By The Squeegee Crew · July 5, 2026 · 8 min read
What Those Black Streaks and Green Clumps Actually Are
The black streaks running down your roof are a blue-green algae called Gloeocapsa magma, and the fuzzy green patches are moss. Neither is dirt, and neither rinses off with a garden hose. Both are living organisms that landed on your roof as airborne spores, took hold, and started feeding. On the 805 coast, where humidity stays high and the marine layer rolls in most mornings, they spread fast.
Gloeocapsa magma feeds on the limestone filler baked into asphalt shingles. As the algae colony grows, it holds moisture against the roof surface and produces a dark pigment to protect itself from UV light. That dark pigment is the streak you see. Beyond looking bad, it makes the roof absorb more heat, which pushes cooling costs up and shortens shingle life.
Moss is worse for the structure itself. It acts like a sponge, soaking up rainwater and fog drip and holding it against the roof for days. On a shingle roof that trapped moisture lifts and curls the edges of each shingle, and the tiny root-like rhizoids work their way under the granule layer. On tile, moss packs into the overlaps and channels, backing water up where it does not belong. Left alone, a moss colony can add years of wear to a roof in a single wet season.
Roof Washing vs. Roof Cleaning: The Real Difference Is Pressure
The difference between the two methods comes down to one number: the pressure hitting your roof. High-pressure roof washing blasts the surface with a pressure washer running 1,500 to 3,000 PSI, the same tool people use to strip paint off concrete. Low-pressure soft washing runs closer to 100 PSI, about the force of a strong garden hose, and does the actual cleaning with a specialized solution instead of brute force.
Soft washing works because it kills the organism rather than scraping it off. The solution, usually a controlled sodium hypochlorite mix with a surfactant, breaks down the algae and moss at the cellular level. It sits, it works, and then the dead growth rinses away with a gentle low-pressure flow. The roof does the least amount of work, and the biology does the most.
That distinction matters because the two approaches produce opposite long-term results. Pressure washing can make a roof look clean for an afternoon while quietly taking years off its life. Soft washing looks just as clean and leaves the roof surface intact. When a contractor says roof cleaning, ask which one they mean, because the words get used loosely and the outcomes are not the same.
Why High Pressure Damages a Roof
High pressure damages a roof because it removes the parts of the roof that protect it. On asphalt shingles, the top layer is a coat of ceramic-coated granules that shields the asphalt underneath from UV rays. A pressure washer strips those granules off by the thousands, and you can watch them wash into the gutter. Once the granules are gone, the asphalt is exposed, it dries out, it cracks, and the shingle fails years ahead of schedule.
On tile roofs the granule problem is smaller but the water problem is bigger. A pressure washer aimed at Spanish clay or concrete tile forces water up under the tiles and past the underlayment, which is the actual waterproof layer of the roof. That trapped water finds its way to the wood decking and the interior. High pressure also cracks and chips older clay tile, and a single cracked tile on a hillside 805 home can mean a leak that shows up in the next winter storm.
There is a paperwork cost too. Most asphalt shingle manufacturers, including the major brands used across Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties, specifically warn against pressure washing, and doing it can void the shingle warranty. So a homeowner who hires a cheap pressure wash can end up with a roof that is worn out early and no longer covered. You pay twice: once for the wash, and again for the repair the wash caused.
Why Soft Washing Is the Manufacturer-Recommended Method
Soft washing is the method shingle manufacturers actually recommend, and it is not a fringe opinion. The Asphalt Roofing Manufacturers Association and the roofing industry group ARMA both point to low-pressure cleaning with an approved solution as the correct way to remove algae and moss. Follow that method and the warranty stays intact, which is the opposite of what pressure washing does.
The reason the manufacturers back it is simple: soft washing does not touch the parts of the roof that matter. The granules stay on the shingles, the underlayment stays sealed, and the tiles stay seated. The only thing that leaves the roof is the dead algae and moss. Nothing about the roof itself is worn down in the process.
It also reaches places pressure never could safely. The solution flows into tile overlaps, shingle seams, and the shaded valleys where moss digs in, and it kills the growth in all of them at once. A pressure wand only cleans the exact spot it is pointed at, and it damages that spot to do it. Soft washing treats the whole roof evenly and leaves it the way the manufacturer intended.
