The two dominant commercial flat-roof membranes have different strengths. TPO wins on energy efficiency and seam reliability. EPDM wins on lifespan and cold-weather performance. Complete side-by-side comparison with 2026 cost data and a decision matrix.
Sixteen criteria across cost, lifespan, performance, and market position. Pricing data from Angi, HomeGuide, and commercial roofing contractor surveys 2026.
| Criteria | TPO | EPDM | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Installed Cost | $5 – $12 / SF | $4 – $14 / SF | EPDM (lower entry) |
| Typical 60-mil Spec | $6.50 – $10.50 | $6.50 – $10.00 | Tie |
| Lifespan | 20 – 25 years | 25 – 40 years | EPDM |
| Maximum Lifespan | 30 yrs (maintained) | 50+ yrs (maintained) | EPDM |
| Default Color | White (cool roof) | Black (absorbs heat) | TPO (hot climates) |
| Energy Star Cool Roof | Yes (white default) | No (unless white EPDM) | TPO |
| Summer Cooling Savings | 20 – 30% | Negligible | TPO |
| Seam Joining Method | Heat-welded (fused) | 3-inch seam tape | TPO (stronger first 10 yrs) |
| Seam Reliability (20+ yrs) | Strong if welded properly | Tape can degrade | TPO |
| Cold-Weather Flexibility | Becomes brittle at -20°F | Flexible at -40°F+ | EPDM |
| Hot-Climate Performance | Excellent (reflective) | Black absorbs heat | TPO |
| Maintenance Required | Periodic cleaning for reflectivity | Minimal | EPDM |
| Chemical/Grease Resistance | Good (restaurants OK) | Poor (avoid restaurant exhaust) | TPO |
| Hail Resistance | Good (60-80 mil) | Excellent (60-90 mil) | EPDM |
| Manufacturer Warranty | 15 – 30 years | 15 – 30 years | Tie |
| Market Share (2026) | ~60% of new commercial | ~25% of new commercial | TPO (more popular) |
Use this checklist to pick the right membrane for your building.
TPO wins. White surface reflects 70%+ solar radiation. Energy Star certified out of the box. Saves 20-30 percent on summer cooling in hot climates. EPDM is black by default and absorbs heat — a drawback in summer, marginal benefit in winter.
EPDM wins. 25-40 year typical service life vs TPO 20-25. Some 1970s EPDM installations still functional in 2026 (50+ years). EPDM stays flexible in cold weather where TPO becomes brittle, contributing to its longer real-world life.
Depends on climate. In hot climates, TPO often delivers lower TCO over 20-30 years because cooling savings compound. In cold climates and long-hold properties, EPDM's lifespan advantage wins TCO. Run the math on your specific building before committing.
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OpenA: EPDM lasts longer. Standard 60-mil EPDM lasts 25 to 40 years with realistic maintenance; some 1970s EPDM installations are still functional in 2026 (50+ years). TPO typically lasts 20 to 25 years, up to 30 with proper maintenance. If maximum lifespan is the priority, EPDM wins by 5 to 15 years on average.
A: TPO wins on energy efficiency by a wide margin. White TPO ships Energy Star cool-roof certified out of the box (initial solar reflectance over 0.70). Studies show TPO reduces summer cooling cost 20 to 30 percent in IECC zones 1 through 3. Black EPDM absorbs solar heat — actually a feature in cold climates where it helps melt snow, but a drawback everywhere else. White EPDM exists but costs 10-25 percent more than standard black.
A: EPDM has a lower entry point. A 45-mil ballasted EPDM system runs $4.20 per SF — cheaper than any TPO system. But at the 60-mil mechanically fastened spec (the most common for both), pricing is essentially tied at $6.50 to $10 per SF. EPDM 90-mil fully adhered runs $14.25 per SF — comparable to 80-mil TPO. Choose by use case, not by price.
A: In the first 10 years, TPO heat-welded seams are stronger and more reliable than EPDM 3-inch seam tape — the welding process fuses the two membrane sheets at the molecular level. Over 20+ years, the story reverses: EPDM seam tape degradation is gradual and easy to spot-repair, while a failed TPO weld is a continuous tear along the entire seam length. Quality of installation matters more than the inherent material — a poorly welded TPO seam fails faster than a properly taped EPDM seam.
A: Generally not recommended. Most TPO manufacturers will not warrant their membrane over an existing EPDM roof because the residual oils and plasticizers in old EPDM can affect TPO adhesion and accelerate aging. The standard approach is full tear-off and replacement. Some manufacturers approve TPO over EPDM with a slip sheet and specific surface preparation — verify with the manufacturer before quoting.
A: Per industry surveys, TPO holds roughly 60 percent of new commercial single-ply installations in 2026, EPDM roughly 25 percent, and PVC + other (KEE, FPO) the remaining 15 percent. TPO has been the market leader since the late 2000s, driven by the energy efficiency narrative. EPDM remains dominant in cold-climate institutional work and in the reroof market where matching existing systems makes sense.
A: Start with climate and hold period. Hot climate + short to medium hold (under 20 years) = TPO (energy savings recoup the premium). Cold climate or long hold (25+ years) = EPDM (longevity wins). Then layer in code requirements (some jurisdictions mandate cool roof), restaurant or chemical exposure (TPO wins), structural ballast capacity (EPDM ballasted is cheapest if available), and brand standardization (if you own multiple buildings, sticking to one membrane simplifies maintenance). When tied, default to TPO — it is the market standard and easier to spec replacement contractors on.
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