Anne Arundel County — Annapolis, Glen Burnie, and the Bay communities of the Western Shore — saw Hurricane Isabel flood historic Annapolis and a 2021 tornado strike Edgewater.
Storm damage on Anne Arundel County roofs
Anne Arundel County roofs face real storm exposure — and the most expensive damage is often invisible from the ground.
Hurricane Isabel (2003) drove a record surge into downtown Annapolis and the City Dock and flooded Bay-front neighborhoods countywide, while wind tore roofs throughout. In 2021, a tornado from Tropical Storm Ida's remnants struck Edgewater and Annapolis, and the 2012 derecho caused widespread damage. The county's long Bay shoreline and large population mean heavy post-storm demand.
🌀 Anne Arundel County storm history
Isabel (2003) flooded Annapolis; a 2021 tornado hit Edgewater and the 2012 derecho caused widespread roof damage.
📋 Anne Arundel County building & wind code
Maryland enforces the Maryland Building Performance Standards (based on the International Residential Code) statewide, with higher wind-design requirements along the Atlantic coast and lower Eastern Shore. Every reroof must be permitted by the local building authority, and every home-improvement contract must list the contractor's MHIC license number. Building to current wind standards holds up far better in the next storm.
Storm-ready roof types in Anne Arundel County
The right roof here balances wind rating, impact resistance, and coastal durability.
Architectural shingle
Most common. Class 4 impact-rated shingles resist wind and hail and may earn an insurance credit.
Metal roofing
Excellent wind resistance and longevity — a strong fit for storm-prone coastal and Bay-front Maryland.
Tile & specialty
Durable but heavier; needs a structural review and proper wind detailing after any impact.
2026 roof repair & replacement ranges
Ranges reflect 2026 quotes from licensed MHIC contractors serving Anne Arundel County.
| Roof work | Typical range | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Minor storm repair | $400 – $1,500 | A few damaged shingles, small leaks |
| Section / slope replacement | $1,800 – $6,500 | Localized wind or hail damage, one slope |
| Full roof replacement | $8,500 – $28,000+ | Widespread damage, aging roof, full tear-off |
| Free inspection | $0 | Every homeowner after a storm |
In Maryland, your contract must list the MHIC license number and can't require more than a one-third deposit — and a licensed contractor keeps your Guaranty Fund protection intact.
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Storm roof claims in Anne Arundel County
After a Maryland storm, the key question is often which policy applies — wind or flood.
Wind and wind-driven-rain roof damage is covered by your homeowner policy, and coastal and Bay-front policies may carry a separate hurricane or wind deductible. Flood damage — which dominated Isabel in Annapolis and Sandy in Crisfield — is NOT covered by a homeowner policy and needs separate flood insurance (NFIP). Document everything with dated photos and get a licensed contractor's written report.
💧 Wind vs. flood in Maryland
Maryland's worst storms — Isabel (2003) and Sandy (2012) — did much of their damage through Chesapeake Bay and coastal flooding, which a homeowner or wind policy does not cover; rising water needs separate flood insurance (NFIP). Wind and wind-driven-rain roof damage is covered. After a storm, document both, and have a licensed roofer separate wind damage from flood damage in writing.
What to do once it's safe
Stay safe & tarp if needed
Don't climb a damaged roof. Cover active leaks from inside and call a pro for emergency tarping. Step-by-step tarp guide →
Document everything with dates
Dated photos of all visible damage — roof, ceilings, walls, attic. Separate wind damage from any flooding.
Get a free licensed inspection
A licensed local Anne Arundel County contractor finds hidden damage and writes the report your claim needs.
File within your window
Submit promptly with the inspection report, and confirm the repair will be permitted.
How to verify a roofer in Anne Arundel County
Maryland gives homeowners one of the strongest consumer protections in the country — but only if you use a licensed contractor.
Maryland requires a Home Improvement Commission (MHIC) license for residential roofing, and the MHIC Guaranty Fund can reimburse a homeowner up to $20,000 for actual losses caused by a licensed contractor's poor, incomplete, or abandoned work. That protection applies only if your contractor was licensed — hiring an unlicensed one forfeits it. Verify any roofer's MHIC license through the Maryland Department of Labor before signing, confirm insurance, and make sure the written contract lists the MHIC number.
Verify the MHIC license
Maryland requires an MHIC license for roofing — check the Maryland Department of Labor.
