
Polycarbonate Patio Covers: Honest Pros, Cons, and Better Options for BC Homes (2026)
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If you’ve been searching for patio cover options in BC, polycarbonate panels have probably shown up in every other search result. They’re popular on DIY forums, big-box stores stock them year-round, and the price tag looks great on paper. But here’s the thing — what works for a mild coastal climate doesn’t always hold up in the Okanagan, where we get 2,000+ hours of sun, heavy wet snow, and temperature swings from -20°C to +40°C. We install patio covers across the valley every week, so we’ve seen what lasts and what doesn’t. This guide breaks down the real pros and cons of polycarbonate patio covers, compares them to glass and aluminum options, and helps you figure out which material actually makes sense for your home.
What Is Polycarbonate?
Polycarbonate is a thermoplastic — basically a type of rigid plastic sheet that comes in clear, tinted, or frosted options. You’ve probably seen it used in greenhouses, skylights, and those wavy panels at the hardware store. It got popular for patio covers because it lets light through (like glass) but weighs a fraction of what glass does and costs significantly less.
For homeowners who want a covered outdoor space without a big budget, polycarbonate looks like a no-brainer. And for mild climates with light rain and moderate sun, it can work fine. The issue is when you start dealing with real weather — the kind we get in Kelowna, Vernon, Penticton, and everywhere else in the Okanagan Valley.
There are two main types of polycarbonate panels used in patio covers, and they perform quite differently:
Solid vs. Multiwall Polycarbonate Panels
| Feature | Solid Polycarbonate | Multiwall Polycarbonate |
|---|---|---|
| Structure | Single solid sheet | Multiple layers with air channels |
| Thickness | 3mm–12mm | 6mm–25mm |
| Light Transmission | 86–90% | 50–80% |
| Insulation | Minimal | Better (trapped air) |
| Relative Cost | Higher | Lower |
| Strength | Higher impact resistance | Lower impact resistance |
| Best For | Windbreaks, partitions | Budget patio covers, greenhouses |
Most DIY patio cover kits use multiwall panels because they’re cheaper and lighter. Solid polycarbonate is tougher, but still has the same yellowing and snow load limitations we’ll cover below.
Pros of Polycarbonate Patio Covers
Let’s give credit where it’s due. Polycarbonate does have genuine advantages, especially if budget is your primary concern.
The Most Affordable Entry Point
A polycarbonate patio cover is the most affordable way to cover a standard 12×16-foot area — noticeably cheaper up front than glass or aluminum options, which is why it appeals to budget-conscious homeowners. If you’re handy and go the DIY route, the material costs alone are lower still.
Impact Resistant (200–250x Stronger Than Glass)
This is polycarbonate’s headline stat, and it’s real. The material is virtually unbreakable under normal conditions. Hailstones, fallen branches, even a stray baseball — polycarbonate flexes instead of shattering. For areas with frequent hail or overhanging trees, that impact resistance is worth noting.
Lightweight and Easy to Install
Polycarbonate panels are lightweight — only a fraction of the weight of glass. That means simpler support structures and easier handling during installation. A two-person crew (or two handy homeowners) can typically install a basic polycarbonate patio cover in a weekend. The framing requirements are less demanding than glass, which needs sturdier aluminum or steel supports.
UV Protection (Blocks 99%)
Quality polycarbonate panels come with a UV-blocking layer that filters out 99% of harmful UV rays. You still get natural light underneath, but your skin and outdoor furniture are protected. It’s a nice feature — though as we’ll cover next, that UV coating is also the first thing to degrade over time.
Cons of Polycarbonate Patio Covers
Here’s where the conversation gets real. These aren’t minor quibbles — they’re the reasons we don’t install polycarbonate covers for our clients.
Yellowing and Cloudiness Over Time
Every polycarbonate panel will yellow eventually. Manufacturers typically say 10–15 years, but in the Okanagan — where we get 2,000+ hours of direct sunshine annually — we see noticeable yellowing and hazing starting around year 8. Once it starts, it accelerates. That crystal-clear cover you installed gradually turns a murky amber colour that blocks light unevenly and looks tired. There’s no fixing it — you replace the panels.
Noise in Rain and Hail
If you’ve ever sat under a polycarbonate roof during a rainstorm, you know the sound. It’s loud. Not “gentle pitter-patter” loud — more like “can’t-hear-the-person-across-the-table” loud. Multiwall panels are slightly better than solid sheets, but neither comes close to the quiet of a solid aluminum cover or laminated glass. During Okanagan hailstorms (which happen a few times every summer), the drumming is intense.
Scratching and Maintenance
Polycarbonate scratches easily. Cleaning with anything abrasive — even a rough cloth — leaves permanent marks. Fallen pine needles, windblown debris, and snow removal all contribute to surface damage over the years. Those scratches scatter light and make the panels look increasingly worn. You can’t buff them out like you can with glass.
