It's not dirt, and it won't go away on its own. Here's what it is, what it's doing to your shingles, and the only safe way to remove it.
If you've noticed dark, streaky staining running down your roof β usually from the peak toward the gutters β you're looking at a living organism. Most homeowners assume it's dirt, soot, or shadowing. It's none of those things.
Those black streaks are a cyanobacteria called Gloeocapsa magma. It's a photosynthetic organism that feeds on the limestone filler used in asphalt shingles. It's been on your roof longer than you can see β the black staining is a protective pigment the bacteria develop to shield themselves from UV rays, which means by the time you notice it, the colony is already well established.
The limestone in your shingles isn't just filler β it adds weight and body to the shingle and helps it shed water. Gloeocapsa magma feeds on this material, gradually breaking down the structural integrity of the shingle over time. Left untreated for several years, it can meaningfully shorten your roof's lifespan.
There's also an energy efficiency angle. Dark algae staining absorbs more heat from the sun, which increases attic temperatures and can raise cooling costs in Charlotte's hot summers.
Beyond your own home, the algae spreads by airborne spores β which means if your neighbor's roof is stained, yours is at elevated risk, and vice versa.
The instinct for many homeowners β and unfortunately some less experienced contractors β is to hit the roof with a pressure washer. This is the wrong approach, and most shingle manufacturers explicitly say so in their warranty documentation.
Most major shingle manufacturers (GAF, Owens Corning, CertainTeed) specify in their warranty that high-pressure washing voids coverage. The force of the water blasts off the granule layer β the mineral coating that protects the asphalt from UV degradation and gives the shingle its fire resistance. You won't see the damage immediately, but you've taken years off the roof's life.
The Asphalt Roofing Manufacturers Association (ARMA) and most major shingle brands recommend a low-pressure soft wash using a diluted sodium hypochlorite solution. This is the same active ingredient in bleach, but applied at the right concentration for roofing applications with biodegradable surfactants to help it cling to vertical surfaces.
The process is straightforward: apply the solution at low pressure, let it dwell for 15β20 minutes, then rinse gently. The algae dies at the root level, and the staining fades β sometimes dramatically β within 24β48 hours as rain washes the residue away.
The staining doesn't always disappear the same day. With heavy algae growth, you'll see significant fading within a week as the dead organisms wash away with rainfall. For roofs that have had visible staining for multiple years, a second treatment may be needed to fully address older, more embedded growth.
We always do a post-job walkthrough and document the condition before and after. If you're not satisfied with the results after 30 days, we come back.