Hail Damage Roof: The Complete 2026 Guide
You searched "hail damage roof" because a storm just rolled through or a contractor knocked on your door. Either way, you want to know what's real, what's a sales pitch, and what your insurance will actually pay for.
The honest answer: most claims fail not because the damage isn't there, but because the homeowner can't tell the difference between hail damage, wind damage, and ten-year-old wear — and neither can the contractor they trusted.
The fix: This guide is the same checklist roofing pros and insurance adjusters use. Read it before you sign anything or file a claim.
If you're searching hail damage roof, you're probably looking at one of two situations: a storm just rolled through and you're not sure if your roof is damaged, or a roofing contractor knocked on your door and you want to know what to actually look for before signing anything. Either way, this guide covers what hail damage to a roof actually looks like, what insurance will and won't pay for, and how to tell the difference between real storm damage and a sales pitch.
We work with roofing contractors and insurance teams every day at StormIntel — so this is the same checklist they use, written for homeowners.
What Is Hail Damage to a Roof?
Hail damage to a roof is mechanical impact damage caused by frozen precipitation hitting roofing materials. It's different from wind damage, age-related wear, or foot traffic damage, and insurance carriers treat each category very differently.
The most common hail damage shows up on asphalt shingles (about 75% of US homes), but it also affects metal roofs, wood shake, tile, and the "soft metals" around your roof — gutters, flashing, vents, AC fins, and skylights.
What Hail Damage Looks Like on Different Roof Types
Asphalt shingles (the most common)
- Round impact marks that expose the black asphalt mat underneath the granules.
- Granule loss — bald or shiny spots, especially around impact points. Check the gutters and downspouts after a storm; if they're full of grit, your roof lost granules.
- Bruising — soft, spongy areas where the shingle mat has been cracked by impact. You can sometimes feel them with a flat hand.
- Random, omnidirectional pattern — true hail damage is scattered, not lined up. Lined-up damage is usually foot traffic or installation defects.
Metal roof hail damage
Metal roofs handle hail far better than shingles, but they're not immune. Look for:
- Dents and dimples on flat panels — these are mostly cosmetic but can void some manufacturer warranties.
- Cracked or chipped coating — this is the bigger issue. Once the protective layer fails, the panel can start to rust.
- Damaged seams and fasteners — these are the leak points.
For metal roofs, most insurance carriers will only pay for damage that affects function, not cosmetics. Read your policy carefully.
Tile, wood shake, and slate
Tile and slate roofs can crack from large hail (1.5"+). Wood shake splits along the grain. All three are expensive to repair, so a thorough inspection is critical before signing any contract.
Soft metals around the roof
These are often where hail damage is most obvious — and where insurance adjusters look first to confirm the storm actually hit:
- Dented gutters and downspouts
- Crushed AC condenser fins (the thin aluminum fins on the outdoor unit)
- Dented attic vents, ridge vents, and pipe flashing
- Damaged skylight frames
If you're a contractor reading this — homeowners are doing this exact research before signing your contract. Knowing the storm hit their ZIP at 1.5" puts you ahead of every door-knocker who just shows up.
See StormIntel Pricing →Hail Size vs. Roof Damage Threshold
Not every hail storm causes insurance-qualifying roof damage. Here are the rough thresholds the industry uses:
- Under 1" (quarter-sized): Usually no damage to asphalt shingles. Soft metals may dent. Insurance rarely pays.
- 1" to 1.25" (quarter to half-dollar): Cosmetic damage on older roofs. Borderline for claims.
- 1.5" to 2" (ping-pong ball): Functional damage to most asphalt shingles. Most claims qualify.
- 2"+ (golf ball or larger): Severe damage. Full roof replacements common, often plus gutters, vents, siding, and windows.
You can check the hail size that hit your address by ZIP code on a hail damage map by ZIP code — most carriers and adjusters will reference NOAA storm reports, which list peak hail size by location.
Hail Damage vs. Wind Damage vs. Wear
This is where a lot of claims fall apart. Adjusters are trained to spot the difference, and so should you:
- Hail: Random, omnidirectional, fresh-looking impact marks. Bruises feel soft. Often accompanied by soft-metal damage.
- Wind: Directional — shingles lifted, creased, or torn off the same edge. Often clustered on one side of the roof (the leading edge of the storm).
- Wear / age: Uniform granule loss across the whole roof. No discrete impact marks. Brittle, curled shingles.
- Foot traffic: Clustered damage in straight lines. Usually near roof access points like skylights or HVAC.
If a contractor tells you everything they see is hail damage but the pattern doesn't match this list, get a second opinion before filing a claim. A denied claim hurts your record with the carrier.
How Old Shingles Affect Claims
Roof age matters more than most homeowners realize. Three rules of thumb:
- Under 8 years old: Shingles usually pass hail damage tests; insurance will sometimes deny claims as "no functional damage."
- 8-15 years: The sweet spot. Shingles are vulnerable enough to show real damage but young enough that the policy will still pay full replacement cost.
