Storm Damage Claims in Wild Air: How It Works
A roof insurance claim follows a fairly consistent path from storm to final payment. Knowing the sequence ahead of time is what keeps a Wild Air homeowner from being rushed or underpaid. Here is the process at a glance, and the rest of this guide fills in the detail.
- Document the storm. Save weather reports, dates, and photos of obvious damage to easily seen items like gutters, fences, or vehicles.
- Get an honest inspection first. Have a qualified Wild Air contractor look at the roof before you file, so you know whether real damage exists.
- File the claim with the date, the type of damage, and the affected areas.
- Meet the adjuster with your contractor present, which is the meeting that decides the outcome.
- Review the estimate line by line against the work the roof actually needs.
- Request supplements for anything missed, with photos and code references.
- Get paid in two parts on a replacement-cost policy: an initial payment, then the remainder after the work is finished.
- Pay your deductible. On a covered claim, that is typically your share, with insurance covering the rest.
What Is Covered and What Is Not
Insurance covers sudden, accidental damage from a covered peril. It does not cover ordinary wear, age, or neglect. That single distinction is behind most denials, and it is why tying the damage to a specific storm matters so much.
| Usually Covered | Usually Not Covered |
|---|---|
| Hail damage (bruising, granule loss from impact, dented soft metals) | Normal wear and age |
| Wind damage (lifted, creased, or missing shingles) | Granule loss from age rather than impact |
| Debris impact (tree limbs, flying objects) | Curling and cracking from UV and time |
| Storm-driven interior leaks | Damage from poor original installation |
| Related hail damage to gutters, vents, and AC coils | Damage made worse by lack of maintenance |
Some Wild Air policies also carry a cosmetic damage exclusion for hail, which limits coverage to damage that affects function rather than just appearance. That clause has become more common in Wild Air, so it is worth checking your declarations page for it specifically.
What Adjusters Often Miss
Adjusters inspect a great many roofs under time pressure, and items get left off the first estimate. These are the ones we most often have to add back through a documented supplement on Wild Air claims.
- Ice and water shield at the eaves and valleys, which Wild Air practice and code often require
- Ridge ventilation that the initial estimate leaves out
- Flashing replacement where reuse is not appropriate
- All the pipe boots when only one was counted
- Drip edge at the eaves and rakes
- Decking replacement when the allowance was underestimated
ACV and RCV at a Glance
The most important line in your policy is whether it pays Replacement Cost Value or Actual Cash Value. This one detail can change your out-of-pocket cost by a large margin on the same damage.
| Coverage | What It Pays | Your Cost |
|---|---|---|
| RCV (Replacement Cost Value) | Full replacement cost, paid in two parts | Generally just your deductible |
| ACV (Actual Cash Value) | Depreciated value only, based on roof age | Deductible plus the depreciation |
On an older roof, ACV coverage can leave you paying a great deal out of pocket even on a fully covered claim, because the payment is reduced for age. RCV pays the full cost minus your deductible. Some policies now apply ACV only to older roofs even when the rest of the policy is RCV, so the age of your roof at the time of the claim can decide which rule applies. The takeaway is to know your coverage type before a storm, since it is locked in for any event once it happens.
The Two Payments on a Replacement-Cost Claim
A replacement-cost claim is normally paid in two parts, and knowing this prevents confusion when the first check looks small. The first payment is the actual cash value, the depreciated amount, which arrives up front to get the project moving. After the work is finished and documented with an invoice and photos, the insurer releases the rest, the held-back depreciation, which is the recoverable depreciation. Across both payments you end up covering just your deductible on a covered Wild Air claim. An actual-cash-value policy, by contrast, does not return that held-back portion, which is the core difference between the two coverage types.
Documents to Have Ready
Claims move faster and pay more fairly when the paperwork is in order before the adjuster arrives. Gather these for your Wild Air claim.
- Weather reports and storm dates for the event
- Photos of ground-level damage to gutters, fences, and vehicles
- Your contractor's written inspection report and photos
- Your policy declarations page showing coverage type and deductible
- Any interior damage photos with dates
If you want help assembling this, our free roof inspection includes the photo documentation and written findings that a clean claim is built on.
If a Claim Is Denied: Your Options
A denial is rarely the end of the road on a Wild Air roof. The options escalate in steps, and most claims that deserve to be paid get resolved well before the later ones.
- Re-inspection: request another look with stronger documentation, often with a different adjuster or a supervisor
- Claim manager: escalate in writing to a senior reviewer if the re-inspection does not resolve it
- Engineering assessment: an independent report that objectively settles disputed age-versus-storm questions
- Public adjuster: an advocate who works for you on larger disputed claims for a share of the settlement
- State and legal: your state's department of insurance for conduct complaints, and an attorney as a last resort for bad-faith cases
Covered Perils in Detail
It helps to know what each covered peril looks like to an insurer, because the claim turns on matching the damage to the event. Hail damage shows up as bruising and granule loss from impact, dents in soft metals like aluminum vents and gutter caps, and impact marks on the AC condenser coils, with larger hail more likely to cause claimable damage. Wind damage shows up differently.
- Hail signatures: bruised or fractured shingle mats, granule loss exposing the asphalt, dented vents and gutters, marked AC coils
- Wind signatures: shingles lifted where the sealant let go, creased shingles that bent during uplift, shingles torn off entirely, debris impact from wind-driven limbs
Storm-driven interior leaks and related damage to gutters, siding, and the AC unit from the same event usually belong on the same claim rather than filed separately, and a good inspection identifies all of it at once.
Gray Areas Worth Knowing
Not every claim is clean, and a few gray areas come up often on Wild Air roofs. When a roof already had some age-related wear and a storm added new damage, insurers sometimes dispute which caused what, and resolving it takes documentation that separates the storm damage from the aging. When damage built up across more than one storm, filing promptly after each event avoids arguments about which one triggered coverage. And partial coverage, where one slope is covered or the roof is covered but not the siding, often works in a homeowner's favor on an aging roof, because insurance pays for the storm-related work while you address other items during the same project.