CORNERSTONE GUIDE · STORM & INSURANCE
The Texas Homeowner’s Guide to Roof Insurance Claims
Hail and wind hit the Brazos Valley every year. Storm chasers follow within hours, knocking on doors and pitching “free roofs.” This guide walks you through what to actually do — from the first 48 hours after a storm through your final restoration — without getting taken for a ride.
This is a long guide. If you have active storm damage right now, the short version is: take photos, don’t sign anything a door-knocker hands you, and call us for a free no-pressure inspection. The rest of this page explains why — and walks you through what comes next.
The First 48 Hours After Storm Damage
What you do (and don’t do) in the first two days shapes everything that follows. Three priorities.
How a Roof Insurance Claim Actually Works
A roof insurance claim involves four players: you, your insurance carrier, your assigned adjuster, and your roofer. Each has a defined role. Everything goes more smoothly when each player stays in their lane.
You file the claim. Not your roofer. Not anyone else. You. The homeowner calls the carrier and reports the damage. This protects you legally and gives you full control of the process. We help you document what to report — we don’t file the claim on your behalf.
The carrier assigns an adjuster. An adjuster is the carrier’s representative who comes out, inspects your roof, and writes a scope of repairs the carrier will pay for. They’re trained to balance accurate damage assessment against the carrier’s cost exposure. Most are professional and fair; some miss legitimate damage.
Your roofer meets the adjuster on the roof. This is where having a competent local roofer matters. We walk the roof with your adjuster, point out damage they may not see from their initial walk, and provide documentation in the format the carrier expects. Adjusters appreciate this — it makes their job easier — and your claim approves faster.
The carrier approves a scope and issues funds. Funds typically come in two checks: an ACV (Actual Cash Value) check at scope approval, and a depreciation-recovery check after the work is complete and documented. Your deductible is your responsibility.
We restore the roof. We install what was approved with manufacturer-spec materials. If we find additional damage during tear-off that the adjuster missed, we document it and submit a supplement to the carrier for additional coverage.
Don’t Sign an Assignment of Benefits (AOB)
This is the single most important thing in this guide. Storm-chaser roofers from out of state make money by getting homeowners to sign Assignment of Benefits documents. These hand the roofer legal control over your insurance claim. Once signed, they can:
Texas has restrictions on residential property AOBs (House Bill 2102, 2019), and many AOB-related lawsuits against carriers have been thrown out. But not every storm chaser respects the law, and the damage can be done before you realize what you signed.
The simple rule: do not sign anything a door-knocker hands you. Don’t sign “just to authorize an inspection.” Don’t sign “just so they can document the damage for your insurance.” Don’t sign anything.
If you already signed an AOB or a contract from a door-knocker and you’re not sure what it does, talk to us — or to a Texas attorney who handles insurance matters. There are often paths out, but they get narrower the longer you wait.
Working With Your Adjuster
When the carrier’s adjuster comes out to inspect, you have two choices: be passive about it, or be prepared. Prepared homeowners get more accurate claim scopes. Here’s how to be prepared:
When a Supplement Is Justified
Adjusters sometimes miss damage or required code upgrades. When they do, we document the gap and submit a supplement — a formal request for the carrier to amend the scope. Legitimate reasons for a supplement include:
Important: we only submit supplements when they’re legitimately justified, with documentation. Inflated supplements are a major reason carriers fight roofing claims and a major reason rates go up. We don’t play that game.
Three Possible Claim Outcomes
Once the adjuster writes the scope, your claim lands in one of three places.
Storm-Chaser Red Flags
Out-of-state storm chasers descend on the Brazos Valley after every major event. The good ones — and there are some — are rare. The bad ones leave a trail of substandard work and angry insurance carriers. Here’s how to spot them:
How Iron Roof Co Helps
We’re a locally owned father-and-son roofing company. We live in the Brazos Valley, our families live here, and we’ll be the company you call decades from now — not the truck from Oklahoma that disappears the moment your check clears.
On storm claims specifically:
