Back to StormIntel
StormIntelBlogHail Damage Insurance Claim: Step-by-Step Guide
Hail Damage Insurance Claim: Step-by-Step Guide

Hail Damage Insurance Claim: Step-by-Step Guide

By StormIntel Team 11 min read
847+ contractors 4.9/5 rating $20.1M+ revenue tracked 30-day guarantee

Half of all hail damage insurance claims get reduced, delayed, or denied — not because the damage isn't there, but because the homeowner skips one of five specific steps.

Document evidence in 48 hours. Two written estimates before you call. File inside 30 days. Have your contractor at the adjuster visit. Scrutinize the scope of loss. That's the playbook.

The fix: Follow this checklist and your claim gets paid in full, the first time, without an appraisal fight.

A hail damage insurance claim sounds simple — your roof got hit, your policy covers it, they cut a check. In practice, half of all hail claims get reduced, delayed, or denied because the homeowner missed one of five specific steps. This is the step-by-step playbook for filing a claim that gets paid in full, the first time, written by people who do this every storm season.

If you're earlier in the process — still trying to figure out whether you have damage at all — read our hail damage roof guide first.

Before You File: 4 Things to Verify

The biggest mistake is calling the carrier before you have your evidence stacked. Once you open a claim, the clock starts and a denial goes on your record. Verify these four things first:

  1. Was there actually a hail event at your address? Check NOAA's Storm Events Database or a paid tool. You need a date, a hail size (1.5"+ is ideal), and your ZIP confirmed.
  2. Is your roof old enough to bruise but young enough to pay? The sweet spot is 8–15 years. Younger roofs sometimes don't show damage; older roofs get heavy depreciation.
  3. Is the damage above your deductible? If your deductible is $2,500 and the damage is $1,800, you're going to spend a week of phone calls to net negative.
  4. Is your policy replacement cost (RCV) or actual cash value (ACV)? RCV pays the full replacement minus deductible. ACV depreciates the roof and pays much less. Check your declarations page before assuming.

Step 1: Document Everything Within 48 Hours

Insurance carriers heavily weight evidence collected within 48 hours of the storm. After that, defendants of late claims face uphill battles to prove causation. Right after the storm:

You do not need to climb the roof. Adjusters and contractors will do that. Ground-level evidence is what wins the claim.

Step 2: Get Two Independent Inspections

Before you call the carrier, get two roofing contractors to inspect and provide written estimates. Two reasons:

What to ask the contractor to document:

Reputable contractors will do this inspection for free. Storm chasers who refuse to give you written documentation are a red flag.

For Roofing Contractors

This is your sales playbook in reverse. Homeowners doing this research are pre-qualifying themselves. Pair a storm report with your inspection and you close at 3-5× the rate of a cold knock.

See StormIntel Pricing →

Step 3: File the Claim (And What to Say)

Now you call the carrier. What to have in hand:

What to say when you call:

"I'm filing a hail damage claim from the [date] storm. NOAA reports confirm [hail size] at my address. I have photographs of damage to gutters, AC unit, and the roof. I have two contractor estimates for [$ range]. I'd like to schedule an adjuster inspection."

What not to say:

Step 4: The Adjuster Visit (This Is Where Claims Are Won or Lost)

The adjuster visit usually happens 2-4 weeks after you file. Three rules:

  1. Have your contractor present. Most reputable roofing contractors will meet the adjuster on the roof, walk through the damage together, and produce a joint scope. This dramatically reduces "no damage" denials.
  2. Don't volunteer information that hurts your claim. If the adjuster asks "any other claims on this roof?" answer honestly. If they ask "when did you first notice the damage?" the answer is "after the [date] storm." Stay focused.
  3. Get the adjuster's report in writing. Don't accept a verbal "I'll get back to you." Ask when you'll see the scope of loss document. Typically 5-10 business days.

