A Pennsylvania storm just damaged your roof. Maybe hail punched holes in your shingles. Maybe a nor'easter peeled off an entire section. Maybe a tree fell through two rafters at 3am. Whatever happened, you're facing a roof insurance claim — and how you handle the next 72 hours will largely determine whether you receive a full, fair settlement or a check that doesn't begin to cover your actual repair costs.
This guide walks you through every step of a Pennsylvania storm damage roof insurance claim, from the moment the storm passes through final payment. Follow these steps in order.
Before You Do Anything: Stop Active Water Entry
If your roof is actively leaking, your first obligation — both practically and under your insurance policy — is to prevent additional damage. Insurance policies require policyholders to take "reasonable steps" to protect the property after a covered loss. An emergency tarp is the right move.
Call (877) 401-3022 for emergency tarping if you have active water intrusion. Emergency tarping costs ($300–$600) are typically covered as part of your claim and are applied toward permanent repair costs. Do not wait for your insurance company before stopping active damage — you could be jeopardizing your claim if you allow preventable interior damage to accumulate.
⚠️ Critical timing: Pennsylvania insurance policies require you to report storm damage "as soon as reasonably possible." Most PA insurers expect contact within days of the event — not weeks. The entire claim process should begin within 48–72 hours of the storm.
Step 1: Document Everything Before Any Repairs
Before any temporary or permanent repairs are made — and before you call your insurance company — document the damage comprehensively. This documentation is the foundation of your entire claim. The more thorough it is, the stronger your position throughout the process.
- Photograph the exterior roof from every accessible angle — from the ground, from a ladder at the eave (don't get on the roof), from upstairs windows if possible.
- Photograph and video the attic interior — any water staining on decking, wet insulation, daylight visible through the roof, structural damage.
- Document all interior damage — ceiling staining, wet walls, damaged personal property, flooring damage. Every room affected.
- Photograph gutters, soffits, and fascia — storm damage to these components is frequently covered and frequently missed by adjusters.
- Record the date, time, and storm details — save any weather alerts, local news reports, or radar screenshots that document the storm event.
💡 Pro tip: If hail fell, photograph any soft-metal items on your property — AC unit fins, satellite dish, mailbox, outdoor furniture — that show visible dent marks. These are powerful corroborating evidence that hail large enough to damage roofing materials actually fell at your specific address.
Step 2: Get a Licensed Contractor's Written Inspection Report
Before calling your insurance company, have a licensed PA roofing contractor inspect your roof and provide a written damage report. This is the single most important thing you can do to protect your claim.
An experienced roofing contractor identifies damage that adjusters routinely miss — particularly hail impact bruising on asphalt shingles, which is invisible from the ground and requires touching the shingle surface to identify. Your contractor's written report becomes your reference document throughout the entire claims process.
RoofPros Pennsylvania provides storm damage inspections and written reports anywhere in Pennsylvania. We identify all damage, photograph it systematically, and provide a formatted contractor damage report suitable for adjuster review. Call (877) 401-3022 — inspections typically happen within 24–48 hours of your call.
Step 3: File Your Claim Promptly
Call your insurance company's claims line with the following information ready:
- Your policy number
- Date of the storm event
- General description of damage (e.g., "hail damage to roof shingles and gutters")
- Whether you have already had a contractor inspect the damage (yes — provide their name and contact information)
- Whether you have taken any emergency protective measures (tarping, etc.)
Ask for your claim number and the name and contact information of your assigned adjuster. Write these down — you will need them throughout the process.
Step 4: The Adjuster Inspection — What to Expect and How to Prepare
Your insurer will assign an adjuster to inspect your property. The adjuster works for the insurance company — their job is to assess the damage accurately, but they are also trained to work efficiently and may miss items that a roofing professional would identify.
Before the adjuster arrives:
- Contact RoofPros to have our contractor present during the adjuster's visit, or at minimum available by phone.
- Have your contractor's written damage report printed and ready to hand to the adjuster.
- Have your own photo documentation organized and accessible.
- List any personal property damaged by the water intrusion — these items may be covered under the personal property section of your policy.
During the adjuster visit:
- Always be present. Never let an adjuster inspect without you or your contractor representative there.
- Walk through the contractor's damage report item by item with the adjuster.
- If the adjuster cannot get on the roof (safety, weather, access), request that the inspection be rescheduled to a date when roof access is possible.
- Ask the adjuster to document anything they look at — not just what they include in the estimate.
- If hail damage is involved, make sure the adjuster touches the shingle surfaces — hail impact cannot be identified visually without physical inspection.
Step 5: Review the Adjuster's Estimate Carefully
You will receive the adjuster's estimate within a few days of the inspection. Do not simply accept it as final — initial estimates frequently undervalue claims for the following reasons:
| Common Problem | What to Do |
|---|---|
| Outdated labor rates below current PA market | Request updated rates with documentation |
| Shingle spec below your existing roof grade | Document your existing shingle grade — like-for-like replacement is required |
| Code-required items omitted (ice shield, drip edge) | Submit PA building code requirements with your dispute |
| Gutters, soffits, or flashings not included | Reference your photo documentation and contractor report |
| Interior damage not included or undervalued | Document with photos and estimates from drywall/interior contractors |
Compare the adjuster's estimate line-by-line to our written repair estimate. Any significant discrepancy — more than a few hundred dollars — is worth disputing in writing.
Step 6: Disputing a Low Settlement
You have the right to dispute an insurance settlement that you believe undervalues your damage. Here's how:
- Submit a written dispute to your insurer with your contractor's estimate and documentation attached. Be specific — reference each line item discrepancy.
- Request a re-inspection if you believe the adjuster missed damage items. Provide your contractor's documentation of the missed items.
- Invoke the appraisal clause if the dispute cannot be resolved through correspondence. Most Pennsylvania homeowners insurance policies include an appraisal clause — you and the insurer each select an independent appraiser, and the two appraisers select an umpire. This is the standard path for resolving valuation disputes without litigation.
- Contact the PA Insurance Department if you believe your insurer is acting in bad faith. The Pennsylvania Insurance Department handles consumer complaints at 1-800-692-7380.
RoofPros Pennsylvania provides written documentation to support claim disputes at no additional cost. We have helped hundreds of Pennsylvania homeowners successfully dispute underpaid storm damage claims.
Step 7: Proceed with Licensed Repairs
Once your claim is approved, do not proceed with unlicensed contractors regardless of price. Pennsylvania homeowners insurance policies require that covered repairs be performed by licensed contractors — using an unlicensed contractor can void your coverage for that work and leave you with zero protection if the repair fails.
Your insurer will issue payment directly to the contractor or to you less your deductible. Retain all repair contracts, warranties, receipts, and written documentation after work is complete — these are important for any future claims that reference the repaired areas.
Need Help With a Pennsylvania Roof Insurance Claim?
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📞 Call (877) 401-3022Pennsylvania Insurance Carriers We Work With
RoofPros Pennsylvania has worked with every major homeowners insurance carrier serving Pennsylvania. We understand each carrier's documentation preferences, claim processes, and typical adjuster approaches. Carriers we regularly work with include: Erie Insurance, State Farm, Allstate, USAA, Nationwide, Travelers, Farmers, Progressive, Liberty Mutual, and Chubb.