Gable parapets - keep or remove?

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We recently moved into a detached house (~1967) and have two leaks: one behind the chimney at the rear (there's no lead back gutter/pan), and one at the front-right, in the bottom corner of the gable parapet. It looks like the previous owners also had a leak in the opposite corner (again, the bottom corner of the gable parapet), but that had been repaired before we moved in.

I've had a few roofers out and most recommended a full re-roof, the underlay is old bitumen felt that's torn in several places, and some battens are completely rotten.

There are two schools of thought on the parapets:
  1. Remove the gable parapets, roof over them, and finish with a dry verge system (~£2k more), getting rid of the leaking area entirely.
  2. Keep the parapets but re-roof with proper lead flashing between the tiles and parapets.
A fair number of houses around here have had the parapets removed, but I'm not sure it's worth the extra £2k, or whether it genuinely lowers the risk of future leaks.

A few specific questions:

- Is removing the parapets + dry verge worth £2k over re-roofing with proper lead?

- Does proper lead flashing reliably stop parapet leaks long-term, or are parapets always a weak point?

- Any downsides to losing them — kerb appeal, character, anything structural?

- We're considering solar later — would losing the parapets give meaningfully more usable roof / less edge shading?

- The quotes for re-roofing without parapet removal are coming in between £9k and £15k. Does this sound about right cost wise? The inside dimensions are 7 x 5.6m, the roof pitch is about 27deg, they are concrete tiles and we are in the midlands (England, UK).

Thanks in advance for your comments! :)

Also considering if we should keep or remove the chimney if anyone has opinions on that!

Screenshot 2026-06-28 185101.png
 
We recently moved into a detached house (~1967) and have two leaks: one behind the chimney at the rear (there's no lead back gutter/pan), and one at the front-right, in the bottom corner of the gable parapet. It looks like the previous owners also had a leak in the opposite corner (again, the bottom corner of the gable parapet), but that had been repaired before we moved in.

I've had a few roofers out and most recommended a full re-roof, the underlay is old bitumen felt that's torn in several places, and some battens are completely rotten.

There are two schools of thought on the parapets:
  1. Remove the gable parapets, roof over them, and finish with a dry verge system (~£2k more), getting rid of the leaking area entirely.
  2. Keep the parapets but re-roof with proper lead flashing between the tiles and parapets.
A fair number of houses around here have had the parapets removed, but I'm not sure it's worth the extra £2k, or whether it genuinely lowers the risk of future leaks.

A few specific questions:

- Is removing the parapets + dry verge worth £2k over re-roofing with proper lead?

- Does proper lead flashing reliably stop parapet leaks long-term, or are parapets always a weak point?

- Any downsides to losing them — kerb appeal, character, anything structural?

- We're considering solar later — would losing the parapets give meaningfully more usable roof / less edge shading?

- The quotes for re-roofing without parapet removal are coming in between £9k and £15k. Does this sound about right cost wise? The inside dimensions are 7 x 5.6m, the roof pitch is about 27deg, they are concrete tiles and we are in the midlands (England, UK).

Thanks in advance for your comments! :)

Also considering if we should keep or remove the chimney if anyone has opinions on that!

View attachment 417460
Parapet roofs are the devil's work.
 

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