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Understanding Roof Colour Thermal Ratings Under NCC 2025 Part J

What Changed and What the New Terms Mean

The thermal performance requirements for roofs and wall cladding under NCC 2025 Part J have evolved significantly.

Under previous NCC versions, roof colour compliance was largely based on a single figure:

However, NCC 2025 now references a broader range of thermal performance properties including:

This change better reflects how roofing materials actually behave thermally in real-world conditions.

For builders, designers and clients, these additional figures can seem confusing at first. This article explains what they mean in simple practical terms.


Why Roof Colour Matters

Roof colours have a major impact on how much heat enters a building.

Because of this, roof thermal properties directly affect:


What Changed in NCC 2025?

Previous NCC Approach

Historically, compliance assessments commonly focused on:

Solar Absorptance

This was used as the primary indicator of roof heat gain.

For example:

While useful, absorptance alone does not fully describe how hot a roof becomes or how it behaves thermally.


NCC 2025 Approach

NCC 2025 now recognises additional thermal properties including:

This provides a more complete understanding of:

In simple terms:

The NCC is moving from a “single-number” approach to a more complete thermal performance assessment.


1. Solar Absorptance (SA)

What is it?

Solar absorptance measures:

How much solar heat the surface absorbs.

It is measured between:


Simple Explanation

Think of standing outside wearing:

The black shirt becomes hotter because it absorbs more solar energy.

Roofs behave the same way.


Examples

ColourApprox. Absorptance
Surfmist0.33
Shale Grey0.44
Monument0.73
Night Sky0.95

Simple Rule

Higher absorptance = hotter roof.


2. Total Solar Reflectance (TSR)

What is it?

TSR measures:

How much sunlight is reflected away from the surface.

It is essentially the opposite of absorptance.


Simple Explanation

A roof that reflects sunlight away stays cooler than one that absorbs it.

Light colours generally have higher TSR values.


Examples

ColourApprox. TSR
Surfmist0.67
Monument0.27
Night Sky0.05

Simple Rule

Higher TSR = cooler roof.


3. Thermal Emittance (Emittance)

What is it?

Thermal emittance measures:

How effectively a material releases heat after it becomes hot.

Most painted metal roofs have emittance values around:


Simple Explanation

Roofs not only absorb heat, they also release heat back into the environment.

Higher emittance helps the roof cool itself down more effectively.


Simple Rule

Higher emittance = heat escapes more easily.


4. Solar Reflectance Index (SRI)

What is it?

SRI is an overall measure of:

How hot the roof surface gets in the sun.

It combines:

Into one overall performance rating.


Simple Explanation

SRI is the easiest way to compare the overall thermal performance of different roof colours.

Higher SRI values mean cooler roof surfaces.


Typical SRI Values

Roof ColourTypical SRI
White roofs80–100+
Mid-grey roofs30–50
Dark roofs0–30

Simple Rule

Higher SRI = cooler roof.


Why This Matters for Builders

Under NCC 2025, roof colour selection can directly affect:

Darker roof colours may now require:

To offset increased heat gain.


Quick Summary Table

TermSimple MeaningHigher Number Means
AbsorptanceHeat absorbedHotter roof
TSRHeat reflected awayCooler roof
EmittanceAbility to release heatCools faster
SRIOverall roof temperature ratingCooler roof

Summary

The key change in NCC 2025 is that roof thermal performance is no longer viewed through absorptance alone.

The NCC now considers:

This creates a more realistic assessment of roof thermal behaviour and building energy performance.

In practical terms:

Light, reflective roofs generally improve thermal performance and reduce cooling loads, while darker roofs may require additional compensation measures under Part J.

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