Your home’s roofline is more than just shingles and gutters. The fascia boards (the vertical trim under the roof edge) and soffit (the horizontal ceiling under the eaves) are critical for both aesthetics and ventilation. Rotting fascia allows water behind gutters and into roof decking. Blocked or damaged soffit vents starve your attic of intake air, reducing ventilation and shortening shingle life. At Wichita Roofing Pros, we replace soffit, fascia, and exterior trim using materials that match your siding and stand up to Kansas weather.
We install aluminum-wrapped (capped) wood fascia, vented aluminum soffit, and cellular PVC trim for a maintenance-free roofline. Or we can match your new siding with fiber cement or vinyl trim for a unified exterior. Every project includes inspection of the underlying wood – if we find rot in the fascia board or soffit plywood, we replace it before installing the new finish materials.
Soffit replacement is also the perfect time to upgrade your attic ventilation. We ensure vented soffit panels provide adequate intake area for your ridge vent or box vents – a balanced ventilation system is essential for preventing ice dams and summer heat buildup. The result is a roofline that looks crisp, performs properly, and protects your home for decades.
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Waterproof Flashing Behind Fascia
Vented or Solid Soffit Panels
Trim & Corner Details
Soffit
Existing wood fascia capped with coil stock aluminum in a color matching your gutters or siding. Maintenance-free, but requires sound wood substrate underneath.
Perforated aluminum panels in 8, 10, or 12-inch widths. Allows attic intake air while keeping out pests. Available in 15+ colors – matching or contrasting.
Solid PVC trim boards (Azek, Kleer) – 100% waterproof, never rots, and holds paint well. Used for fascia, corner boards, window trim, and frieze boards.
HardieTrim or equivalent – matches Hardie siding exactly. Requires painting or factory finish. More impact-resistant than PVC. Ideal for full Hardie exteriors.
We inspect fascia and soffit from a ladder, note any visible rot or pest damage, and discuss material options (aluminum wrap, PVC, fiber cement).
Old soffit/fascia removed. Rotted rafter tails or soffit backing cut out and replaced with pressure-treated lumber or exterior plywood.
Drip edge or flashing installed along roofline. New fascia (wrapped wood or PVC) attached. Soffit panels cut and fastened into place.
Corner trim and any transitions caulked with exterior-grade sealant. Gutters reattached (if removed). Final inspection for alignment and gaps.