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Temporary vs Permanent Anchors: What You Should Actually Use


If you’re standing on a roof wondering what anchor to use, temporary or permanent, this is for you.

Here’s the deal: one’s made to take off when the job’s done. The other stays bolted in for life. Pick the wrong one, and you’ll either waste your time, damage the roof, or worse, fall off it.

Let’s break it down so you get the right anchor, don’t screw up the install, and get the job done safe.

Quick Answer

If it’s a one-off job, use a roof harness anchor that’s temporary.

If the roof gets regular access, go permanent.

Simple. Now here’s the why behind it.

What’s the Difference?

Temporary anchors are for quick jobs.

They clamp, strap, or bolt on—and come off just as fast. Perfect for tradies, roofers, solar installers, or maintenance crews doing short-term work.

Permanent anchors are fixed to the structure.

They’re drilled in properly, certified, and built to last years. These are what you want if people need safe roof access regularly.

This isn’t about which one’s “better.” It’s about what fits the job.

When to Use a Temporary Anchor

Use one if:
  • You’re doing a job that takes hours or days—not weeks
  • You don’t own the building
  • You’re not coming back every few months
  • You don’t have permission to drill into the roof permanently
Common jobs:
  • Solar panel installs
  • Gutter cleaning
  • Quick roof inspections
  • Antenna or vent work
Why it’s good:
  • Fast to install
  • No long-term damage
  • Cheaper
  • Easy to take with you from site to site
What to watch out for:
  • Don’t buy no-name junk off eBay
  • Make sure it suits the roof type (metal, tile, concrete)
  • Always double-check the rating—if it’s not certified, don’t trust it

When to Use a Permanent Anchor

Use one if:
  • The roof gets regular foot traffic
  • You’re managing a site with scheduled maintenance
  • It’s your building and you care about long-term safety and compliance
  • You want it installed once and ready forever
Common sites:
  • Schools
  • Warehouses
  • Apartments with rooftop HVAC
  • Commercial buildings with solar or comms gear
Why it’s good:
  • Always there when you need it
  • Neater, cleaner install
  • Usually stronger and fully compliant
  • Good for tracking inspections and re-certification
What to watch out for:
  • Needs a proper installer
  • More expensive up front
  • Can’t just slap it on anywhere—needs structural fixing

Quick Comparison



Common Mistakes That Could Ruin Your Day

1. Using the wrong anchor for the roof type
    Don’t clamp metal gear to tiles. Just don’t.

2. Setting the anchor too low
    High anchor point = less fall distance = less chance of injury.

3. Leaving a temporary anchor in place long-term
    They’re not built to survive the weather for months. They rust. They fail.

4. Assuming short job = no anchor needed
    Falls don’t care how quick the job is.

5. Using gear with no compliance tag or rating
    No label = no idea if it’ll hold. And good luck with insurance if something goes wrong.

What Should You Use?

Ask yourself a few things:
  • Is this a one-time job?
  • Am I doing more work on this roof later?
  • Do I have permission to drill?
  • Do I need to move the anchor around?
If you’re unsure or the job’s small—go temporary.

If people are going up there often—install a permanent anchor and be done with it.

Still stuck? Ask the person paying for the job what the plan is long-term. Saves you from guessing.

Final Word

Stop overcomplicating it. The right anchor keeps you alive. The wrong one puts you in hospital or in court.

Temporary anchors are your go-to for quick jobs.

Permanent ones are for anything ongoing.

Use the right tool. Use it properly.