How Long a Soft Wash Actually Lasts
A proper soft wash keeps a roof clear for two to four years, and the reason is that it kills the growth at the root instead of hiding it. When algae and moss are killed cellularly, there is nothing left alive to keep spreading. The roof does not just look clean, it is biologically reset. A pressure wash, by contrast, knocks off the visible top layer and leaves living spores behind, so the streaks often creep back within a year.
How long your two-to-four-year window runs depends on your specific lot. A roof under heavy tree cover, or one that sits in the marine layer every morning, will trend toward the shorter end because spores keep landing and moisture keeps feeding them. A roof in full sun with good airflow holds its results longer. Either way, soft washing buys you years, not months.
For homes in the worst spots, a lot of 805 owners set up a light maintenance rinse every couple of years rather than waiting for the streaks to fully return. Catching regrowth early is faster and cheaper than letting a moss colony re-establish and start lifting shingles again. Prevention is measured in a quick treatment; neglect is measured in a new roof.
The Two 805 Roof Types We See Most
Across Ventura, Santa Barbara, and San Luis Obispo Counties, the two roofs we clean most are Spanish clay or concrete tile and standard asphalt shingle, and each gets handled differently. Both respond well to soft washing, but the setup, the solution strength, and the approach on the roof are not identical, and a contractor who treats them the same is guessing.
Spanish clay and concrete tile are everywhere in the 805 because they fit the Mediterranean and Mission styles common from Ventura up through Santa Barbara. Tile is durable but brittle, and it is walked carefully or not walked at all, because a cracked tile is a future leak. Soft washing suits tile perfectly: the solution flows into the curved overlaps and the moss-packed channels and clears growth that a pressure wand would only chip tile trying to reach. Older clay especially needs the gentle approach.
Asphalt shingle is the other common roof, and it is the one most at risk from the wrong method. Because the whole defense of a shingle is that granule layer, high pressure is the fastest way to ruin it, and soft washing is the only method that removes the Gloeocapsa magma without stripping the shingle. We match the solution to the shingle age and pitch, treat the shaded north-facing slopes where moss concentrates, and let the biology do the work so the granules stay put.
Why Coastal and Tree-Shaded 805 Homes Get Moss Worst
Moss and algae need three things to thrive, moisture, shade, and cool temperatures, and coastal and tree-shaded 805 homes serve up all three. The marine layer that blankets the coast from Ventura to Pismo most mornings keeps roofs damp for hours after sunrise, well into the day on the shady side of the house. That standing moisture is exactly the environment Gloeocapsa magma and moss are built for.
Tree cover doubles the problem. A big coast live oak or a row of pines drops shade that stops the roof from drying out, and it drops organic debris that feeds the growth and traps even more moisture. The north-facing slope under those branches is almost always the first place moss shows up, because it may go a full day without direct sun in the winter months.
Neighborhood geography matters too. Homes in the canyons and on the shaded side of hills around Ojai, Montecito, and the Santa Barbara foothills stay cool and damp longer than a place out in open sun in Camarillo or Paso Robles. If your roof sits in fog, under trees, or on a north slope, moss is not a maybe, it is a matter of when, and a soft wash is the way to reset it without harm.
What to Ask Before You Hire, and What Drives the Price
Before you hire anyone, ask one question first: do you soft wash or pressure wash the roof? If the answer is pressure washing, or if they dodge the question, keep looking. Then ask whether they are insured, whether their method keeps your shingle warranty intact, and whether they have cleaned your specific roof type, because tile and asphalt are handled differently. A straight answer to all four is what you want.
Also ask what they do to protect the rest of the property. A real soft wash includes pre-wetting and rinsing the plants around the house so the solution does not harm your landscaping, and it accounts for runoff. A contractor who has a plan for your gutters, your foundation plantings, and your neighbor's yard is one who has done this before on 805 homes.
On cost, three things drive the price: the size of the roof, its pitch, and how bad the growth has gotten. A larger footprint is more area to treat, and a steep or multi-level roof takes more setup and safety work, so both raise the price. Severity matters because a roof with heavy, established moss needs more solution and more dwell time than one caught early. That is a good argument for cleaning at the first sign of streaks rather than waiting until the growth has dug in. The Squeegee Crew is insured, works across the 805 from Ventura to San Luis Obispo, and quotes every roof free, so you know the number before anyone gets on a ladder.


