If your Florida roof has dark streaks running down it, you’re not looking at dirt — you’re looking at Gloeocapsa magma, a blue-green algae, and the only way to remove it for good is a low-pressure soft wash that kills the colony at the root. Scrubbing, bleaching or pressure washing it off only takes the visible layer, so the streaks come back within a year or two.
Here’s what those streaks actually are, whether you need to worry about them, and how roof cleaning gets rid of them without wrecking your shingles or tile.
What are the black streaks on my roof?
They’re algae — specifically Gloeocapsa magma, a hardy blue-green algae that’s everywhere in the South Florida air. It lands on the roof, feeds on the limestone filler baked into asphalt shingles, and spreads into the dark streaks and blotches you see from the street. On clay and concrete tile it doesn’t eat the surface the same way, but it still stains and discolors the same.
The streaks almost always run downward because the algae follows rainwater as it sheds down the slope. You’ll usually see it worst on the north- and shade-facing sections of the roof, where the surface stays damp longest.
Why do South Florida roofs turn black so fast?
Because this is about the most algae-friendly climate in the country. Constant heat, high humidity, frequent rain and salt air give the colony everything it needs to grow year-round — there’s no winter freeze to slow it down. Spores also travel on the wind and rain from neighboring roofs, which is why one stained roof on a street tends to be followed by others.
That’s also why a roof that’s just blasted clean re-streaks so quickly here: in South Florida, visible streaks typically return within 18–24 months unless the colony is actually killed at the root.
Are black streaks on a roof harmful, or just ugly?
They’re more than cosmetic. Left alone, the algae:
- Shortens the roof’s life. On asphalt shingles it slowly consumes the granules that shield the roof from UV. Lose the granules and the roof ages fast — sometimes years early.
- Holds moisture against the surface, which can encourage further growth and damage.
- Raises cooling bills. A dark algae layer absorbs heat instead of reflecting it, pushing more load onto your AC.
- Triggers HOA violations. Many South Florida associations treat a stained roof as a code issue and send dated violation letters with fines that can run up to $100 a day under Florida’s default rules.
So it’s worth dealing with — but the way you deal with it matters a lot.
Why pressure washing and bleach don’t fix it
The instinct is to blast the streaks off or hit them with bleach. Both backfire:
- Pressure washing uses 2,000–4,000 PSI. On a roof that strips the protective granules, cracks tile and voids most manufacturer warranties — and it only removes the visible top layer, so the rooted colony grows back within months.
- Hardware-store bleach can lighten streaks for a little while, but it isn’t calibrated for roof biology, it runs off and burns landscaping, and it doesn’t kill the colony at the root either.
You end up paying twice: once for the quick fix, and again when the streaks return — sometimes alongside a roof that’s now aging faster than it should.
How to remove black streaks for good
The method that actually works is soft washing — the manufacturer-approved approach for cleaning a roof:
- Low pressure (around 60 PSI) — about the force of a garden hose, safe for shingle, tile and metal.
- A calibrated biocide that kills the algae, mold and mildew at the root instead of just rinsing the surface.
- A gentle rinse, top down, with the landscaping pre-wet and protected.
Done right, soft washing clears the streaks completely and they stay gone far longer than anything high pressure can do. For the full comparison, see our guide on soft wash vs. pressure washing for South Florida roofs.
How do I keep the streaks from coming back?
Killing the colony is step one; keeping it off is step two.
- Add a preventative roof treatment. A residual biocide left on the roof after the wash stops new spores from re-seeding and extends results from 18–24 months to roughly five years.
- Keep gutters clear so water sheds cleanly instead of pooling and feeding growth — clogged gutters and tiger-striped fascia often show up alongside roof algae.
- Trim overhanging branches that drop debris and keep sections of the roof damp and shaded.
What does it cost to remove black streaks in South Florida?
For a standard single-family home, professional roof soft washing runs $399 to $900, or about $0.30–$0.75 per square foot, depending on roof size and pitch, material (tile costs more than shingle), and how heavy the staining is. At 4 Pro Wash, every estimate is locked in writing within 24 hours before any work begins — no surprises on the invoice.
4 Pro Wash is a licensed, insured, bilingual crew serving Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach. Our roof soft washing service removes the streaks at the root and is backed by a 5-year no-algae guarantee, and our optional roof treatment keeps them from coming back. Want a number for your roof? It takes about 60 seconds to request a free, same-day quote.