Not Built for Okanagan Snow
This is the deal-breaker for Okanagan homes. Standard polycarbonate patio cover kits are lightweight systems built for mild climates — they simply aren’t made for the heavy, wet snow we get here. BC building code accounts for local snow load, and the Okanagan gets real snow, so a cover has to be built for it.
Lower Home Value Impact
Appraisers and realtors treat polycarbonate patio covers differently than permanent structures. A well-built aluminum or glass patio cover adds real, lasting value and appeal to your home. Polycarbonate covers are generally viewed as temporary improvements — similar to a canvas awning — and add little to home value at sale.

Polycarbonate vs Glass vs Aluminum Patio Covers
This is the section most people are really here for. Let’s put all three materials side by side so you can see exactly how they stack up.
| Factor | Polycarbonate | Glass | Aluminum |
|---|---|---|---|
| Relative Cost | Lowest upfront | Premium | Mid-range |
| Lifespan | 10–15 years | 25–40+ years | 30–50+ years |
| Built for Okanagan Snow | Not really | Yes | Yes — over-built |
| UV Protection | 99% (degrades) | 99% (permanent) | 100% (solid panels) |
| Natural Light | High (diminishes) | High (permanent) | None (solid) or partial |
| Rain/Hail Noise | Loud | Quiet | Very quiet (solid panels) |
| Maintenance | Frequent | Minimal | Almost none |
| Home Value | Minimal impact | Strong positive | Strong positive |
| DIY Friendly | Yes | No (pro install) | No (pro install) |
| BC Code Compliant | Usually no | Yes | Yes |
When Polycarbonate Makes Sense
We’re not going to pretend polycarbonate is always the wrong choice. It makes sense when you need temporary coverage (rental property, seasonal use), when your budget genuinely can’t stretch to glass or aluminum right now, or when you’re covering a small area that doesn’t bear snow load (like a south-facing wall-mounted awning that sheds snow naturally). If any of those apply, polycarbonate can be a reasonable short-term option.
When Glass Is the Better Investment
If you want natural light underneath your cover and you plan to stay in your home for 10+ years, glass patio covers are the clear winner. Tempered or laminated glass panels won’t yellow, won’t scratch under normal use, and handle Okanagan snow loads without issue. Yes, the upfront cost is higher than polycarbonate, but because glass lasts far longer, it often works out to be the smarter investment over time. They also look significantly better — clean, modern, and permanent.
When Aluminum Is the Right Call
If your main goal is weather protection and year-round use (and you don’t need light transmission), solid aluminum covers are hard to beat. They handle the heaviest Okanagan snow loads, require almost zero maintenance, and can be fitted with fans, heaters, and lighting to create a true outdoor room. They’re the workhorse option — not flashy, but they’ll outlast everything else. Check our glass vs. aluminum comparison if you’re torn between the two.

How Long Do Polycarbonate Patio Covers Last?
Most manufacturers warranty polycarbonate panels for 10–15 years against yellowing and breakage. In practice, the functional lifespan in the Okanagan tends to be on the shorter end of that range. By year 8–10, yellowing is usually visible. By year 12–15, most homeowners are ready to replace.
Here’s where the long-term picture gets interesting:
| Material | Typical Lifespan | Long-Term Value |
|---|---|---|
| Polycarbonate | 10–15 years | Replaced sooner — you pay again |
| Glass | 25–40+ years | One-time investment |
| Aluminum | 30–50+ years | Longest-lasting |
When you look at the full lifespan, polycarbonate is often the most expensive option over time. You pay less upfront, but you pay more often.
Maintenance Tips for Polycarbonate Covers
If you already have a polycarbonate patio cover (or decide to go with one), here’s how to get the most life out of it:
- Clean gently. Use a soft cloth or sponge with mild dish soap and lukewarm water. Never use abrasive cleaners, Windex, or ammonia-based products — they accelerate yellowing and cause micro-scratching.
- Rinse regularly. Hose down the panels monthly to remove pollen, dust, and tree sap before they bake on in the sun.
- Clear snow carefully. Use a soft-bristle broom or foam snow rake. Metal shovels or ice scrapers will permanently gouge the surface. Better yet, install panels at a pitch steep enough for snow to slide off naturally.
- Inspect seals annually. The rubber gaskets and edge seals on polycarbonate systems dry out and crack in our temperature extremes. Replace any cracked seals before water gets into multiwall channels (it causes mould and cloudiness from the inside).
- Check for sagging. After heavy snow events, inspect the panels for any permanent deflection. Sagging panels are a sign they’ve been overloaded and may fail in the next storm.
