Skylight
Skylight is glazed opening in roof admitting daylight. Counts as overhead glazing under AS 1288:2021. Must use laminated safety glass; common flashing failure point.
Ask Chalkline about this →A skylight is a glazed opening in a roof admitting daylight (and sometimes ventilation) into the building below. In Australia, skylights are commonly used in kitchens, bathrooms, stair voids, and roof additions where natural light is desired but the wall plane cannot provide a window. Because the glass sits horizontally above an occupied space, it is classified as overhead glazing under AS 1288:2021 and must use laminated safety glass (typically 6.38 mm or 8.38 mm laminated): broken toughened-glass fragments would fall vertically into the room below, while laminated glass holds together on the interlayer even when shattered. Skylights are also a common point of roof waterproofing failure because they require complex flashings, kerbed framing, and seasonal thermal cycling at the perimeter. Verified per AS 1288:2021 and AS 4285:2017 (2026-05-16).
Types of skylight:
| Type | Description | Use |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed | Sealed glass unit, no opening | Most common; pure daylight |
| Operable (manual) | Hinged glazed unit with handle/crank | Daylight + natural ventilation |
| Operable (electric/remote) | Motorised; rain sensor common | Premium installations |
| Tubular skylight | Reflective dome → tube → diffuser; daylight via small roof penetration | Internal rooms with no roof access; smaller glass area |
| Walk-on skylight (floor-level) | Glazed floor panel in roof terrace | Premium architectural; load-rated |
| Roof window | Larger operable skylight, typically dormer-style | Attic conversions, top-floor rooms |
AS 1288 overhead glazing requirements:
| Element | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Glass type | Laminated safety glass (NOT toughened); 6.38 mm minimum, 8.38 mm common, 10.38 mm for larger units |
| Wired glass | Acceptable in some heritage applications; uncommon in new |
| Polycarbonate | Allowed for some applications under AS 4285; not all certifiers accept it |
| Insulating glass unit (IGU) with laminated inner | Common in modern skylights for thermal performance; both panes typically laminated where over habitable space |
The reasoning: a toughened pane breaks into thousands of pebble-sized fragments. Above a person, those fragments are projectiles. A laminated pane breaks but the PVB interlayer holds the fragments in place, so the broken glass remains as a sheet (even if cracked). The sheet may sag, but it does not rain glass.
Construction and flashing:
A skylight installation involves a kerb (a raised perimeter on the roof) and a flashing kit (typically supplied with the unit) that integrates the kerb with the roof system:
┌────────────────────┐
│ GLAZED UNIT │
├────────────────────┤ ← skylight perimeter seal
│ KERB │
│ (raised) │
├────────────────────┤
│ STEP/CONT FLASHING│ ← integrates kerb with roof tiles or sheet
│ │
└────────────────────┘
Roof tiles or sheet
The flashing must:
- Wrap up the kerb at minimum 75 mm (per NCC 2022 Housing Provisions 7.3).
- Lap at least 75 mm at the head (top), with the upper roof course tucking over.
- Step-flash the sides (per AS 2050 for tiles, AS 1562 for sheet).
- Drain the apron at the base into the gutter system.
Common failure modes:
| Failure | Cause |
|---|---|
| Leaks at upper edge | Flashing reverse-lapped; water enters under the head flashing |
| Leaks at sides | Step flashings too short or omitted; water tracks down the kerb |
| Leaks around penetration | Kerb-to-deck seal failed at corners |
| Condensation between IGU panes | Glazing seal failed; IGU end-of-life |
| Frame sealant perished under UV | Original silicone failed at 5-10 years; re-seal needed |
| Internal condensation on cold-side pane | Low-performance glass and high humidity; thermal break or low-e glazing helps |
Energy and condensation:
A typical single-glazed skylight has a U-value around 5.0 W/m²K, much worse than a wall. In NCC Specification 42 (7-star plus WoH ≥60) assessments, skylights are commonly flagged as a thermal weak point. Two mitigation strategies:
| Strategy | Effect |
|---|---|
| Double-glazed (IGU) skylight with low-e + argon | U-value can drop to 2.0-2.6 W/m²K |
| Triple-glazed skylight | U-value to 1.5 W/m²K; rare in residential, expensive |
For warm-humid climates (NCC zones 1-3) condensation on the inner pane in winter is a known issue; in zone 7-8 (alpine) it’s near-constant without high-performance glazing.
Builder takeaway:
- Specify laminated glass; never toughened for habitable-space skylights.
- Use the manufacturer’s flashing kit; don’t fabricate.
- Brief the roofer to step-flash the perimeter properly.
- Allow for periodic gasket replacement (every 15-20 years).
- For thermal performance, IGU + low-e is the residential standard now; single-glaze only on minimal-impact installations.
Also known as: roof window; rooflight; sky-window; lantern (architectural); roof glazing.
Category: Materials.
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Last updated: 2026-05-16. Verified: 2026-05-16. Quarterly review for currency.