- 15+ years: Carriers may depreciate the roof heavily or only pay actual cash value (ACV), which can leave you with a big gap.
Hail Damage Roof Repair Cost
Costs vary widely by region, roof size, and material, but ballpark figures for 2026:
- Spot repair (a few damaged shingles): $400–$1,200 out of pocket.
- Partial slope replacement: $2,000–$6,000.
- Full asphalt shingle replacement: $8,000–$18,000 for a typical 2,000-sq-ft home.
- Full metal roof replacement: $20,000–$45,000.
- Tile or slate: $30,000–$80,000+.
With a valid hail claim, your insurance pays everything above your deductible. That's why pre-storm research matters — knowing whether the storm actually hit your address at damaging size can save you the entire claim filing process.
When to File an Insurance Claim (And When Not To)
File a claim when:
- The storm produced 1.5"+ hail at your address (verifiable via NOAA or a storm report).
- You can see clear impact damage on shingles, soft metals, or both.
- Your roof is between 5 and 18 years old.
- The damage exceeds your deductible by enough to make filing worthwhile.
Don't file when:
- You can't actually find damage — multiple denied claims raise your premium.
- The damage is clearly old or wear-related.
- The repair cost is less than your deductible.
For the full step-by-step on how to actually file, see our hail damage insurance claim guide.
How to Spot Real Hail Damage on Your Roof
If you want to do a basic inspection yourself before calling anyone, here's the safe-from-the-ground version:
- Check the gutters and downspouts. If you see granule buildup or sediment after a storm, your shingles lost material.
- Look at the AC unit. Dented fins are a near-perfect proxy for hail size. Crushed = 1.5"+ hail.
- Check the gutters from the side. Dents along the top edge usually mean enough hail size to damage shingles.
- Look at painted surfaces. Wood deck, painted fence tops, mailboxes — chips and pock marks tell you the storm was real.
- Check window screens and skylights. Torn screens or cracked skylights point to large hail.
If three or more of those check out, get a professional inspection. Don't get on the roof yourself — that's how people fall.
Working With a Roofing Contractor
After a major storm, your phone, doorbell, and inbox will fill up with roofing contractors. Some are legit, some are storm chasers. How to tell the difference:
- Local presence: Real local roofers have a physical address, established phone number, and Google reviews from before the storm.
- Insurance handling: Reputable contractors work with adjusters but don't promise to "waive your deductible" — that's insurance fraud.
- Written estimates: Get itemized written estimates from at least two contractors before signing anything.
- No same-day pressure: "Sign now or the price goes up" is a sales tactic. Real damage doesn't get cheaper to fix in 24 hours.
- Storm data: A contractor who can show you a hail report for your specific ZIP — confirming the storm hit at damaging size — knows what they're doing. (Many use tools like StormIntel for exactly this.)
The Bottom Line
Hail damage roof claims are won on three things: storm data (was the hail actually big enough?), inspection evidence (random pattern, soft-metal damage, fresh impacts), and timing (file within 30 days of the storm). Get those three right and you'll either get a deserved claim paid or save yourself the time of filing a bad one.
If you're a roofing contractor reading this, the same three factors decide which streets are worth your crew's time. That's why we built StormIntel — pay-per-storm ZIP-by-ZIP hail data with damage severity scoring. See how to use storm data to prioritize roof inspections.
Frequently Asked Questions
How can I tell if my roof has hail damage?
Look for round impact marks exposing black asphalt mat, granule loss in your gutters, dented AC fins, and bent gutters. Hail damage is random and omnidirectional, while wind damage is directional. If you see three or more of those signs after a storm, get a professional inspection.
Does insurance pay for hail damage roof repair?
Yes — homeowner's insurance covers hail damage roof repair or replacement above your deductible when the damage is functional (not just cosmetic) and the storm is verifiable via NOAA records. Claim approval depends on hail size at your address (typically 1.5"+), roof age, and inspection evidence.
How much hail size causes roof damage?
Hail under 1" rarely damages asphalt shingles. 1.5"+ (ping-pong ball size) typically causes functional damage that insurance will pay for. 2"+ (golf ball) usually triggers full roof replacement plus damage to gutters, vents, siding, and windows.
How long do I have to file a hail damage claim?
Most carriers require claims within 12 months of the storm, but file within 7–30 days for the best outcome. After 30 days, carriers push back on causation. After 12 months, most policies deny outright. Document damage with photos the day you find it.
Can a roof be replaced under warranty for hail damage?
Shingle manufacturer warranties typically exclude hail damage — that's why homeowner's insurance handles it instead. The exception is some impact-rated (Class 4) shingles that carry limited cosmetic warranties. Check your specific warranty before assuming coverage.
What's the difference between hail damage and wind damage on a roof?
Hail damage is random and omnidirectional — scattered impact marks across the roof in no particular pattern, with soft-metal damage on gutters and AC units. Wind damage is directional — shingles lifted, creased, or torn from the leading edge of the storm, usually on one side of the roof.
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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.
- ZIP-level damage severity scoring
- Ranked street lists for inspectors
- Built for inspection-first sales teams
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