Licensed roofer inspecting a Horry County home after a storm
South Carolina · Horry County · Free Inspections

Horry County Storm-Damage Roofing

Horry County has a documented history of hurricane and storm damage. After any storm, a free inspection documents your roof damage and protects your insurance claim before the filing window closes.

What type of roof do you have?

Storm damage varies by roof type

Select your roof type to get matched with a contractor who specializes in your specific material.

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Horry
County
Cat 4
Peak storm risk
$0
Free inspection
24–48h
Response time
Local notes — Horry County

Horry County — Myrtle Beach, North Myrtle Beach, and Conway along the Grand Strand — is South Carolina's busiest stretch of coast and has weathered Florence, Matthew, and Ian in recent years.

Storm damage on Horry County roofs

Horry County roofs face real, repeated storm exposure — and the most expensive damage is often invisible from the ground.

Hurricane Florence (2018) brought catastrophic, record flooding to Conway and the Grand Strand along with damaging winds, and Hurricane Matthew (2016) tore roofs and downed trees across Myrtle Beach. Hurricane Ian (2022) destroyed the Cherry Grove pier and battered the North Strand. As a high-wind coastal county, Horry roofs face direct Atlantic exposure and frequent storm impacts.

🌀 Horry County storm history

Florence (2018, record flooding), Matthew (2016), and Ian (2022) are the defining recent storms along the Grand Strand.

📋 Horry County building & wind code

South Carolina's Building Code (the 2018 IBC/IRC with state amendments) includes SC High Wind Zone provisions for the eight coastal counties — Beaufort, Berkeley, Charleston, Colleton, Dorchester, Georgetown, Horry, and Jasper — with design wind speeds reaching 130 mph or more and wind-borne-debris requirements. Reroofs must meet these standards and be permitted by the local authority; work near tidelands may also need an OCRM critical-area permit. Building to current wind standards holds up far better in the next storm.

Roofing Options

Coastal roof types in Horry County

The right roof here balances wind rating, salt-air durability, and impact resistance.

Architectural shingle

Most common. Class 4 impact-rated shingles resist wind and hail and may earn an insurance credit.

Metal roofing

Excellent wind and salt-air resistance — a strong fit for the hurricane-prone South Carolina coast.

Tile & specialty

Durable but heavier; needs a structural review and proper wind detailing after any impact.

Pricing in Horry County

2026 roof repair & replacement ranges

Ranges reflect 2026 quotes from licensed roofers serving Horry County. Beachfront addresses run toward the higher end.

Roof workTypical rangeBest for
Minor storm repair$400 – $1,500A few damaged shingles, small leaks
Section / slope replacement$1,800 – $6,500Localized wind or hail damage, one slope
Full roof replacement$9,000 – $30,000+Widespread damage, aging roof, full tear-off
Free inspection$0Every homeowner after a storm

Confirm the quote includes a permit pulled with the local building authority — and near the water, an OCRM critical-area permit may also apply.

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Insurance

Storm roof claims in Horry County

Along the South Carolina coast, wind and hail are often handled separately from your standard policy — and your deductible may be a percentage, not a flat amount.

Many coastal homeowners carry wind and hail coverage through the South Carolina Wind and Hail Underwriting Association (the "Wind Pool") and face a separate hurricane deductible. Document storm damage thoroughly with dated photos; a licensed roofer's written report strengthens your claim, and a permitted, code-compliant repair protects its validity.

💰 Hurricane deductibles & the Wind Pool

Coastal South Carolina policies frequently carry a percentage-based hurricane or wind/hail deductible, and the South Carolina Wind and Hail Underwriting Association provides wind coverage where standard insurers limit it. Know your deductible before a storm, and keep your roof documentation current — it speeds claims and can support credits for impact-resistant or upgraded roofs.

Right After the Storm

What to do once it's safe

1

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 →

2

Document everything with dates

Dated photos of all visible damage — roof, ceilings, walls, attic. Timestamps help tie damage to a specific storm.

3

Get a free licensed inspection

A licensed local Horry County roofer finds hidden damage and writes the report your claim needs.

4

File within your window

Submit promptly with the inspection report, and confirm the repair will be permitted.

