In high-wind zones, soffits need solid blocking at exterior walls
HUD RSDG §5.6.5Description
In high-wind areas, soffits must be solidly nailed to framing to prevent wind uplift of the soffit covering or its being pulled away from the framing. This requires solid blocking along the exterior wall and between roof rafters or trusses that frame the overhang, OR an IRC-compliant blocking panel substituting 2x4 framing + wall sheathing.
Why this exists
Soffit blow-out is a documented high-wind failure mode that opens the attic to the elements + horizontal wind-driven rain. Standard 1/4" perforated vinyl soffit retained only by edge-J-channel pulls free at modest uplift; solid blocking + ringshank nailing holds it.
Categories
Source
Solver enforcement
Browsable only — the solver does not currently enforce this directive (no spec-level data to check against). This entry exists so the architect personas can cite it in conversation and the user can read what the rule says.
Related directives
- Continuous load path from roof to foundation · HUD RSDG §2.4
- Residential structural reliability targets 1-in-100 to 1-in-1000 annual probability of failure · HUD RSDG §2.5
- Residential floor live load: 40 psf minimum (30 psf sleeping rooms) · HUD RSDG §3.4
- Wind load design uses ASCE 7 basic wind speed for the locality · HUD RSDG §3.6
- Ground snow load for Virginia: 25 psf eastern, up to 40 psf western mountains · HUD RSDG §3.7
Last reviewed 2026-05-14.