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Aluminium doesn't rust, but it does corrode — and in Tauranga's coastal environment, that corrosion happens faster than most homeowners realise. Salt-laden air from the Bay of Plenty attacks aluminium surfaces, hardware, and seals year-round. A simple maintenance routine every 3 to 6 months can double the lifespan of your windows and doors and prevent expensive repairs down the track.

How Salt Air Damages Aluminium Joinery

Aluminium naturally forms a thin oxide layer that protects it from corrosion. Powder coating adds a second layer of protection. But salt deposits break down both barriers over time through a process called pitting corrosion — tiny holes form in the surface, exposing fresh aluminium to further attack.

The NZ Building Code classifies exposure zones by distance from the coast. Much of Tauranga falls within Zone D (severe marine) or Zone C (moderate marine):

Wind direction matters too. Windows and doors facing the prevailing onshore winds (northeast to northwest in Tauranga) accumulate salt deposits 2 to 3 times faster than sheltered sides of the house.

The 30-Minute Quarterly Wash

The single most effective maintenance task is washing your joinery with fresh water and a mild detergent. This removes salt deposits before they cause pitting. Here's the routine I recommend to all my Tauranga clients:

  1. Hose down all aluminium frames — start at the top and work down. Plain water removes most surface salt.
  2. Wash with warm soapy water — use a soft cloth or sponge with household dish soap. Avoid abrasive cleaners, scouring pads, or anything containing ammonia or bleach — these damage the powder coating.
  3. Clean the tracks — vacuum sliding door and window tracks to remove sand, grit, and debris. A damp cloth after vacuuming picks up the fine particles. Clean tracks extend the life of ranch slider rollers significantly.
  4. Check and clean drainage holes — aluminium window frames have small weep holes at the bottom that drain condensation and rain. If these are blocked with dirt or paint, water pools inside the frame and accelerates corrosion. Clear them with a thin wire or compressed air.
  5. Rinse thoroughly — remove all soap residue with fresh water.

For a typical three-bedroom home, this takes about 30 minutes. Done quarterly for coastal homes and twice yearly for inland homes, it prevents the vast majority of corrosion issues I see across Tauranga.

Hardware Maintenance

Handles, locks, stays, and rollers all have moving parts that need periodic attention:

If hardware is already corroded or stiff, see our guides on window handle replacement and stays and hinges for when repair vs replacement makes sense.

Rubber Seal Care

Window and door seals degrade faster in coastal environments due to combined UV and salt exposure. While you can't prevent rubber degradation entirely, you can slow it:

When seals do perish, replacement is quick and affordable. The key is catching them before water starts leaking through and damaging the wall framing behind the window.

When to Call a Professional

Regular maintenance handles prevention, but some issues need professional attention:

I provide free assessments for window and door repairs in Tauranga, Mt Maunganui, Papamoa, Bethlehem, and surrounding suburbs. A 15-minute inspection identifies what needs attention now, what can wait, and what's still in good shape — so you're not paying for work that isn't needed.

Thirty minutes with a hose and soapy water every 3 months is the cheapest insurance you can buy for your windows and doors. Salt doesn't stop, so maintenance shouldn't either.