Guaranty Fund protection
A licensed MHIC contractor gives you access to the Guaranty Fund — up to $20,000 for covered losses. Unlicensed forfeits it.
Use a local roofer
Local pros know coastal permits and stay accountable.
Find your Anne Arundel County city
Choose your city for a local, no-cost storm-damage roof inspection and a roofer near you.
Get your free Anne Arundel County roof inspection
No cost, no obligation. A licensed local MHIC contractor reaches out within 24–48 hours.
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A licensed local MHIC contractor will reach out within 24–48 hours to schedule your free Anne Arundel County inspection.
Recent storm activity in Anne Arundel County
Anne Arundel County — Annapolis, Glen Burnie, Pasadena, Arnold, and the Bay communities of Chesapeake Beach, Mayo, and Deale — faces a unique storm exposure profile shaped by its position on the Western Shore of the Chesapeake Bay. Unlike Maryland's Ocean City coast, which faces Atlantic hurricane exposure, Anne Arundel's primary risk comes from the Chesapeake Bay's amplification of storm surge from tropical systems approaching from the south or southeast. Hurricane Isabel (September 2003) defined the modern baseline for Anne Arundel storm damage: the storm drove a record surge of 7–8 feet above normal tide levels into downtown Annapolis and the City Dock area, flooding historic waterfront properties and causing the worst storm surge Annapolis had experienced in the 20th century. More than 200 years of historic buildings were affected.
In more recent years, the county has absorbed several significant storm events that, while less catastrophic than Isabel, have produced real roof damage across its communities. Tropical Storm Ida's remnants (September 2021) crossed Maryland and spawned a confirmed EF1 tornado in Edgewater and parts of Annapolis — the tornado's narrow track produced localized but severe roof damage including complete shingle stripping, exposed decking, and structural damage to a number of homes in its path. The 2012 Derecho — an inland wind event rather than a tropical system — delivered a 90-mph wind gust that caused some of the most widespread non-tropical storm damage in the county's history, with fallen trees on roofs across Annapolis, Severna Park, and Glen Burnie responsible for much of the structural damage.
The cumulative effect of repeated moderate events — Isabel's water damage, the 2012 derecho's wind loading, Ida's 2021 tornado track, and the increasingly active nor'easter seasons of 2022–2024 — has produced an aging housing stock in Anne Arundel that benefits from professional evaluation. Many homeowners who replaced roofs after Isabel are now looking at 20-year-old installations that have absorbed two decades of Chesapeake climate exposure.
What this means for Anne Arundel County homeowners
- Isabel-era roof replacements (2003–2005) are now 20+ years old — professional inspection before the next storm season is overdue for this cohort.
- Ida tornado (2021) damage in the Edgewater/Annapolis track may still be actionable — Maryland gives homeowners 3 years from claim denial to file suit.
- All Anne Arundel County home improvement contractors must hold a Maryland MHIC license — verify at dllr.state.md.us before signing any contract.
Anne Arundel County storm roof claim: what to expect
Maryland's insurance regulatory framework is moderately consumer-protective, with prompt-pay requirements and a reasonable litigation period. The Maryland Insurance Administration (MIA) actively handles consumer complaints and provides a meaningful avenue for disputes that don't resolve through standard claim processes.
Maryland claim filing deadlines
Maryland gives homeowners a 3-year statute of limitations on insurance contract claims. File initial claims promptly per your policy's notice requirements — typically "as soon as practicable" or within a specified number of days.
The Anne Arundel County claim process
- Storm hits → Document all damage with dated photos within 24 hours. For Bay-front properties: document surge and water intrusion separately from wind damage.
- Day 1–3 → File your claim. Maryland requires insurers to acknowledge claims promptly — follow up in writing if you don't hear within a week.
- Contractor → MHIC license required — all Maryland home improvement contractors must be licensed by the Maryland Home Improvement Commission. Verify at dllr.state.md.us/license/mhic. The MHIC license protects you through the Maryland Guaranty Fund if a contractor fails to complete work.
- Contract requirements → Maryland law requires home improvement contracts to include the MHIC license number, a specific completion date, and cannot require more than a one-third deposit. These protections are enforceable — insist on them.
- MIA complaint → If your insurer is unresponsive or acting in bad faith, file a complaint with the Maryland Insurance Administration at insurance.maryland.gov — the MIA intervenes in disputes more actively than many state insurance departments.
- Payment → Standard ACV first, RCV after permitted completion.