For comparison, here’s our aluminum maintenance guide — the main takeaway is that aluminum covers need almost no upkeep beyond an annual rinse.
Snow Load Performance in the Okanagan
We keep coming back to snow load because it’s the single biggest factor that disqualifies polycarbonate for most Okanagan applications. Let’s break down why.
The Okanagan gets real snow, and it varies a lot by location. Here’s a rough sense of how a lightweight polycarbonate kit holds up around the valley:
| Location | Winter Snow | Lightweight Polycarbonate Kit |
|---|---|---|
| Penticton | Lightest in the valley | Borderline — risky |
| Kelowna (valley) | Real snow loads | Not built for it |
| West Kelowna | Real snow loads | Not built for it |
| Vernon | Heavier | Not built for it |
| Lake Country | Heavier | Not built for it |
| Salmon Arm | Heaviest of these | Not built for it |
Even Penticton — the mildest snow area in the valley — is often more than a lightweight polycarbonate kit is built to handle. Everywhere else, the panels simply aren’t made for the snow they’ll see. And drifting and elevation can pile even more weight onto a roof than the ground snow alone.
We’ve seen polycarbonate panels buckle, crack, and collapse under Okanagan snow loads — sometimes in their first or second winter. The framing might survive, but panels that flex beyond what they were built for don’t bounce back. They stay warped, and the next load finishes them off.
What We Recommend for Okanagan Homeowners
We’re going to be straight with you: we don’t install polycarbonate patio covers. Not because we can’t — but because we can’t stand behind them for the conditions our customers deal with.
When a homeowner calls us, they usually want one of two things:
- Light and views: If you want to see the sky and let sunlight through, we recommend tempered glass patio covers. They handle our snow loads, they won’t yellow, and they look clean for decades.
- Maximum protection: If you want a covered outdoor space that’s usable in rain, snow, and heat, solid aluminum covers are the answer. Quiet in rain, bulletproof in snow, and virtually maintenance-free.
Both options cost more upfront than polycarbonate. We know that matters. But they’re also one-time investments that last decades instead of years. They add real value to your home. And they don’t leave you climbing up with a foam broom every time it snows, wondering if this is the storm that pushes things too far.
If you’re weighing your options, we’re happy to walk through the specifics for your home — no pressure, no sales pitch. Just honest advice from people who do this every day.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does polycarbonate compare in cost to glass or aluminum?
Polycarbonate is the cheapest patio cover material upfront, which is its main appeal — a lightweight DIY kit costs a fraction of a permanent cover. Glass and aluminum cost more at the start, but because they last two to four times as long, they often work out to the same or less over the life of the cover. For an exact price on a permanent cover built for your home, the best move is a free on-site quote.
Can polycarbonate patio covers handle Okanagan snow loads?
In most cases, no. Standard polycarbonate kits are lightweight systems built for mild climates, not the heavy, wet snow the Okanagan gets. BC building code accounts for local snow load, and it’s heavier in higher-elevation areas — more than a typical polycarbonate kit is built to take. Panels can buckle or crack under snow they weren’t made for. A permanent aluminum or glass cover, over-built for BC winters, doesn’t have that problem.
How long do polycarbonate patio covers last compared to glass or aluminum?
Polycarbonate patio covers typically last 10–15 years before yellowing, hazing, and structural degradation require panel replacement. In the Okanagan’s high-UV environment, visible yellowing often starts around year 8. By contrast, tempered glass patio covers last 25–40+ years with no discolouration, and solid aluminum covers last 30–50+ years with minimal maintenance. Spread over its lifespan, polycarbonate often ends up costing as much as or more than glass or aluminum, because you replace it far sooner.
Do polycarbonate patio covers yellow over time?
Yes, all polycarbonate panels yellow with UV exposure. Manufacturers typically warranty against significant yellowing for 10–15 years, but in the Okanagan — which receives 2,000+ hours of direct sunshine annually — noticeable yellowing and cloudiness can appear as early as year 8. The UV-protective coating on the panels gradually breaks down, and once yellowing starts, it accelerates. There’s no way to reverse it; the only fix is replacing the panels entirely.
Is polycarbonate or glass better for a patio cover?
It depends on your budget and timeline. Polycarbonate wins on upfront cost and is easier to install as a DIY project. However, glass wins on every long-term metric: lifespan (25–40+ years vs. 10–15), appearance (no yellowing or scratching), snow performance in Okanagan winters, noise reduction, home value impact, and long-term value. For Okanagan homeowners planning to stay in their home for 10+ years, glass is almost always the better investment.
Not Sure Which Patio Cover Material Is Right for Your Home?
We’ll walk you through the options for your specific situation — no pressure, just honest advice from people who install patio covers across the Okanagan every week.

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