Contractor Verification

How to verify a roofer in Horry County

South Carolina has one of the lowest licensing thresholds in the country — and using a licensed roofer isn't optional, it's the law.

Residential roofers register as a Residential Specialty Contractor (Roofing) with the SC Residential Builders Commission, while larger residential and commercial roofing requires a General Contractor license with a roofing classification from the SC Contractor's Licensing Board — both under the Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation (LLR). Unlicensed residential contracting is a misdemeanor in South Carolina, and an unlicensed contractor can't even enforce the contract against you. Verify any roofer's license at LLR before signing, and confirm insurance.

📜

Verify the LLR license

SC requires a licensed or registered roofer — check the Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation.

🛡️

Confirm insurance

Ask for liability and workers' comp certificates.

📍

Use a local roofer

Local pros mobilize fast after a storm and stay accountable.

Cities in Horry County

Find your Horry County city

Choose your city for a local, no-cost storm-damage roof inspection and a roofer near you.

Free Inspection

Get your free Horry County roof inspection

No cost, no obligation. A licensed local roofer typically reaches out within 24–48 hours.

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A licensed local roofer will reach out within 24–48 hours to schedule your free Horry County inspection.

Recent Activity

Recent storm activity in Horry County

Horry County — home to Myrtle Beach, North Myrtle Beach, Conway, and the Grand Strand — has the distinction of being South Carolina's fastest-growing coastal county and also one of its most storm-exposed. Hurricane Florence made landfall near Wrightsville Beach, NC in September 2018 and then slowed to a near-stop directly over the Carolinas, delivering over 30 inches of rain in some Horry County locations over four days. The resulting inland flooding was catastrophic — the Little Pee Dee and Waccamaw rivers reached record levels, inundating communities well inland of the coast and producing a type of sustained water intrusion that overwhelmed roof systems designed for rainstorm exposure, not multi-day saturation. Tens of thousands of Horry County roofs sustained structural damage from the combination of prolonged wind and water exposure.

Hurricane Dorian (2019) passed just offshore as a Category 2 storm, close enough to deliver tropical-storm winds across the Grand Strand for an extended period. The cumulative loading effect on roofs still carrying Florence-related vulnerabilities produced widespread damage that was often misattributed to deferred maintenance by insurer adjusters. Hurricane Matthew (2016) preceded Florence and had already tested the county's housing stock significantly — Horry County's rapid growth includes a large inventory of properties built in the 1980s and 1990s to code standards that have been significantly upgraded since.

The Myrtle Beach resort market adds a unique layer to Horry County's storm damage picture. A significant percentage of the county's housing stock is short-term rental property, often owned by out-of-area investors who may not have local contractors or established insurance relationships. Post-storm roof damage to rental properties often goes undetected for weeks or months, allowing water infiltration to compound into structural damage, mold, and HVAC damage that multiplies the original claim cost dramatically.

What this means for Horry County homeowners

  • Florence flooding damage from 2018 may have compromised roof deck and framing integrity in ways not visible from the surface — if your roof hasn't been inspected since 2018, it should be.
  • South Carolina's 3-year limitation on insurance suits means underpaid Florence and Dorian claims may still be actionable — consult a public adjuster if you believe your original claim was underpaid.
  • Short-term rental properties require immediate damage documentation after any storm — delayed discovery significantly weakens insurance claims and creates liability exposure with guests.
Insurance Guidance

Horry County storm roof claim: what to expect

Horry County's combination of rapid growth, high rental property density, and recurring storm exposure has produced a roofing market with both strong experienced contractors and a persistent presence of storm-chaser operators following each event. Navigating the claim process requires knowing your rights and working with licensed local professionals.

South Carolina claim filing deadlines

SC's 3-year statute of limitations for filing suit after a claim denial is the most generous in the Southeast. File your initial claim promptly after each storm event — internal policy deadlines require "prompt notice" regardless of the longer litigation window.

