Red flags on someone else’s soffit and fascia quote

  • “Wrap” over existing rot. Cheap shortcut where aluminum trim coil is wrapped over the existing wood without addressing the rot underneath. The rot continues invisibly and structural damage develops over time.
  • Solid (non-vented) soffit panels. Without perforations, the soffit cannot serve as attic intake. Acceptable only on porches or unvented attics; on a normal vented attic this short-circuits the ventilation loop.
  • No drip edge integration. The fascia top should tuck behind the drip edge so water sheds outside rather than wicking behind the fascia. Missing drip edge is a common cause of fascia rot.
  • Sealed soffit gaps at the wall. If the contractor seals the back edge of the soffit airtight against the wall, no intake air reaches the attic. The gap is intentional.
  • Bare wood fascia painted over. Paint is not a long-term moisture solution; aluminum-wrapped or PVC fascia is much more durable in our humid climate.

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