Step 5: Review the Scope of Loss and Settlement

When the carrier sends the scope of loss and settlement check, scrutinize three things:

If Your Claim Is Denied or Underpaid

About 30% of initial hail damage claims are denied or underpaid. Options:

  1. Request a re-inspection. You can request a second adjuster within 30 days of the denial. Bring your contractor.
  2. File a supplement claim. If the scope is missing items, your contractor can submit a supplement with documentation. Many supplements pay.
  3. Invoke appraisal. Most policies have an appraisal clause. Each side picks an appraiser, they agree on a third (umpire), and they decide the loss amount. This is binding and skips most of court.
  4. Public adjuster. A public adjuster works for you, not the carrier. They typically take 10-15% of the settlement but often increase total payout 30-50%.
  5. Attorney. Last resort. Some states have one-way attorney fee statutes that make carriers pay your legal costs if you win.

Average Insurance Payout for Hail Damage Roof

This depends heavily on roof size, material, location, and carrier, but typical 2026 ranges:

The single biggest factor in payout amount is whether your policy is RCV or ACV. Check this before you ever need to file. Upgrading to RCV is often only $50-150/year more.

Realistic Timeline

Anything significantly longer than this means a delay you should be pressing on. Polite but persistent follow-up is the norm.

The Bottom Line

A hail damage insurance claim is won with three things: storm evidence (the hail actually hit at damaging size), inspection documentation (two written estimates with photos), and timing (file inside 30 days). Skip any of the three and you risk a denial that follows your record for years.

If you're a roofing contractor, this same flow is your customer's mental checklist before they sign your contract. Bringing storm data (like a StormIntel ZIP report) to the first conversation puts you ahead of every storm chaser who just shows up with a clipboard.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I file a hail damage insurance claim?

Document damage with photos within 48 hours, get two written contractor estimates, then call your carrier with the storm date, NOAA confirmation, your photos, and the estimates. File within 30 days for the best outcome. The adjuster visit happens 2-4 weeks later — have your contractor present.

How much does insurance pay for a hail damaged roof?

Typical 2026 net payouts: partial repair claims pay $3,000–$8,000 after deductible; full asphalt replacement under an RCV policy pays $12,000–$22,000 net; ACV policies on older roofs pay $4,000–$10,000 net due to depreciation. Metal and tile replacements range $25,000–$60,000.

How long do I have to file a hail damage insurance claim?

Most policies allow up to 12 months, but file within 7-30 days for the best outcome. After 30 days, carriers push back on causation. After 12 months, most claims are denied outright. Document damage immediately — photo metadata timestamps are critical evidence.

Will my insurance go up if I file a hail damage claim?

A single weather-related claim typically does not raise your premium because hail is non-fault. However, multiple claims within 3-5 years, or claims that get denied, can affect your record. File only when you have documented qualifying damage above your deductible.

What's the difference between RCV and ACV on a hail claim?

RCV (Replacement Cost Value) pays the full cost to replace the roof minus your deductible. ACV (Actual Cash Value) depreciates the roof based on age and only pays the depreciated value — often 40-60% less. Check your declarations page before filing; upgrading to RCV usually costs only $50-150/year.

Can I file a hail damage claim months after the storm?

Technically yes, but it gets harder every week. After 30 days, carriers scrutinize causation. After 6 months, you'll need strong NOAA evidence to tie damage to a specific storm. After 12 months, most policies deny outright. File as soon as you find damage.

Do I need a contractor at the adjuster visit?

Strongly recommended. Having your contractor walk the roof with the adjuster reduces 'no damage' denials by roughly half. They can point out hits the adjuster might miss and produce a joint scope of loss that's hard to dispute later.

Storm Season Is Here

Higher Close Rate. Less Windshield Time.

StormIntel tells you exactly which streets in which ZIPs have real, current-storm damage — so your inspectors stop wasting daylight on old claims and tire-kickers.

Subscriptions start at $1,800/yr $299 one-time per storm
  • ZIP-level damage severity scoring
  • Ranked street lists for inspectors
  • Built for inspection-first sales teams
  • 30-day money-back guarantee
Basic $299 · Pro $399 · Elite $499
30-day money-back guarantee No subscription Instant delivery