The Horry County claim process

  1. Storm hits → Document all damage including attic, ceilings, and exterior within 24 hours. For rental properties: document before any guests check in post-storm.
  2. Day 1–3 → File your claim with your insurer. If you have a separate flood policy (NFIP), file both simultaneously.
  3. Day 15 → SC requires insurer acknowledgment within 15 days and investigation completion within 30 days.
  4. Contractor inspection → Get an independent SC-licensed contractor inspection. Florence damage frequently appears as seemingly minor surface issues that conceal compromised decking — a thorough inspection matters here.
  5. Payment → SC requires payment within 30 days of satisfactory proof of loss. Delayed payment is actionable.
Common Questions

Horry County roofing FAQ

What hurricanes have hit Horry County and Myrtle Beach?
Florence (2018) brought record flooding and damaging winds to Conway and the Grand Strand, Matthew (2016) tore roofs across Myrtle Beach, and Ian (2022) destroyed the Cherry Grove pier and battered the North Strand. As a high-wind coastal county, Horry roofs face direct Atlantic exposure.
Will my insurance cover storm roof damage in Horry County?
Wind and storm damage is generally covered, but many coastal South Carolina homeowners carry wind/hail through the SC Wind and Hail Underwriting Association (the Wind Pool) and face a percentage-based hurricane deductible. Document thoroughly with dated photos, file promptly, and make sure the repair is permitted — a licensed roofer's report strengthens your claim.
How fast can I get a free roof inspection in Horry County?
Usually within 24–48 hours. Submit the free-inspection form and a licensed local Horry County roofer reaches out to schedule. After major storms, demand spikes fast, so earlier is better.
I have a Myrtle Beach vacation rental — how do I handle storm damage claims on a rental property?
Vacation rental properties in Horry County typically require a landlord or dwelling fire policy, not a standard homeowner's policy — and these policies have different claims procedures. Crucially, you have a duty to document damage and file promptly even if the property is unoccupied. Delayed discovery of storm damage to a rental property can give insurers grounds to reduce claims for consequential damage (mold, structural deterioration) that occurred after the storm. Inspect all rental properties within 48 hours of any storm event.
How did Hurricane Florence affect roofs that didn't have obvious wind damage?
Florence's defining characteristic was duration, not wind speed. Four days of sustained rain and tropical-force winds caused a type of fatigue damage that differs from a sharp hurricane hit. Water found its way under shingles through capillary action, saturated roof decking, swelled and warped OSB sheathing, and compromised adhesive strips that subsequent dry weather partially re-sealed. These roofs may have appeared intact after Florence but have performed poorly in subsequent rain events. If your Horry County roof has had recurring leaks since 2018 that seem unrelated to any specific storm, Florence is the likely culprit.
Are SC roofing contractors required to be licensed in Horry County?
Yes. South Carolina requires a state contractor's license from the SC Contractors' Licensing Board for roofing work. Verify at llr.sc.gov/con. Horry County also requires a local business license. After Florence, Dorian, and Matthew, Myrtle Beach and Grand Strand communities experienced significant influxes of unlicensed storm chasers. The SC Contractors' Licensing Board and the Horry County Building Department take unlicensed contracting seriously — always verify before signing.
What wind speed is my Myrtle Beach home designed for?
Homes in Horry County's coastal and near-coastal areas are designed to the South Carolina Building Code's wind speed requirements, which map to ASCE 7 wind speed zones. The Myrtle Beach oceanfront and barrier areas have design wind speeds of 130–140 mph (3-second gust). Inland areas of Horry County may have lower design speeds. Homes built before the 2009 SC Building Code update were designed to lower standards. Your contractor should know the applicable wind speed zone for your specific property location.
What's the difference between hurricane damage and flood damage for my Horry County insurance claim?
Wind damage to your roof (shingles blown off, decking lifted, structural damage from wind forces) is covered by your homeowner's policy. Flood damage from rising water — whether from storm surge, the Waccamaw River overflowing, or surface water intrusion — requires a separate NFIP flood policy and has its own adjuster and claim process. After Florence, many Horry County claims involved both damage types simultaneously. Proper documentation of how each damage type occurred is critical to routing claims correctly and maximizing total recovery.
Nearby Counties

Other South Carolina counties we cover

Storm hit Horry County? Don't wait on the roof.

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