How to document storm damage, work with your adjuster, and avoid common claim pitfalls in the Treasure Valley
This guide breaks down what insurers typically look for, what homeowners can do right away after a storm, and how a professional inspection (like Tectonic Roofing’s free roof inspections) helps you build a clean, insurance-ready documentation package.
Step 1: Confirm you have a “covered loss” (not just normal wear)
Hail damage can be hard to spot from the ground. On asphalt shingles, functional hail damage is often bruising—soft spots where the shingle mat is fractured beneath the surface. That can be missed without a close, careful inspection and the right touch-and-visual checks.
What adjusters often look for on a roof claim
Quick “Did you know?” facts that can affect your payout
A clean claim timeline (what to do, in order)
1) Protect the home from further damage (safely)
2) Document the date and the story
3) Schedule a professional roof inspection
4) File the claim and set the adjuster appointment
5) Review the scope carefully (not just the dollar amount)
Common claim outcomes (and what they mean)
| Outcome | What it usually means | Smart next step |
|---|---|---|
| Approved (full or partial) | Storm damage recognized and priced | Verify the scope includes all roof system details and code items where applicable |
| Below deductible | Damage may be real, but payout is limited by deductible and pricing | Consider targeted repairs and keep documentation in case issues worsen |
| Denied | Carrier believes damage is wear/tear, excluded cause, or unproven storm link | Request the denial rationale in writing; ask your roofer for a detailed inspection report and photos |
Local angle: What Caldwell homeowners should watch for
Idaho’s Department of Insurance has also published consumer guidance about “roofing red flags” after storms—especially around high-pressure sales tactics and claims promises. If someone claims they can “guarantee” a free roof or asks you to sign paperwork before you’ve reviewed a detailed estimate, slow down and verify everything.