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Storm Restoration Roofing Leads: 5 Channels Ranked by ROI

Storm Restoration Roofing Leads: 5 Channels Ranked by ROI

By StormIntel Team 8 min read
847+ contractors 4.9/5 rating $20.1M+ revenue tracked 30-day guarantee

You're buying leads for $150โ€“$300 each from vendors who sold the same lead to four other contractors an hour ago.

Purchased leads for storm roofing close at 3โ€“8% โ€” a quarter of what a warm canvassed door closes at in a qualifying hail zone.

The fix: Here are the 5 lead channels ranked by actual ROI so you can stop paying for scraps and start owning your pipeline.

Storm restoration roofing is a lead-generation business as much as a construction business. The companies that win a storm market aren't always the best roofers โ€” they're the ones who reach homeowners first, most, and cheapest. This breakdown ranks the 5 primary lead channels by what actually matters: cost per signed contract, close rate, and revenue per dollar invested.

Channel 1: Targeted Door Canvassing (ROI: 8โ€“15x)

The highest-ROI lead channel in storm restoration, bar none. A rep in a qualified hail zone (1"+ hail) closes 8โ€“12% of doors knocked, with zero lead cost. The only costs are rep time and vehicle. At $10,000 average contract and 10% close rate on 100 doors, one rep generates $100,000 in contracted revenue per storm event day.

The catch: this math only works if you're in the right neighborhood. Canvassing without real-time hail data cuts close rates to 2โ€“4% and burns rep days. Connect your canvassing to real-time hail prospecting tools to protect your ROI.

Channel 2: Customer Referrals (ROI: 12โ€“20x)

The highest close rate of any channel โ€” typically 30โ€“50% โ€” because the homeowner already trusts you before you show up. Cost is near-zero if you systematize the ask. The problem: referrals don't scale predictably enough to run a storm-chasing operation. They're a supplement, not a primary source. Most top operators close 20โ€“30% of their total volume on referrals and run the rest on canvassing and digital.

Channel 3: Google Local Services Ads / SEO (ROI: 3โ€“6x)

Inbound digital leads from Google convert at 15โ€“25% for storm restoration because the homeowner initiated the search โ€” they already know they need help. The challenge: storm markets move faster than SEO. After a major event, organic search results for your city won't update for 2โ€“4 weeks. Google LSAs can move faster (48โ€“72 hours to activate), but CPLs run $80โ€“$200 per lead in competitive storm markets. At 20% close rate and $10,000 average contract, that's $400โ€“$1,000 cost per closed job โ€” workable but not dominant.

Channel 4: Lead Vendors (ROI: 1.5โ€“3x)

Angi, HomeAdvisor, Modernize, and similar platforms sell exclusive or shared leads for $100โ€“$350 each. The core problem: "exclusive" leads are often sold to 3โ€“4 contractors simultaneously, and the homeowner has no real relationship with you before the first contact. Close rates typically run 5โ€“10% on purchased leads โ€” half what you'd get from a canvassed door in the same neighborhood. Cost per closed job: $1,000โ€“$7,000. At those numbers, you need strong average contract values ($12,000+) to make the math work.

Use lead vendors to fill gaps between storm events, not as your primary storm-season strategy. For a structured approach to storm leads, see our full post-storm leads guide.

Channel 5: Social / Direct Mail (ROI: 2โ€“4x)

Facebook and Instagram ads targeting homeowners in hail-affected ZIP codes can work well in the 24โ€“72 hours post-storm when homeowners are actively searching. CPLs run $40โ€“$120 in most storm markets. Close rates are typically 8โ€“15% from social, better than lead vendors but less predictable than canvassing.

Direct mail to hail-affected addresses (pulled from a tool like StormIntel) works well but has a 3โ€“5 day delivery lag, meaning you're arriving after competitors who canvassed the door on day one. Best used as a follow-up to canvassing โ€” the homeowner already met your rep, and the mailer reinforces the message a week later.

StormIntel shows you exactly which ZIP codes got hit, how large the hail was, and how many rooftops are in the zone โ€” before your competition loads their maps. See plans →

ROI Summary: 5 Channels Head-to-Head

Channel Close Rate Cost/Lead ROI Range
Targeted canvassing8โ€“12%$0 (rep time only)8โ€“15x
Referrals30โ€“50%$0โ€“$20012โ€“20x
Google LSA / SEO15โ€“25%$80โ€“$2003โ€“6x
Lead vendors5โ€“10%$100โ€“$3501.5โ€“3x
Social / Direct Mail8โ€“15%$40โ€“$1202โ€“4x

Building the Right Mix for Your Operation

The math is straightforward: lead with canvassing in the first 48 hours after a storm event. Layer in social ads and direct mail as follow-up in days 3โ€“7. Use lead vendors to fill pipeline between events when you don't have active storm markets. Build SEO and referral systems as long-term compounding channels.

The single most important variable in all of this is storm-event detection speed. Every channel performs better when you activate it within 24 hours of a qualifying storm. After 72 hours, you're competing with 5โ€“10 other contractors for the same homeowners. For event detection, see our guide on NOAA hail data for roofers.

Bottom Line

Stop buying leads you share with four competitors. Build a canvassing operation fueled by real-time storm data, run social and direct mail as follow-up, and use lead vendors only when you have no active markets. The best lead you'll ever get is a homeowner who opens the door three hours after a hailstorm and sees your branded truck parked at the curb.

Ready to work smarter on storm days? StormIntel delivers real-time hail polygons, property counts, and roof-age data so your crew hits the right doors first. Start free →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best source for storm restoration roofing leads?

Targeted door canvassing in verified hail zones consistently delivers the highest ROI โ€” 8โ€“12% close rates with near-zero lead cost. The key is using real-time hail data to identify qualified zones within hours of a storm event, not general canvassing.

How much do roofing storm leads cost from lead vendors?

Lead vendors like Angi and HomeAdvisor charge $100โ€“$350 per lead for roofing storm restoration. The problem is close rates are only 5โ€“10% on purchased leads, making cost per closed job $1,000โ€“$7,000. Compare that to canvassed leads where your only cost is rep time.

How quickly should I respond to a storm event to maximize leads?

The first 24โ€“48 hours are critical. Companies that canvass within 24 hours of a qualifying hail event see 2โ€“3x higher close rates than those who arrive on day 3 or later. Real-time hail detection tools are the only way to consistently hit that window.

Do Facebook ads work for storm restoration roofing?

Yes, particularly in the first 72 hours post-storm when homeowners are actively searching for help. Target homeowners in affected ZIP codes with storm-specific messaging. Expect CPLs of $40โ€“$120 and close rates of 8โ€“15% โ€” better than lead vendors but less consistent than targeted canvassing.

What percentage of storm roofing revenue should come from referrals?

Top-performing storm restoration companies typically generate 20โ€“30% of revenue from referrals. Referrals close at 30โ€“50%, making them your highest-quality leads. Systematize the ask โ€” a simple text or email 30 days after job completion asking for a referral can double your referral rate.

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